You may not see a bacterial bloom, not everyone does.
I recommend testing your aquarium once per day at about the same time of day. Write down the results so you can both refer to it when asked questions and so you can see the progression of the cycling process.
IF/when you see an ammonia reading of 0.50ppm or more, change 50% of the aquarium water and be sure to add the proper amount of water conditioner based on your chlorine or chloramine levels.
IF/when you see a nitrite increase of 0.25ppm or more, perform a water change OR check out T TwoTankAmin topic on using sodium chloride to reduce nitrite effects on fish (hope I remember that correctly).
The loach- let me try again perhaps with shorter words?
You cannot sell bottled bacteria that contains Nitrospira. The reason is simple, you can say it contains that strain of bacteria, but you cannot prove this.
You cannot prove it because the probe which will detect it is patented and you cannot use it without the permission of the patent holder.
The patent is held jointly by Dr, Hovanec and by Marineland which was purchased along with the patent rights to the probe, by Spectrum brands. Spectrum also owns Tetra who has the right to use the patented probes which they do to make Safe Start.
It will be interesting to see what Stability does (I don't know) keep us posted.
you can keep dosing Prime as you've always done just to keep it simple.
Some people test their tap water for either chlorine or chloramine before water changes because sometimes the local water authority or company may have performed some maintenance on the lines (breaks) or at the plant depending on the time of year and it's possible there would be more disinfectant at the home as a result.
Don't worry about nitrate right now because you are in a transition from using Stability to doing a fish in cycle. You can always test for nitrate if you want but it is not as important to the health of your fish as a measurable level of ammonia or nitrite is.
https://aem.asm.org/content/aem/64/1/258.full.pdfNitrospira-like bacteria associated with nitrite oxidation in freshwater aquaria
TA Hovanec, LT Taylor, A Blakis… - Applied and …, 1998 - Am Soc Microbiol
Oxidation of nitrite to nitrate in aquaria is typically attributed to bacteria belonging to the genus Nitrobacter which are members of the α subdivision of the class Proteobacteria. In order to identify bacteria responsible for nitrite oxidation in aquaria, clone libraries of rRNA genes were developed from biofilms of several freshwater aquaria. Analysis of the rDNA libraries, along with results from denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) on frequently sampled biofilms, indicated the presence of putative nitrite-oxidizing bacteria …
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