English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

i recently upgraded my lighting in hopes to add coral once i can get my water parameters in order. I've had the tank for about 6 months and just added 2 10000°K HQI double-ended metal halide and 2 actinic blue compact fluorescent lights totaling 492 watts. before i just had two standard florecent lights. Will the tank have to cycle again?

2007-07-22 09:38:06 · 4 answers · asked by lineman 1 in Pets Fish

4 answers

The only reason your tank would go through another cycle would be if you didn't have fish or other organisms in the tank and didn't provide a source of ammonia for the existing bacteria following the end of the first cycle. Without an ammonia source, any bacteria would have died.

If you did a fishless cycle, you should add new organisms slowly so that the bacterial population can adjust to the new bioload. As Magicman said, there will probably be a spike in ammonia with each new organisms you add. If you cycled with fish, or currently have some fish in the tank, you may see a smaller spike, because you'll have had a continuous ammonia source from the fish.

Craig also gave good advice on allowing new corals to adjust to your lighting. Depending on where you purchase your corals, they may not have had as intense of lighting previously, and may actually shrink from too intense of light. With the metal halides, also be conscious of the heat they produce, so they don't overheat the tank. Photosynthetic organisms will start to expel their zooxanthellae when the temperature is above 84o for a prolonged period.

2007-07-22 12:07:21 · answer #1 · answered by copperhead 7 · 1 0

lighting doesnt have anything to do with the nitrogen cycle but when you upgrade your lights if you have any inverts that are light dependent such as anemones or corals you will need to acclimate them to the new lighting. Read up on acclimating to lighting. certain creature are semiphotosythetic so when you increase the lighting the got use to you will have to slowly increase your lighting being you have so much more power. when you start with corals you may want to start with a zoathid colony they are good hardy corals for beginers. good luck and hope this helps.

2007-07-22 17:58:21 · answer #2 · answered by craig 5 · 2 0

Nope, you will not need to cycle the tank again. Depending on what animals you already have in the tank, you could potentially see a small and very brief spike in the ammonia, but probably not and certainly nothing to be concerned about.

MM

2007-07-22 18:31:20 · answer #3 · answered by magicman116 7 · 1 0

Lighting doesn't really affect the nitrogen cycle in an aquarium. Check this link to learn more about the nitrogen cycle.
http://freshaquarium.about.com/cs/biologicalcycle/a/nitrogencycle.htm

2007-07-22 16:47:14 · answer #4 · answered by Ghost Shrimp Fan 6 · 1 0

fedest.com, questions and answers