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First time fish tank - comments/suggestions?

NorthCoast

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25 Sep 2024
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A few weeks ago I was looking at a friends 75 gallon planted tank and then went down a rabbit hole on YouTube/these forums and it has really sparked an interest.

Anyways, this is my first time setting up a fish tank/trying aquascaping.

The tank is an ADA 45p (45x27x30). Initially I was going to go for a 20-30 gallon but the wife isn’t as excited as I am so I settled on this 10 gallon betts tank for my daughter.

The hardscapenisnt exactly what I had initially planned, and I was going to go for something in a little more random/natural but as I played around with the materials I had this just kind of worked. The plan is to heavily plant it, and hopefully lean into the triangle composition, with mostly a variety of green plants with red in the top right (some red background plants)

The bottom right with the sand and white rocks will be filled in properly after planting, just trying to minimize the mess. Currently sitting full of water and filter running with APT start. Doing a 3-4 week dark start, followed by loading plants and then introducing snails and shrimp a week or two later. Following that maybe 8 ember tetras, and then a few weeks later introduce a young betta. My thought is establishing the other fish, and maybe using a breeder box for the beta within the top corner may allow the betta to adjust without murdering the rest of the stock.

Anyways, as I said I’m brand new to this so any comments or ideas are appreciated.
 

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Love your choice of wood. Looks great.

Not sure of the wisdom of API start, without something to start the cycle. Some use ammonia, I favour plants.

Thanks!

I should have mentioned 2 weeks ago I had no interest or knowledge about fish but something about the plants/fish/snail/shrimp eco system type tanks really interests me. So no suprise of there is a lack of wisdom haha

I did use APT Start, which if I understand correctly (I probably don’t) should have some bacterial starter and is intended for dark starts in particular. That being said I’m sure it may be a bunch of marketing and pixie dust.

My understanding was that the tank should probably be cycled after 3-4 weeks


That being said, would using an API quick start not get the cycle going?


Cheers!
 
Hi all,
Welcome to UKAPS,
Not sure of the wisdom of API start, without something to start the cycle.
APT Start? I think it includes ammonia as well as "nitrifying bacteria" <"https://www.amazon.co.uk/2HR-Aquarist-Aquarium-substrate-enrichment/dp/B0BTD3CF1S">. If it is "API Start" <"https://apifishcare.com/product/quick-start">, it says "suitable for saltwater and freshwater aquariums" which would worry me.

It won't do any harm, but it wouldn't do any good either.
I favour plants.
Plants and time...
Honestly that is the answer, you don't need to buy anything or add anything, just plant the tank up and once the plants are in active growth, after 6 weeks or so, <"your tank is fish safe"> and "cycled".

At UKAPS we've talked to some of the leading scientists working on the microbes that perform nitrification in aquarium filters (including <"some Canadian ones">) and their research has shown that things are <"very different from the traditional view of cycling">.

Have a look at <"Correspondence with Dr Ryan Newton - School of Freshwater Sciences, University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee">, this is what Dr Newton said
It is a good question to ask where the initial inoculum of nitrifiers comes from & it is a question that I do not have a definitive answer. Nitrifiers are present in many environments because they can live with comparably low external nutrients (carbon particularly). There are a couple of good possibilities, 1) the water - most municipal water systems contain some number of nitrifiers, which then come out of your residence tap; 2) the plants - nitrifiers are also commonly associated with plants. Or, it could be they drift in from the air - seems less likely, but it is not impossible.

If you do need to add nitrifiers the best source is from an aquaponics or aquaculture system that is already running and removing ammonia. Some water or sediment/soil or part of the biobilter (if there is one) is an excellent starter. Without this source as an inoculum then you could add some roots from plants from any other tank that is running - these are likely to have nitrifiers associated with them. A small clipping put into the tank would be enough.

In some lab tests we found that adding previous material from a running biofilter could reduce ammonia oxidation start-up time from 2-3 weeks to 2-3 days. We also tested a commercial product of nitrifiers & it did decrease the time to ammonia oxidation start-up. It was slower than our biofilter material transfer, but much quicker than doing nothing. However, the microbes present in the system from the commercial product disappeared over a few weeks and were replaced by those more common to our system. So, it seems some products could help “jump-start” the process, but it will be a lot less predictable and ultimately may not determine what microbe succeed in the long run.

cheers Darrel
 
Thanks!

I should have mentioned 2 weeks ago I had no interest or knowledge about fish but something about the plants/fish/snail/shrimp eco system type tanks really interests me. So no suprise of there is a lack of wisdom haha

I did use APT Start, which if I understand correctly (I probably don’t) should have some bacterial starter and is intended for dark starts in particular. That being said I’m sure it may be a bunch of marketing and pixie dust.

My understanding was that the tank should probably be cycled after 3-4 weeks


That being said, would using an API quick start not get the cycle going?


Cheers!
Also, if relevant I’m using tropica aqua soil which I understand has a fairly high release of ammonia in the first weeks? Part of the reason I was going with dark start was to hopefully give the tissue culture plants I will use a better shot of survival. I will be planting all easy plants with no co2 added to the tank. The plants will have a couple weeks to start growing before I add the shrimp/snails as well.

Obviously this is based on the patchwork of information I have gathered and I’m sure is not overly scientific
 
Hi all,
Welcome to UKAPS,

APT Start? I think it includes ammonia as well as "nitrifying bacteria" <"https://www.amazon.co.uk/2HR-Aquarist-Aquarium-substrate-enrichment/dp/B0BTD3CF1S">. If it is "API Start" <"https://apifishcare.com/product/quick-start">, it says "suitable for saltwater and freshwater aquariums" which would worry me.

It won't do any harm, but it wouldn't do any good either.


Honestly that is the answer, you don't need to buy anything or add anything, just plant the tank up and once the plants are in active growth, after 6 weeks or so, <"your tank is fish safe"> and "cycled".

At UKAPS we've talked to some of the leading scientists working on the microbes that perform nitrification in aquarium filters (including <"some Canadian ones">) and their research has shown that things are <"very different from the traditional view of cycling">.

Have a look at <"Correspondence with Dr Ryan Newton - School of Freshwater Sciences, University of Wisconsin—Milwaukee">, this is what Dr Newton said


cheers Darrel
Thanks for the info, your posts and referenced materials have been extremely useful.

And yes I used APT start, but I did initially order API quick start which I have returned. (The names are a little confusing).

I also could have mentioned I don’t really have access to any used filter media etc hence why I went for the APT product.

What I have found is that there is a lot of opinions/info/methods available and it’s easy to get them mixed up. This forum is extremely helpful
 
Hi all,
What I have found is that there is a lot of opinions/info/methods available and it’s easy to get them mixed up.
That is the problem, there is now so much information (<"most of it wrong">) that it is really difficult to sort out the <"coffee from the froth">.
I also could have mentioned I don’t really have access to any used filter media etc hence why I went for the APT product.
It won't have done any harm and if you haven't got access to filter material, or are going to keep <"a tank without plants"> it is a viable option.

The advantage of <"plant and wait"> is that you don't have to be able to measure anything or buy any products (other than the plants), all you have to do is watch the plants and then "grown in = fish safe".

It is a technique based on probability, and "plant and wait" and then "grown in = fish safe" has a <"high probability of success">, because you are just reliant on things you can see, rather than a magic number.

cheers Darrel
 
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Start with plants. Add time. Change the water. Add a little more time. Change the water. Add fish. In my experience API products are not that good, but it'll do no harm.
 
I've never really understood the concept behind a dark start. Chuck in the plants, turn on the lights and go for it! Plants won't be hurt - the concern around a non-mature tank is for the health of livestock.
I think it came from a combination of using aquasoil, which can leach ammonia, and use of tissue culture plants, which can melt after planting. I think the idea is that some folk believe that if the ammonia release is avoided, i.e. after a dark start, then the tissue culture plants won't melt. I think there is also a belief that it will help avoid algea on initial startup.

I did a sark start on my tank and used filter starter when I set it up 18 or so months ago, my tissue culture plants didn't melt. Can I say for certain that the dark start helped? No, and I'll try the other way next time I use AS.
 
That is interesting. So it looks like I am going through a non-dark start (traditional?) method. In short, everything in (aqua soil, plants, hard scape, CO2 and lights on) and wait for a while.

It’s too early to understand the impact of that method (only day 17) but will report back if helpful.
 
Hi all,
I've never really understood the concept behind a dark start.
I think it came from a combination of using aquasoil, which can leach ammonia, and use of tissue culture plants, which can melt after planting. I think the idea is that some folk believe that if the ammonia release is avoided, i.e. after a dark start, then the tissue culture plants won't melt. I think there is also a belief that it will help avoid algea on initial startup.
<"I think it"> is for the reasons that @Miniandy suggests. I've never used an ammonia rich substrate, or added ammonia deliberately, so it isn't something I have practical experience of.
Chuck in the plants, turn on the lights and go for it! Plants won't be hurt - the concern around a non-mature tank is for the health of livestock.
You could definitely <"add a floating plant from the start">, it isn't <"carbon (C) limited">, it can only get algae on the roots and it will help deplete <"TAN (NH3 / NH4+)"> more quickly.

cheers Darrel
 
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