Not in my experience. I suppose it could happen if you do something wonky like 100% water changes once a month, but even a lackluster maintenance schedule can keep things in line for a while.
Does doing a large water change make your tank go into a mini-cycle? Obviously the concentration of ammonia is reduced with a large water change, which would kill off some beneficial bacteria until the ammonia concentration returned to pre-water change levels. If so, your tank never really "cycles" if you are doing frequent large water changes.
Not in my experience. I suppose it could happen if you do something wonky like 100% water changes once a month, but even a lackluster maintenance schedule can keep things in line for a while.
Nitrosomonas and nitrobacter live and " work on our side " in colonies inhabited on a slime formation formed strictly on surfaces .
They are fairly inactive and scarce while they are motile in the water column .
That's why you don't have to worry about the few motile BBs in your water column , because most of them thrive and work in the colonies on our filter materials and in the sand bottom , if you have one .
Yes, but if the ammonia concentration in the water column changes frequently the bacteria cannot maintain at a constant level beacuse their food source is eliminated with large water changes. It may take days to return to the previous ammonia concentration, in the mean time the bacteria are starved and die. That is my point.
There won't be much ammonia to begin with if you do water changes regularly, and there is much more to bio filtration than a couple species of bacteria. Besides, the bacteria involed with ammonia processing double in population at least once a day.
When there is no ammonia, the ammonia-oxidizing bacteria don't instantly drop dead, like a car running out of gas. I have three fishless tanks cycling most of the time (experimental tanks) and I often don't add any ammonia for a couple of days after the ammonia is gone. They go dormant... the bacteria need ammonia mostly for energy, and not necessarily for short term survival. The fish are continuously excreting ammonia from the gills, even during a WC, and in a cycled tank the bacteria are oxidizing it at the same rate it is being excreted.
What if you change 80% of the water twice a week...the ammonia concentration will be quite high by water change day and then drop significantly after the water change...this does not impact the beneficial bacteria in any way?
You're worrying way too much about beneficial bacteria. Twice a week is fine.
There isnt and there should'nt be no Ammonia nor Nitrites -No2 detectable in a well established tank and filter . Only nitrates -NO3 should build up between WCs.
BB colonies in your well established filter materials takes care of ammonia very quick if not instantly . They are in constant change of numbers and constant equillibrium with the bioload / present Ammonia. Their numbers constantly change and vary in correlation with the present ammonia levels.
They multiply quick and DOUBLE their numbers between 7-14 hours .
On top of that as DJW -Dan already said , fish constantly release ammonia and BBs don't instantly die off in large numbers when left with less food to eat for just a couple of hours .
Last edited by Filip; 02-07-2018 at 10:13 AM.
Altho,you can have ammonia spikes if you over load the bioload with anything organic.Excessive food,more fish,vodka ect. and causing a slight cloudiness to the water.
If you do a large water change (say 80%) at bed time and do not feed the discus until the next morning, the massive BB colony will not starve overnight? It can survive for hours on fish created ammonia alone?
Yes. You cannot harm your bb colony with water changes.