Can a temperature change kill off nitrifying bacteria?

WaterBaby

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Sep 23, 2002
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The reason I am posting this is I have a empty cycled tank that has no heater (broke). I do not have a spare heater and will not have one till at least the weekend.

The water is "COLD". It's around 64 degrees. The temp in the tank has always been around 76-78 degrees.

Will this kill off all or any of the nitrifying bacteria in the tank/filter?
 
They will grow slower and like the above poster said, wont reproduce as quickly as they would in a warm "tropical aquarium". As for killing off the colony? nah....not at 64 degrees because remember, in the grand scheme of things 64 degrees is really NOT "cold".
 
Originally posted by WaterBaby
Will this kill off all or any of the nitrifying bacteria in the tank/filter?

No, but starving the bacteria will, and/or not running the filter.

I added a bit of food twice a week to an empty tank that had the filter running. It was like that for a month, and I tested it, no nitrite or nitrate. I just added neons and two cory's this evening.
 
Filter's running, and I'm going to keep feeding the tank until I get a new heater (and new fish).
 
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