you should also be testing for ammonia and nitrite as they are far more dangerous the nitrates. i see you got 2 clowns now. i was going to say get 5-10 more pounds of rock, but that might make it worse now since it may start the cycle all over again. just let the tank be for about a month and see what happens. i know it seems like forever, but its not bad, and it will be all that much better when you add your fish.
Nitrite is extremely toxic, Rich!
Sometiems I really wonder where you come up with your info????
-B-
Aquarists' concerns about nitrite are usually imported from the freshwater hobby. Nitrite is far less toxic in seawater than in freshwater. Fish are typically able to survive in seawater with more than 100 ppm nitrite! Until future experiments show substantial nitrite toxicity to reef aquarium inhabitants, nitrite is not an important parameter for reef aquarists to monitor. Tracking nitrite in a new reef aquarium can nevertheless be instructive by showing the biochemical processes that are taking place. In most cases, I do not recommend that aquarists bother to measure nitrite in established aquaria.
from 20 years of personal experience and thousands of other people with similar experience.
-B-
From "Diseases of Fish" Bowser, 1999
Treatment of methemoglobinemia may consist of adding chloride (usually as sodium chloride) to the water. The rationale is that the chloride ion and nitrite ion are competing monovalent anions for limited number of uptake sites across the gill epithelium. The management strategy is to establish a ration of Cl:NO2 of at least 5:1. This is thought to reduce the uptake of nitrite by the fish to the extent where the natural methemoglobin reductase enzyme system in the fish can convert the methemoglobin back to hemoglobin.
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