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Test strips are not always the most accurate. They may seem easy to use but they don't give the most reliable readings.
Ammonia can be very toxic to fish. I don't know what "medium" ammonia means? My test kit reads in ppm and with fish in a system I usually reduce/stop feed and start to worry if the ammonia is much more than 0.25-0.50 and if it gets up to 1 ppm with fish in the system I'm doing water changes.
Same with Nitrite but you can mitigate nitrite toxicity a bit by adding 1 ppt of salt to the system. Nitrite is toxic to fish the way Carbon Monoxide is toxic to humans.
Nitrates are what you get to feed the plants.
Now if you used all the media from a comparably sized already cycled system then you might expect there to be very little in the way of cycle up. However just a little media from the aquarium dropped into your new fish tank isn't going to suddenly cycle up the media beds and if the media was allowed to dry out or starve before being put into the new set up then it might do very little at all. Filter squeezing from a good cycled aquarium into the media bed of an aquaponics system can be of some use but even with all the tricks, cycling up still takes time. Three weeks with all the tricks and perfect conditions and water for fishless cycling and normally more like 6 weeks with good conditions with fish in the system (because you have to watch the levels closely and reduce feed or do water changes to keep the fish alive so that slows the bacteria colonization.)
so you are saying?
pH=8.4
Kh=300 ppm
Gh=300 ppm
ammonia=????????
nitrite=3 ppm
nitrate=10ppm
How many fish are we talking?
Your pH is high (warning if you test pH right out of the tap, it's giving you a false low reading because of dissolved CO2 in the water and after bubbling over night will probably read high) might be worth getting some pH down to at least get it below 8 or even down to 7.6 then let the cycling naturally take over using up the buffers (the hardness) to bring it down a bit more over time. Be careful and only move the pH a tiny bit each day (like .1-.2 per day) Better yet, get a bucket or barrel where you can adjust the pH and let the water sit and bubble for a day or so before doing water changes.
Your nitrite being 3 is high and could well be killing fish. If you consider that a trace then I hate to think what medium ammonia means especially at your high pH and I'm gonna guess that the ammonia spike is what is killing the fish.
lots of hardness and alkalinity are not really a problem in themselves but they could make it hard to get through the initial cycle up with fish since they make it hard to adjust the pH. (you add acid then the hardness counters it and the pH doesn't really stay down very well until you use up some of that hardness so to speak.)
How many fish you still have in there? If the fish don't make it, I would recommend finishing up the cycling fishlessly since you won't have to worry about the pH and ammonia killing fish that way and once the system kinda settles in a bit and the pH comes down some naturally then you can re-introduce fish once the ammonia can be dosed to between 1-2 ppm and 24 hours later both the ammonia and nitrite are back to 0.
you could transfer them to another tank but you will want to make sure it has filtration in order to keep them alive.
for a good test kit, Sylvia sells them and for a good price last time I checked too.
http://www.theaquaponicstore.com/API-Freshwater-Aquarium-Test-Kit-p...
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