nvan said:
Alrighty. So the eye thing isnt popeye or anything? Also, if the point of cycling is to get the amonia to spike, then the nitrates to spike and whatnot, wouldnt water changing mess with the cycling? or is it that the bacteria are already built up? Basically, if my nitrates are spiking, and i do a water change/add stress coat and bring them down, wont they just have to spike again before they finally drop down?
You said there was a growth on the eye. pop eye is actually the eye protruding from the fish abnormally, not a growth, so that rules out pop eye. And the point of cycling is to build the beneficial bacteria. The ideal situation is fishless cycling, as it is quicker in that you can
allow the toxins to spike because there are no fish in there. With fish, water changes become necessary because the fish will die in water that is high in ammonia or nitrites or nitrates if they remain in it too long. Sort of defeats the purpose of cycling to kill the fish because when they die and the ammonia levels drop and the nitrites drop, the bacteria die off as they have no food source. So, during a fishy cycle, most folks recommend that you do a 50% water change everyday to keep the toxins down. Trust me, they're still there and you will still cycle.
Let's just say theoretically you were able to remove all ammonia and nitrites from your tank(which isn't likely with 50% daily water changes) the fish are still in the tank, still releasing ammonia through their gills, still producing waste. So, the bacteria still have food. The bacteria even themselves out. Based upon how much waste the fish produce you will grow the appropriate size bacterial colony.
The other big disadvantage to a fishy cycle is that once your tank is "cycled" it is only cycled for your current bioload. So, you have to add fish in limited numbers and spaced out over a longer period since you have to allow the bacteria to "catch up" to the new fish and adding to many is just like cycling all over again. Whereas, with a fishless cycle you have built up a very sizeable bacterial colony and this allows you to add a full (not overstocked, but well stocked) bioload to your tank as soon as it is cycled.
Anyway, yes, daily water changes for now so those fish can cycle your tank.