So they have small 15lb bags of live sand that is dry so if I add one of them and I piece of live rock those will seed my sand and base rock ? and make them become live, ?
Quote:
Originally Posted by
smartorl http:///t/388846/starting-my-cycling-today-on-my-85-gallon-tank#post_3432157
No need for apologies, each of started in the same place, most of us doing a lot less research than you have done!
The cycle can be started by the die off on the rock or a faster way is using the shrimp.
Once the cycle is complete, you want and need all the little flora and fauna to provide the balance within your system. These little critters are a part of your clean up crew and a good source of food for your fish and corals later on.
The cycle and the live rock are on different plains, the only parallel is that the initial die off from the rock is what people used for many years to feed the cycle. The beneficial bacteria will be present and prosper after the cycle but they aren't the critters we are pointing out. The bacteria and the copepods, tiny brittles, the macros, etc are two seperate things. Bacteria won't create the life that live rock can provide.
While you can run a more sterile system, it will rely a lot more heavily on the mechanical filtration. For most within this hobby, the quest is to create the perfect little habitat that has that careful balance that makes it almost self sustaining.
Live rock is an important part of a stable biological system. Base rock can be seeded and eventually will become live rock but without adding something to seed it, it will remain base rock.
Many of my dwarf seahorse tanks were sterile systems for their safety. But, I had higher losses due to the systems inability to stabilize. A tiny fluxuation or overfeed was like a domino effect. I had to do weekly water changes to keep the water quality reasonable.
I hope this makes sense?