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rene besett

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i have been running biopellett reactor for about 8 months recirc type it works well as in keeps nitrates down,but for about 3 months i have had a small amount or nitrites that never seem to go away i have nobody to ask who knows how this
can be, any advice would be greatly appreciated !!!!!
 
it is really good reactor hard plumbed into skimmer its a huge bubble mag collects lots of skimm have recently reduced flow from reactor into skimmer to see if that helps. nitrates stay around 20 but nitrites are not at 0 as they should be
 
You may want to go that route to get them lower, plus your corals will love it too! Just an idea. Also have you added to your bio load lately? (More fish/feeding) how big is your tank and how many lbs of rock do you have?
 
You may want to go that route to get them lower, plus your corals will love it too! Just an idea. Also have you added to your bio load lately? (More fish/feeding) how big is your tank and how many lbs of rock do you have?
water changes are not for lowering nitrites nor is more rock or more pellets
 
Interesting. No Ammonia I presume? If your showing Nitrates, I'd just leave well enough alone. How does everything look?
 
What nitrite level are you finding? I presume you may be talking about levels like 0.5 ppm?

Generally, nitrite is not something to worry much about in a marine system (unlike freshwater systems where it can be very toxic). People at a fish store may have convinced you it is a problem because they are trained in freshwater issues.

It take typically takes hundreds to thousands of ppm of nitrite to kill marine fish.

I discus it here:

Nitrite and the Reef Aquarium by Randy Holmes-Farley - Reefkeeping.com
http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2005-06/rhf/index.htm
 
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What nitrite level are you finding? I presume you may be talking about levels like 0.5 ppm?

Generally, nitrite is not something to worry much about in a marine system (unlike freshwater systems where it can be very toxic). People at a fish store may have convinced you it is a problem because they are trained in freshwater issues.

It take typically takes hundreds to thousands of ppm of nitrite to kill marine fish.

I discus it here:

Nitrite and the Reef Aquarium by Randy Holmes-Farley - Reefkeeping.com
http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2005-06/rhf/index.htm
What nitrite level are you finding? I presume you may be talking about levels like 0.5 ppm?

Generally, nitrite is not something to worry much about in a marine system (unlike freshwater systems where it can be very toxic). People at a fish store may have convinced you it is a problem because they are trained in freshwater issues.

It take typically takes hundreds to thousands of ppm of nitrite to kill marine fish.

I discus it here:

Nitrite and the Reef Aquarium by Randy Holmes-Farley - Reefkeeping.com
http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2005-06/rhf/index.htm
thanks so much for your help yes 0.5 is where it stays is that ok for corals as well? also is this common for biopellets and why is it? and yes i look forward to your writings to read
 

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