viper_930
Active Member
Originally Posted by crimzy
Let me explain. When you ghost feed and use liverock to cycle, in my experience, you get a "lighter" cycle. Typically these methods produce less of a spike and produce less beneficial bacteria. Now, depending on how much food is actually used, this cycle may be sufficient to support fish, or it may not be... this is the difficulty. With damsels, the tank becomes established with the fish waste already being produced. It is easier to know that the cycle has produced enough bacteria to support livestock.
Why would ghost feeding produce less beneficial bacteria? The only answer I can think of to that would be if you're not feeding enough.
I don't understand how already having the damsel through the cycle would prove the tank is ready for more fish. You could just as easily add a damsel as a tester AFTER cycling via the ghost feeding or shrimp method. Not to mention damsels are hardier than other fish anyways, so it's not really a proof unless you plan on adding more damsels.
Let me explain. When you ghost feed and use liverock to cycle, in my experience, you get a "lighter" cycle. Typically these methods produce less of a spike and produce less beneficial bacteria. Now, depending on how much food is actually used, this cycle may be sufficient to support fish, or it may not be... this is the difficulty. With damsels, the tank becomes established with the fish waste already being produced. It is easier to know that the cycle has produced enough bacteria to support livestock.
Why would ghost feeding produce less beneficial bacteria? The only answer I can think of to that would be if you're not feeding enough.
I don't understand how already having the damsel through the cycle would prove the tank is ready for more fish. You could just as easily add a damsel as a tester AFTER cycling via the ghost feeding or shrimp method. Not to mention damsels are hardier than other fish anyways, so it's not really a proof unless you plan on adding more damsels.