I have doubts about where I'm at in my cycling process after unexpected ammonia showing up and I'd love some help.
I have a 13.5 Evo set up for observation/QT that's been up for two months and was seeded with Microbacter7 for the first 14 days. Bare bottom, started with two pieces of pre-used dry rock, and added GSP on live rock from a mature system two weeks in. Diatoms came and went, brown algae, and then a bit of GHA. Had super high phos (over 1.0) at that point, dosed Phosphat-E for a week at lfs recommendation and threw in some snails and a hermit. Phos was at .1 the following week and the tank looked great. This past week phos was .03.
Everything now has green coralline (including a speckling of it on my glass) and flecks of purple are starting to show. I've also got a bowl of new sand (with diatoms now) under one of the rocks that I put in last week to give habitat for the Hector's Goby I bought (I've already figured out that this might not have been the best choice for first fish).
Before today's 25% water change, Red Sea tests indicated that my ammonia was at .2 and nitrates were 8. The water change brought them down to .1 and 5 respectively. Nitrites were 0. I expected the rise in nitrates because I've been overfeeding to try to get the goby to eat, but I did not expect the ammonia.
I thought I was through that part of cycling. It tested at 0 before I got the Hector's goby. She seems okay, active, sifting, pecking rocks, etc. but she's a shy, skittish thing and I don't want to stress her.
It appears that the QT is still cycling. What can I do to get the ammonia all the way down? More Microbacter7? Prime? Just be patient and keep doing 20% water changes with no new additions until it's at 0?
I also have a 40b AIO DT that's been up with no lights for about three weeks now. First 14 days with Microbacter7 and nothing since, nothing in it but the same pre-used dry rock, new sand, and some chaeto in one of the back sump chambers in anticipation of a high phosphate spike like the one in the QT. The lfs says that often happens with dry rock. Today it tests 0 nitrites, 0 ammonia, and 5 nitrates, but I don't trust that now because that's what my QT did.
I don't get what the bacteria are eating if there is no ammonia being introduced, and now there's nothing going into the DT besides RO top offs to maintain salinity. Won't the bacteria starve?
I don't want to introduce the goby to the DT until I know she will come eat and she looks fat and happy. There's nothing for her to scavenge if she's there alone, and when I introduce other fish, she will have competition. I'm not convinced the DT is cycled enough to put her in there, anyway.
I have a Reef Mature kit but didn't get it right at the beginning and haven't used it. Is there anything in that kit that I could safely use without a skimmer to feed the bacteria and test ammonia consumption? Should I just ghost feed? I intend to put my AI Prime on soon so there's algae for future critters to eat, and maybe start adding pods and whatever they need to be happy. I'm not really in a rush to stock it, I like watching critters in the QT. I can do patience.
Research is great, and I did a fair bit before I started and daily now, but it's different to actually be coordinating all the moving parts myself and dealing with contradictory advice from every corner, books being outdated, etc.
I'm pretty sure a sand-sifting goby was a mistake for first introduction, despite the lfs saying it would be fine. I should have waited for the pistol goby pair I intended to start with. Care info for the Hector's said easy to feed, I missed the moderate care part while I skimmed it at the lfs, I just knew it had been on my maybe list for stocking. Nowhere did it say *why* they were moderate care. Nothing said that sifters do better in a mature reef with microfauna and more detritus available, though now that seems rather obvious. I only figured it out researching here. Also, I obviously I need to be sure fish are eating prepared food before I bring them home in the future. I trust my lfs folks, they only do saltwater, they have many years of experience reefing and are well-respected by others I've met. I want people to get guidance from in person. Now I'm not sure who to trust about anything in a hobby where there are so many different ways to do things and still succeed (or fail spectacularly).
Thanks for reading my long-winded post. Does anyone have some kind, helpful advice or encouragement for me? I feel like a new parent freaking out over everything.

I have a 13.5 Evo set up for observation/QT that's been up for two months and was seeded with Microbacter7 for the first 14 days. Bare bottom, started with two pieces of pre-used dry rock, and added GSP on live rock from a mature system two weeks in. Diatoms came and went, brown algae, and then a bit of GHA. Had super high phos (over 1.0) at that point, dosed Phosphat-E for a week at lfs recommendation and threw in some snails and a hermit. Phos was at .1 the following week and the tank looked great. This past week phos was .03.
Everything now has green coralline (including a speckling of it on my glass) and flecks of purple are starting to show. I've also got a bowl of new sand (with diatoms now) under one of the rocks that I put in last week to give habitat for the Hector's Goby I bought (I've already figured out that this might not have been the best choice for first fish).
Before today's 25% water change, Red Sea tests indicated that my ammonia was at .2 and nitrates were 8. The water change brought them down to .1 and 5 respectively. Nitrites were 0. I expected the rise in nitrates because I've been overfeeding to try to get the goby to eat, but I did not expect the ammonia.
I thought I was through that part of cycling. It tested at 0 before I got the Hector's goby. She seems okay, active, sifting, pecking rocks, etc. but she's a shy, skittish thing and I don't want to stress her.
It appears that the QT is still cycling. What can I do to get the ammonia all the way down? More Microbacter7? Prime? Just be patient and keep doing 20% water changes with no new additions until it's at 0?
I also have a 40b AIO DT that's been up with no lights for about three weeks now. First 14 days with Microbacter7 and nothing since, nothing in it but the same pre-used dry rock, new sand, and some chaeto in one of the back sump chambers in anticipation of a high phosphate spike like the one in the QT. The lfs says that often happens with dry rock. Today it tests 0 nitrites, 0 ammonia, and 5 nitrates, but I don't trust that now because that's what my QT did.
I don't get what the bacteria are eating if there is no ammonia being introduced, and now there's nothing going into the DT besides RO top offs to maintain salinity. Won't the bacteria starve?
I don't want to introduce the goby to the DT until I know she will come eat and she looks fat and happy. There's nothing for her to scavenge if she's there alone, and when I introduce other fish, she will have competition. I'm not convinced the DT is cycled enough to put her in there, anyway.
I have a Reef Mature kit but didn't get it right at the beginning and haven't used it. Is there anything in that kit that I could safely use without a skimmer to feed the bacteria and test ammonia consumption? Should I just ghost feed? I intend to put my AI Prime on soon so there's algae for future critters to eat, and maybe start adding pods and whatever they need to be happy. I'm not really in a rush to stock it, I like watching critters in the QT. I can do patience.
Research is great, and I did a fair bit before I started and daily now, but it's different to actually be coordinating all the moving parts myself and dealing with contradictory advice from every corner, books being outdated, etc.
I'm pretty sure a sand-sifting goby was a mistake for first introduction, despite the lfs saying it would be fine. I should have waited for the pistol goby pair I intended to start with. Care info for the Hector's said easy to feed, I missed the moderate care part while I skimmed it at the lfs, I just knew it had been on my maybe list for stocking. Nowhere did it say *why* they were moderate care. Nothing said that sifters do better in a mature reef with microfauna and more detritus available, though now that seems rather obvious. I only figured it out researching here. Also, I obviously I need to be sure fish are eating prepared food before I bring them home in the future. I trust my lfs folks, they only do saltwater, they have many years of experience reefing and are well-respected by others I've met. I want people to get guidance from in person. Now I'm not sure who to trust about anything in a hobby where there are so many different ways to do things and still succeed (or fail spectacularly).
Thanks for reading my long-winded post. Does anyone have some kind, helpful advice or encouragement for me? I feel like a new parent freaking out over everything.



