Not sure that a decaying prawn producing ammonia has a significantly different net effect than adding bottled ammonia/um.
As for wanting to chuck a load of fish in at once, I believe the idea came from Chris Cow to immediately stock African Cichlids.
Darrel is correct, our tanks will never see the heady heights of ammonia (and nitrite) that we add to our ranks to fishlessly cycle them. In the ideal world we'd know the typical amount of ammonia excreted from a full stock of fish, whatever full stocking means, and would drip ammonia in at a trace level over the day up to the amount needed to sustain the intended bioload. In practice, that's impossible and impractical, so we dose the 2ppm or whatever. I'd personally be inclined to dose low and often where practicable.
Whatever we do to cycle with ammonia, bicarbonate, water changes etc, we reset the water at the end hopefully via a few water changes, and check the oxidisation process after each water change to ensure the munchers were happy with the change in parameters.
All said and done, there are many ways to skin a cat. Personally I'll back anything that ensures that eliminates the risk of fish being unnecessarily exposed to toxins, and I see no reason that anybody should disagree with that statement. So cycle away using any method suggested, as long as you can ensure that the livestock don't suffer.
As for wanting to chuck a load of fish in at once, I believe the idea came from Chris Cow to immediately stock African Cichlids.
Darrel is correct, our tanks will never see the heady heights of ammonia (and nitrite) that we add to our ranks to fishlessly cycle them. In the ideal world we'd know the typical amount of ammonia excreted from a full stock of fish, whatever full stocking means, and would drip ammonia in at a trace level over the day up to the amount needed to sustain the intended bioload. In practice, that's impossible and impractical, so we dose the 2ppm or whatever. I'd personally be inclined to dose low and often where practicable.
Whatever we do to cycle with ammonia, bicarbonate, water changes etc, we reset the water at the end hopefully via a few water changes, and check the oxidisation process after each water change to ensure the munchers were happy with the change in parameters.
All said and done, there are many ways to skin a cat. Personally I'll back anything that ensures that eliminates the risk of fish being unnecessarily exposed to toxins, and I see no reason that anybody should disagree with that statement. So cycle away using any method suggested, as long as you can ensure that the livestock don't suffer.