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Dakota9;491794 wrote: I never meant to say that people were upgrading to keep their nitrates in check, only meant that it takes much, much longer for nitrates to build up than other detrimental parameters (ammonia, NO2).
I see many people upgrading or changing their system dramatically 2 or 3 times a year. This alone would keep the nitrates in check on a otherwise chemically balanced tank.
Check out the graph, hopefully it's there
You can see the prolonged amount of time it takes nitrates to build to anything that would amount to trouble for your tank. Idf the tank is being re-done every 5 to 6 months or so, that in it'self would keep the nitrates in check.
Of course Nitrates take longer to build up than ammonia and nitrite, because Nitrate is the third part of the Nitrogen Cycle, after ammonia and after nitrite. To say that it takes "much, much longer" for nitrate to build up than ammonia and nitrite is misleading. In a properly established system, there will not be any ammonia or nitrite building up. If these two are present, there are other more serious problems. Also, from what I've read, nitrates do suspend in the water column, while the source of the nitrates will settle into the substrate. If they weren't suspended, nitrate would not be an issue for our corals or fish unless the substrate was disturbed.
It also seems that you are implying that nitrates take a very long time to accumulate to an unhealthy level in any system. This completely depends on the husbandry: amount of feeding, macro algae, nitrate removing media, water changes, etc. Besides, what is "unhealthy" many times depends on the inhabitants. Some corals like "dirtier" water while others require a pristine system.