I've been thinking. I know a dangerous thing. Obviously - high amounts of free ammonia (NH3) are toxic - There are a number of products out there - that purport to detoxify/eliminate this. BUT - the question - in our tanks - how often does this ammonia level ever become a problem (with cycling - of course - if you're adding ammonium chloride)?
Total ammonia does not easily translate into toxicity. Because at the pH of our aquaria assuming 8.0. The amount of 'toxic ammonia NH3' - is not an issue at .25 total and depending on salinity/pH/temp - even higher levels would not cause toxic issues/death. IMHO - the issue comes down to SUDDEN spikes in ammonia (total/free) - that result from a death - that causes another death etc etc etc - a cascade of sorts. Then heterotrophs - take over - using up the oxygen in the tank and worsening things even more.
I just wonder how often ammonia causes a problem. The higher the pH - the more likely it is to cause a problem. @Lasse
Total ammonia does not easily translate into toxicity. Because at the pH of our aquaria assuming 8.0. The amount of 'toxic ammonia NH3' - is not an issue at .25 total and depending on salinity/pH/temp - even higher levels would not cause toxic issues/death. IMHO - the issue comes down to SUDDEN spikes in ammonia (total/free) - that result from a death - that causes another death etc etc etc - a cascade of sorts. Then heterotrophs - take over - using up the oxygen in the tank and worsening things even more.
I just wonder how often ammonia causes a problem. The higher the pH - the more likely it is to cause a problem. @Lasse


