Lane1223
Aquarium Advice Freak
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2011
- Messages
- 221
Ok for one, is it ok to put livd rock in my tank with ammonia nitrite and nitrates? And also what is base rock what are the details about it?
carey said:Do you have any livestock in your tank now? How long has it been cycling? Size of tank?
Base rock is not from the ocean, or it's dead so to speak. Alot of companies actually make the rock out of calcium something I think, you get no live bacteria on it and it has no critters either. It's also usually at least half the price of live rock from your lfs
carey said:You can add all the live rock you want now since its cycling so it won't produce die off and hurt any fish. How much rock do you have so far?
I get all my base rock from reefcleaners.org.
I think it's $100 for 50lbs now with free shipping. You can price around though. I've just had good luck with them
carey said:Thats what we are all here for, fire away...
As far as the rock, if you get say 40lbs of base rock and 10 lbs of real live rock the live rock will seed the base rock and make it "live" as well over time. It's recommended to have 1.5 to 2lbs of rock per gallon usually. I'm not sure if the footprint of the 40B makes a difference. You might want more rock since you have more bottom real estate.
carey said:I'd either keep another dead shrimp in there to boost your ammonia or dose the tank with Pure ammonia, like janitorial strength you get at Ace Hardware. That way you can control the ammonia level. If you test every morning, youre ammonia should be going down from the morning before. If it does you just add some more ammonia til you get to the ppm you are aiming for.
Adding Live rock will help a little bit die to die off on it, so you will have a slight ammonia spike I'd think. You need to keep the ammonia up until the nitrites start falling. It could take days or weeks to finish a cycle so don't worry.
carey said:If you are gonna go the pure ammonia route you won't need them.
You'll get insta ammonia so you dont have to wait for the shrimp to decay.