Cycling with a Cichlid, Water Change and Help

valpofan98

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I need some help in understanding some water quality concerns...My tank is cycling right now.

At http://freshaquarium.about.com/cs/biologic...ogencycle_3.htm, the article talks about doing water changes during cycling when Ammonia is high and nitrites are high as a way of helping the fish, even if it prolongs the cycle. I have read somewhere that when your nitrates are high, it is also a good time to do a water change.

Here are my current readings: Nitrate: 60 ppm, Nitrite 2 ppm, Hardness 250 ppm, Buffer 80 ppm, pH 8.1 and ammonia is at 3.8-.5. I have one african chiclid in a 20 gallon tank.

Last night, my nitrates were at 100 ppm so I did a water change and they got knocked down to 60 ppm. One question I have is, I have heard that when nitrates go above 50 ppm, then a water change is suggested. Is that also true when cycling a tank?

Also, do my readings make sense in terms of cycling? My tank has been running for two years but I started over with 25% of the original water/new filter a week ago so I am assuming it has too cycle.

I added some "Prime" in last night because of the high readings and added "Cycle" in today because someone suggested that since one fish may not be enough to get the process going. This fish has lived in this tank for 4 years and through my many ups and downs of fish owernship has gotten through it all. Also, this afternoon I added some "stress coat" and "aquarium salt" to help with the stress.

I think the main question that is bothering me is...what levels are too high for nitrates, nitrites and ammonia when the tank is cycling so I know when to do a water change so I am not harming the cycling. Also, what would be very helpful is for you to tell me if my numbers make sense in terms of cycling...Thanks so much...don't want to hurt the fish!

Thanks,
Kirsten
 
I believe ammonia is toxic to fish above 1ppm, so I'm keeping level under that with frequent water changes.
 
Its a good idea to do sufficient water changes to keep ammonia and nitrate under 1ppm. I'm surprised your fish isn't dead already to be honest, he must be a survivor. :D NitrAte is less toxic but ideally should be under 30ppm, lower if you can.
 

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