Not trying to pick a fight, but to me, what I understand you to say is that a large colony can grow on next to nil ammonia.
Yes, bacteria can grow on trace amounts of ammonia, but their growth is still limited to the amount available. For bacteria to reach it's carrying capacity it must be fed all the ammonia that the colony can re mediate optimally. If not enough ammonia is present, the colony will never reach it's remediation potential. Large water exchanges do not solve the problem, they only remove the nutrients that the bacteria need. If your tank has a high bio-load, then they will emit larger amounts of ammonia, and you will consequently need a larger colony of bacteria to convert it to NO3.
Healthy ecosystems do not have huge swings in ammonia, they reach an equilibrium. By doing large water exchanges, ammonia can swing from 0 to .5 in a two days. This is not optimal for fish either.
Yes, some fish can show stress around 0.25ppm, but serious damage will only occur at higher levels. We are talking about convicts here, they aren't extremely sensitive fish.
Yes, bacteria can grow on trace amounts of ammonia, but their growth is still limited to the amount available. For bacteria to reach it's carrying capacity it must be fed all the ammonia that the colony can re mediate optimally. If not enough ammonia is present, the colony will never reach it's remediation potential. Large water exchanges do not solve the problem, they only remove the nutrients that the bacteria need. If your tank has a high bio-load, then they will emit larger amounts of ammonia, and you will consequently need a larger colony of bacteria to convert it to NO3.
Healthy ecosystems do not have huge swings in ammonia, they reach an equilibrium. By doing large water exchanges, ammonia can swing from 0 to .5 in a two days. This is not optimal for fish either.
Yes, some fish can show stress around 0.25ppm, but serious damage will only occur at higher levels. We are talking about convicts here, they aren't extremely sensitive fish.