reducing ammonia NH3 levels
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We know high levels of NH3 (ammonia) is harmful to fish in the aquarium or pond but reducing them can often be a problem.
All aquariums should have a biological and or chemical filtration to control ammonia. Biological filtration uses bacteria colonies to convert ammonia to less harmful substances. Chemical filters remove the ammonia and lock it away; the most common material is zeolite. If you see sudden spikes without a change in stocking or feeding levels than it is likely that either of these methods has failed, allowing ammonia to rise to unacceptable levels; a chemical additive or water changes is a good ways to reduce free ammonia levels.
The root cause of high NH3 it can vary but usually it is worth checking the following:
- make sure you are not over stocking or stocking too quickly. Also see New tank syndrome.
- make sure you are not overfeeding.
- make sure that a fish has not died in the pond or aquarium.
- make sure that your filtration is working correctly and is not too small
- ensure that water used for changes has a similar pH, else NH3 may be converted from NH4 with a pH increase.
- filters might have been over cleaned and the beneficial bacteria colonies killed or removed.
Here are a few common ways to remove or control ammonia:
- water changes - this is by far the fastest and most reliable method but care should be taken.
- ammonia-removing chemicals - there are many ammonia-removers on the market but they are no magic cure. You have ammonia because somthing is wrong; using chemicals is not a long term solution.
- increasing biological filtration - this could take longer than the two above, so might need to be used in conjunction with them. Usually it involves adding more filtration, especially with a high flow and media with a large surface area for bacteria to colonise. Another way is to encourage bacteria to colonise much more rapidally. A few tips can be found here.