irish1985
New Member
Hi all, newbie here, running a 75 gallon with overflow box that runs down into a wet/dry sump with bio-balls. Roughly 70 lbs of live rock. I have a little bit less than 1 inch of sand. Live stock includes 1 medium sized yellow tang, 1 smaller clown, 1 medium sized lawnmower blenny, 2 anemones, and a CUC which consists of 1 large banded shrimp, 1 small camelback shrimp, 5 large turbo snails, 5 small margarita (I think?) snails, and 4 small hermits.
Levels are all reading fine, except my nitrates, which are crazy-high – 160+. I think it might be dirty bio-balls. Or possibly not a deep enough sand bed? Not a sufficient CUC? I don’t think it’s overfeeding, I’ve cut back to every other day feeding in an attempt to get things under control, and since then I’ve done a couple of large water changes, but nitrates are still through the roof.
I’ve been using R/O water from my LFS (which of course tested at 0ppm for everything). The crazy thing is, I didn’t even notice a decrease in nitrates after I did a 50% water change, and I’ve always made sure to clean any debris I find on the top of the sand bed. It’s not a faulty test kit either. The live stock all seems fine, nothing looks unhealthy and they’re all eating normally, but I’m still worried the nitrates are going to cause my tank to crash. Like every question I’ve had with this hobby, I’ve gotten a lot of mixed reviews with the bio-balls. The guy at my LFS said he NEVER cleans the bio-balls in his tanks, and his setups all look amazing. I will more than likely end up cleaning them for the hell of it (not all at once obviously) but any other insight before then would be much appreciated, and please remember to take it easy on me as I am very new to the hobby.
Thanks in advance.
Levels are all reading fine, except my nitrates, which are crazy-high – 160+. I think it might be dirty bio-balls. Or possibly not a deep enough sand bed? Not a sufficient CUC? I don’t think it’s overfeeding, I’ve cut back to every other day feeding in an attempt to get things under control, and since then I’ve done a couple of large water changes, but nitrates are still through the roof.
I’ve been using R/O water from my LFS (which of course tested at 0ppm for everything). The crazy thing is, I didn’t even notice a decrease in nitrates after I did a 50% water change, and I’ve always made sure to clean any debris I find on the top of the sand bed. It’s not a faulty test kit either. The live stock all seems fine, nothing looks unhealthy and they’re all eating normally, but I’m still worried the nitrates are going to cause my tank to crash. Like every question I’ve had with this hobby, I’ve gotten a lot of mixed reviews with the bio-balls. The guy at my LFS said he NEVER cleans the bio-balls in his tanks, and his setups all look amazing. I will more than likely end up cleaning them for the hell of it (not all at once obviously) but any other insight before then would be much appreciated, and please remember to take it easy on me as I am very new to the hobby.
Thanks in advance.