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Discussion Starter · #1 ·
So here's what happened...

The power was accidentally off on my 37gallon tank for I'm not sure how long, it could have been over 24 hours, so we can safely say all the bacteria in my two Aquaclear 50's were dead and gone.

So, I "borrowed" the biofoam from a filter running on my 15gallon and stuck it in one of Aquaclear 50s so I'd have some bacteria to start with. (the 15gallon is well established and has been running for years, and that power outage did not affect the 15g).

How long should it take for both my Aquaclears to get re-established? (the 37g is stocked with about 8 1" africans, a cuckoo cat, and a pair of siamese algae eaters.
 

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Discussion Starter · #3 ·
awesome, thanks for the reply. yeah, they've been running with that borrowed bio-foam for about a week, so good to know everything is probably back up and running the way it should be already. Thanks again!
 

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Me neither, they don't die off that fast. There would have been food and oxygen in the filter water, particularly in HOB filters. Probably would've been ok for many days. All you really needed to do was empty any water out of the filters, refill, and restart. Adding media from another tank would've been good insurance though.
 

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Not sure where, but a year or two ago I remember reading that a power outage could destroy all your bacteria if anything over 5 or 6 hours or something. Glad that's not the case.

I added that other filter media from that other tank in the beginning just to be safe, but now I have my filters back together properly and everything is aok. Thanks for the replies everyone.
 

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Not sure where, but a year or two ago I remember reading that a power outage could destroy all your bacteria if anything over 5 or 6 hours or something. Glad that's not the case.
You probably read it here many times. Too many factors involved and too many unknowns about the bacteria themselves for anyone to make a statement like that. What is known is that the bacteria need oxygen and a nitrogen food source ( ammonia, etc). As long as those are present, no reason they should die off. In a closed filter like a cannister, they'd run out of oxygen sooner than an open filter like a HOB, but no one can say for sure how many days, or hours. Anything you read is speculative including my own opinions here. IME once established, they're pretty hardy and don't die off as easily as sometimes portrayed. Just my experience.

I had a small tank one time that was giving me fits with nitrite levels that just wouldn't go away. Finally I noticed that the last time I had messed with the filter (2 weeks prior ) I had forgotten to plug it back in, doh! :eek: . Plugged it in and the next day nitrite was 0 and stayed there. The little buggers were still alive and well and working just not on my tank water since it wasn't flowing through the filter. There'll still be some oxygen/carbon dioxide exchange going on at the surface of the filter water that'd keep some alive.

If anaerobic conditions existed in the water as well, then you may end up with the nitrate being converted back to nitrite which is why it's a good idea to dump the filter water and refill before turning it back on. If only off for a day, there's not enough time for that process to happen to any extent, but you could replace the water just to be safe.

One other note. For some reason the bacteria seem less hardy in the early going. I'm not sure if it's a numbers thing or type. There may be many types of nitrifying bacteria, and the ones that are present in a long established filter may be hardier than what's present in the early going. But, again, just speculating based on my experiences.
 
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