The aquarium nitrogen cycle explained

The nitrogen cycle is the invisible engine of every healthy aquarium. Fish waste, uneaten food, and decaying plants release ammonia, which is highly toxic — and a cycled tank converts it into far safer compounds automatically.

Once you understand the nitrogen cycle, almost everything else in fishkeeping makes sense: why you wait before adding fish, why you test water, and why you do water changes. This guide breaks the process down step by step.

Steps

  1. Waste produces ammonia (NH3/NH4+)

    Fish excrete ammonia and it is also released as food and plants break down. Even small amounts are toxic to fish, burning gills and causing stress or death.

  2. Nitrosomonas bacteria convert ammonia to nitrite

    Beneficial bacteria called Nitrosomonas colonise your filter and surfaces, oxidising ammonia into nitrite (NO2-). Nitrite is still toxic — it stops fish carrying oxygen.

  3. Nitrobacter bacteria convert nitrite to nitrate

    A second group of bacteria turns nitrite into nitrate (NO3-), which is far less harmful. This is the safe end-point of the biological cycle in most home tanks.

  4. You remove nitrate with water changes

    Nitrate still accumulates and stresses fish at high levels. Regular partial water changes — and live plants, which use nitrate as food — keep it in a safe range.

    Plants and a heavily planted tank consume ammonia and nitrate directly, easing the load on your bacteria and your water-change schedule.

  5. Watch the cycle play out in your data

    During cycling you see ammonia rise then fall, nitrite rise then fall, and nitrate appear and climb. Plotting your tests makes this textbook pattern visible.

Frequently asked questions

Related guides

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Track it all in Aquairi

Put this guide into practice — log parameters, set reminders, and watch your Health Score with the free Aquairi app.

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