High Nitrate.. what to do

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Rxb09a

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Well my tank has been up and running for about a month so it is very new. Ammonia is 0 nitrite is 0 and nitrate is 50ppm. I know 50ppm is high but what is the ideal range? I added two clowns that have been in the tank almost a week now. I am doing 10% water changes once a week starting 2 weeks ago. I don’t see my nitrate dropping any. Do I need to do a bigger water change or dose something to bring it down to the ideal range?
 
Since your tank is still very new and recently cycled, I would do a MUCH larger water change and test again. I don't know how large your tank is, but maybe a 50% water change, then give it a few hours or a day before you test again. If the test comes back the same, I might consider a different test kit.

For a fish only system 50ppm isnt a huge deal, but if you're going to be having a reef, most people try to have 5-10ppm and below.

You're to early in the game, IMO, to consider other methods of nitrate reduction outside of water changes.
 
Well my tank has been up and running for about a month so it is very new. Ammonia is 0 nitrite is 0 and nitrate is 50ppm. I know 50ppm is high but what is the ideal range? I added two clowns that have been in the tank almost a week now. I am doing 10% water changes once a week starting 2 weeks ago. I don’t see my nitrate dropping any. Do I need to do a bigger water change or dose something to bring it down to the ideal range?
I feel the ideal nitrate range is 5ppm to 30ppm. Unless the 50ppm is causing a problem, I would give it time on a new tank.

I would also point out that a 10% water change should drop your nitrates from 50ppm to 45ppm which is likely not within the accuracy of your test kit.
 
Since your tank is still very new and recently cycled, I would do a MUCH larger water change and test again. I don't know how large your tank is, but maybe a 50% water change, then give it a few hours or a day before you test again. If the test comes back the same, I might consider a different test kit.

For a fish only system 50ppm isnt a huge deal, but if you're going to be having a reef, most people try to have 5-10ppm and below.

You're to early in the game, IMO, to consider other methods of nitrate reduction outside of water changes.
I have a 32 gal biocube. So a larger water change should help. Is this anything that would hurt for it to wait a week or so? I am having to order more salt.
 
I agree with @ChukeeR and @Brew12 do a weekly water changes and let the system ride.

Six months down the road, I would look at siprox, matrex, zeovit, bif bio fil to using in the sump for nitrate control.
 
Nitrates won't drop much with such a small water change especially on a newly cycled tank. Depending on tank volume I would recommend at least a 30-40% water change and go from there which should reduce the Nitrates to a more manageable level, also don't feed your clown's too much, that will just lead to more Nitrates in the end. Depending on what the Nitrates level are after a few months you could consider carbon dosing (NO3.po4 -x, vinegar, vodka, sugar etc) but I would caution against it right now as it can have some nasty affects on your tank inhabitants if not done correctly.
 
I have a 32 gal biocube. So a larger water change should help. Is this anything that would hurt for it to wait a week or so? I am having to order more salt.

Waiting a week at this point wouldn't be an issue if your only livestock is the clownfish. Once you get salt, maybe try changing 15 gallons of water, then give it half a day and test again. Might need to do a couple of these in a short span of time, but I wouldn't be overly concerned at this point as your only livestock is fish.
 

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