1.5 cups of shrimp =
12 ounces of shrimp =
340 grams of shrimp =
119 grams of food, dry weight (35%) =
100 grams of protein (84%) =
16 grams of nitrogen =
13,122 mg ammonia =
47,771 mg nitrate
In a 681 liter (180 gallon) tank, yields 47771/681 = 70 ppm nitrate every day which is around 7x what your WC schedule and nitrate readings suggest (assuming you are doing huge changes.)
Also, based on your post, I calculated around 6.4 lbs of fish in the tank. So that works out to .68 lbs food/6.4 lbs fish per day, or 11% of net body weight, which is around 4-5x what they should be getting in food per day.
It's like both numbers are off by 5-7x. Maybe you meant per week not per day. That would make more mathematical sense.
Nope. Fed that much daily. Weekly wc for about 6-8 months and then I got tired of dealing with such a high bioload and got rid of the aros, gars, and a few bichirs. Now my water is clean for at least 3 weeks before I notice any changes in the parameters. But I still change once every week or two to make sure I don’t run into problems.
As far as the math is concerned...there’s probably factors that I haven’t noticed that keep my numbers lower than what would be expected from a mathmatical standpoint. I’m not sure 100% what those factors may be but I can tell you that for at least 6 months my water never went above
0.50ppm ammonia
0.50ppm nitrite
10ppm-20ppm nitrate.
I tested once every week or two before my water changes. Added declorinator and salt. No prime or anything to help reduce those numbers. And my water changes ranged from 50-70% depending on how bad my water was.
Just before I got rid of the fish the water parameters were close to the 20ppm. Nitrate range and that’s when I decided I couldn’t keep up anymore. I was doing 2 wc a week for The last 2-3 weeks trying To keep nitrates lower than 10ppm. Finally had enough and decided to get rid of bioload.