Originally Posted by
HatesSushi
I think you are wrong by saying that there are a lot of people on this board that hate to be disagreed with. I think it is the contrary. You will find most people do discuss issues with their tank issues with the hope of finding solutions, and others that offer possible solutions. I can tell you that all the people I know on this board will say that nitrates are a sign of degraded water quality. To say "having extremely high nitrates and everything is fine" is an irresponsible comment. Things may seem fine at the moment but they are not and a system that is not maintained properly will eventually crash.
consider this;
"By itself nitrates are not a concern for most livestock and systems. What a measure of nitrate can and should do for the hobbiest is serve as a guide to the total water-quality picture. There are many other chemical and physical changes that occur in a small captive system that are characteristic of overcrowding in an artificial environment. A high nitrate reading almost assuredly means a build-up of other dissolved organic wastes and degraded water quality. Be aware of and resist those changes by having ample filtration and circulation capacity, by removing and diluting converted wastes via regular water changes, and by using live rock and calcerous substrates." (from "The conscientious Aquarist" by Robert M. Fenner)
See, you're disagreeing with me and it bugs you.
I don't think my comment was irresponsible. I was just stating something that I have experience with and was in no way recommending that everyone try it out for themselves. It was simply a different perspective, an addition to the knowledge base. Everyone on this board has had their own experiences, and many of us get to the same place while taking different routes.
As for your belief that nitrates are a sign of degrading water quality, that's debatable. Nitrates are the natural end result of the nitrogen cycle present in most home aquariums. If anything, they're a sign that things are working right. Yes, they need to be controlled and limited with water changes, but for most of us they will always be there in some amount, regardless of water quality.
And I bet you're going to disagree with that, too.