|
| |
|
FAQs on Freshwater Aquarium Water Quality 1
Related Articles:
A
practical approach to freshwater aquarium water chemistry by Neale
Monks,
In praise of hard water; How hard,
alkaline water can be a blessing in disguise by Neale Monks pH, alkalinity, acidity, Treating
Tap Water, Freshwater Maintenance, Frequent Partial
Water Changes, Establishing Cycling, Freshwater
Filtration, Setting up a Freshwater Aquarium,
Tips for Beginners, In
praise of hard water; How hard, alkaline water can be a blessing in
disguise by Neale Monks,
The Soft Water Aquarium: Risks and Benefits
by Neale Monks
Related FAQs: FW H2O Quality 2,
FW H2O Quality 3,
Cloudy Water , Aquarium Maintenance, Treating
Tap Water for Aquarium Use, pH, Alkalinity,
Acidity,
Water Hardness,
Nitrogen Cycling,
Establishing Cycling 1,
Ammonia, Nitrite,
Nitrate,
Phosphates, Freshwater Algae Control, Algae
Control, Foods, Feeding, Aquatic Nutrition,
Disease,
Panaque suttonorum
(formerly P. suttoni).
|
 |
Water Quality, Plecos, and Praise - Oh My!
Sabrina,
<Hi again, Chris!>
many thanks for the prompt and helpful reply.
<Oh, goodness.... I hope you can forgive the delay on this
one! Computers crashing all around me.... I think I have
bad computer vibes emanating from my fingertips, or somethin'!>
As you suspected water quality was (is still not) ideal. Nitrites and nitrates
are high and I'm getting them down with water changes
<Ah, good.>
although I'm equally cautious about doing too much too quickly.
<Not much to be cautious of, here; just be sure to match temperature and pH
to that of the tank.>
We've added some bogwood and improved the hiding place.
<Also good.>
We've also left the light off for the last few days, room light is quite good.
<That will definitely help soothe this primarily nocturnal critter as he
settles in.>
The tank bottom is all sand so he (or she - I wish I could tell)
<Sex can be determined in adults during breeding time (or if you simulate
conditions of their breeding season) - males of most Loricariids will develop
"odontodes", these are fine bristles that will show up on their
pectoral fins and on their 'face'/'cheeks', especially on the
operculum. Females will lack these odontodes. Other than
that, it can be extremely difficult to tell gender.>
should have a soft place to lay up. I've also noticed its adhering to the glass
more so I suspect there's some algal growth forming up.
<It could also be that the sand is too sharp for him (er, her?
it?). Please watch for any redness/irritation on the plec's
belly.>
In general the plec is looking calmer but I'm not complacent. Its just getting
the balance right of trying to do the right thing and not causing too much
stress.
<You nailed it on the head right there, mi amigo!>
It's my son's tank and the fish, especially the plec, are real pets if you know
what I mean.
<I do know, indeed.>
If I could ask you a couple more questions please:
1. How do you sex a plec?
<Yikes! I jumped the gun. See above.>
2. We live in a very hard water area - I have access to deionized water - should
I mix this in with the tank during water changes?
<That is certainly an option. Though, you could try using peat in
your filter instead; this certainly does the trick for my tanks, and I recommend
it highly.>
3. Does having hard water change the water parameters I should aim for?
<No. Ammonia and nitrite should be zero, and nitrate ideally below
20ppm, and as close to zero as possible - regardless of pH and alkalinity.>
4. The filter is within the tank and has a compartment for charcoal - do you
have a point of view on using it as I've received mixed opinions?
<It most certainly has its uses! It can remove toxins that find
their way into your water - which is quite important - among other
things. If you choose not to use it constantly, consider at least
running carbon in the filter for a few days each month.>
Lastly, I have to congratulate you on the web site - truly one of the best web
sites I have been to (not just fish but all web sites). Highly informative,
realistic in expectations and advice and welcoming to all levels. Well done
indeed.
<From all the crew, thank you very much for your kind
words! Erm.... I really hope the delay in response on this
one doesn't change your view!>
Thanks again for your help. Chris
<You're quite welcome, and thank you again for your
praise. Wishing you and your plec well, -Sabrina>
Smelly Tank! O, Smelly Tank..!
Hi WWM Crew,
<Hi Magnus on Call>
I recently got a 15 gal. fresh water fish tank. I washed all the rock and plants
and decorative stuff before putting them in the tank. I had the tank up and
running for 2 days.
<You should let the tank run about a week or so, this give it time for it to
cycle and the beneficial bacteria that breaks down the fishes waste to build
up.>
I bought 3 Tetras. A week later, the water smells horrible.
<This is due to the tank cycling through. Next time you set up a
tank remember to give it a bit more time. Also another trick is to
add some fish flakes before fish are in there, that will feed the bacteria and
speed the cycle faster. Also, tetras like having a tank that is more
mature, so watch the fish and make sure they do okay... They are
sensitive and the tank might be a bit hard on them.>
Is there something I can do to get the water to lose it's terrible smell or am I
at the point of starting all over again?
<Starting all over won't really do much except cause this problem again a
week or two from now. What you should do is be Filtering the water
with Activated Carbon/charcoal. Those nice little filter bags you see
in the whisper filters. The Carbon removes that nasty smell and
impurities (which cause the smells) from the water. So, just bump up
the filtration and things should go much better. Also, check our FAQ
area in the freshwater section to get some more ideas.>
Thank you,
<No Prob. Hope all goes well.-Magnus>
Greenwater....
Am new user, have set up tank and suddenly it goes green. Have
replaced 50% water now and tank still has green tinge; am lost on what to do.
<If you haven't yet, please read the following article: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwalgcontrol.htm
. You might also search WWM using our google tool at the bottom of
the page for "need clarity", as we very recently went in-depth with a
similar problem. There is a lot of information archived in the FAQs
linked at the top of the algae article, as well. If you need more,
please write back with more information on your system (size, water parameters,
what fish you intend, etc.), and we'll be better able to help
you. Wishing you well, -Sabrina>
Missing Algae
I recently wrote you a letter on my green spotted pufferfish, but I have
another question. I have had a fifty five gallon tank of cichlids for a little
over a month, and I have yet to see any algae. I have heard that algae is a sign
of a well maintained tank. Until the past two weeks when two fish died, we had
fourteen cichlids. Our tank has rock, live and artificial plants, and I don't
know why we haven't seen any algae.
<Algae is not necessarily a sign of a healthy tank, it just shows that there
are excess nutrients in the water allowing the algae to feed and grow. The
real way to see how healthy the tank is to have happy and healthy fish. I
would be more worried about the death of the two fish. something must
not be right in the tank. Check your water parameters. (ammonia,
nitrite, nitrate, your pH things like that.) If the parameters are
all good, then you will know your tank is going well. -Magnus>
Thank you, Rachel
New Tank Syndrome - Is It Fresh? Is It Salt? It
Doesn't Matter!
>I have a question, concerning my 29 gallon aquarium, and my Penguin
Bio-wheel filtering system.
>>Alright.
>I recently started having problems with my aquarium getting cloudy, and not
being able to clear it up. I've changed 50% of the water, and the filtering
system has been well rinsed, and the filter changed. It still wont clear
up.
>>Using these methods it NEVER will. You are ensuring that you
remove the very bacteria you're trying to culture. These are benthic
nitrifying bacteria (they convert ammonia from the fish's wastes into other,
less noxious compounds). When you do water changes and clean the
filter, you're removing them and giving free floating bacteria the upper
hand. You have to stop, leave the tank alone.
>The bio wheel isn't spinning. Will that make a difference in
filtration?
>>Bad, it sure will. Contact the shop you bought it from, it
may be a defective unit.
>Should I replace the wheel?
>>No, if this is a relatively new unit (under 3 months old) and you've
been struggling with this in operation, they should be willing to replace it
free of charge. If not, contact Penguin and ask them to replace
it. In the meantime, do try to leave the tank be for a
month. It will clear up (assuming you're not overfeeding or the like)
once the nitrifying bacteria finally get established. Marina
Nitrite Ghosts
Hi there,
<Hi Jade, Sabrina here>
Thanks for the reply way way back (about the sick tiger barbs).
<Sure thing, hope all is going well.>
I hope you can help me with this one since I am a bit puzzled with why my
nitrites are still in the 0.1 mg/L for three weeks now.
<Yikes>
The ammonia is at 0 and the nitrate is a little above 25 mg/L.
<Nitrate's a bit high, but not awful.>
I thought it may have been due to excess food but I have been vacuuming
diligently.
<Possibly too diligently? How often do you vacuum? Try
to alternate what portions of the substrate you vacuum each time, so there's
always some area with enough bacteria to keep the nitrogen cycle going.>
I change the water (25%) every week and sometimes even twice a week when I get
jittery about the nitrite.
<Hmm.... If you're vacuuming thoroughly with every water change,
this could very well be the root of the problem....>
I am not sure now if the problem is with the amount of oxygen that is in the
water or perhaps I am not providing enough filtration. I have a 20 gallon
aquarium but I am only using an undergravel filter and an air pump (airlift).
<Since all you've got in there is a handful of tiger barbs, this *should* be
sufficient....>
Do you think I should get a powerhead or can I just increase the airflow rate?
<You could try either of these.>
How much filtration should I really be ideally providing for 7 tiger barbs only?
<Really, you *should* be alright with what you've got. Obviously,
something's going wrong though - those nitrites have to be there for a reason. My
first thought, as above, is that you might be vacuuming *too* much and removing
all of your nitrifying bacteria before they can do their job. If
that's not the case, possibly overfeeding - tiger barbs don't consume a whole
lot of food. If not that, perhaps decomposing matter underneath the
filter plate - for which you can try running an air hose down the lift tube,
start a siphon, and see if you can pull any gunk out.>
I am also thinking if I should get a BioWheel instead.
<I do very much like the bio-wheel filters, for their ease of use and
maintenance especially.>
Thanks and hope you can help me this one.
<I hope so, too, Jade - best of luck to you! -Sabrina>
Jade
Timing of Water and Filter Changes - II
Thanks. I should have mentioned that I vacuum the gravel with
each 20%
change......
<In that case, yes, I would change the cartridge at a different
time. I'd also recommend only vacuuming about half the gravel each
time, also to prevent removing too much bacteria at once - of course, if you're
not experiencing changes in water quality (test often/regularly for a while)
with your normal routine, you may not need to change how you're doing things at
all. Hope all goes well, -Sabrina>
Salvatore J. Frontiero, Esq.
Clearly the water? Or not so clearly not the water?
Hi,
I am twelve years old. I got my first aquarium with my birthday money in August.
<Congratulations, and welcome to the fishkeeping hobby!>
It is a 10-gallon freshwater aquarium with a power filter. This got my mom
interested and she started a cool-water aquarium about a month ago, also
10-gallon with a power filter.
<Fish certainly are addictive, huh?>
We also have bettas in a one-gallon tank, 1.66 gallon and a 2.5-gallon tank.
They both have under-gravel filters. Our water is from a well. We
adjust it to PH 7.0. It is really alkaline naturally.
<What is the pH out of the tap naturally? If it's not too bad, you
may not have to adjust the pH; it's better to have a stable, not-quite-perfect
pH than to run the risk of a fluctuating pH.>
I have some small tetras, a catfish and a small cone snail in mine, and she has
a male Betta, four white clouds and a small cone snail in hers. Then we added
two ghost shrimp to each 10-gallon tank and one each to the two smaller Betta
tanks.
<Freshwater shrimp are my favorite animals - even just plain ol' ghost shrimp
- what fun creatures.>
My father also decided he had to have a glass cat and added one to my mom's
tank.
<Uh-oh....>
The other fish and the snails are doing fine. The clear animals all died, most
within a day or two. My mom is guessing there's something in the well water that
kills clear animals.
<Interesting guess, but it's very likely that the shrimp deaths and the glass
catfish death are completely unrelated. First, the glass catfish -
these fish are very, very sensitive schooling fish. They do not do
well singly, and they can't tolerate ammonia or nitrite in the water at *all*;
have you tested the tank(s) for ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate? Next,
the ghost shrimp - I see two main possibilities why these died. These
cute little beasts are usually sold as food animals to feed to larger fishes. Because
of that, they are often kept in crowded, unhealthy environments before they are
sold - after all, their ultimate goal is in the belly of a fish in most cases. The
last batch I got (not as food, don't worry!), I purchased two dozen, and only
six survived; the rest died within a few days of purchase. Those
remaining six, however, grew up and bred, and now their young are breeding. Basically,
what this boils down to, is that very often, ghost shrimp are sick to begin
with, so it *might* not be anything to do with your water. HOWEVER. (saw
that coming a mile away, huh?) Invertebrates, shrimps included, are
very, very sensitive to certain metals (especially copper) in their water. It
is entirely possible that there is some mineral or metal in your well water that
they can't handle - unfortunately, beyond copper, I don't have any idea what you
might need to look out for, there are so many variables.>
Do you know what it could be and if a water purifier would help?
<If you mean something like a reverse osmosis unit, that would probably work
to pull out any metals in the water, but the costs of such units are (in my
opinion) not worth it for just ghost shrimp. You might want to try
one of the water conditioners available that neutralizes heavy metals - I don't
know if this would work or not, but it's certainly worth a shot.>
I would also like to ask about one more thing.
<Alright.>
A tiny brown snail came in on a plant to the 2.5-gallon Betta tank. It
grew fast and looks like it laid eggs in patterns like horseshoes or other
curves all over the place. It is less than an inch across, kind of a rounded
shape and mottled brown. The eggs have started to hatch and there are already a
few baby snails. Do you know what kind of snail this is and what I should do
about them?
<As for what kind of snail, there are so many species - I suppose it's
probably some sort of pond snail, you might find more at http://www.applesnail.net/
. And for what to do with them.... Personally, since they
tend to devour plant life and reproduce at astounding rates, I would remove
them, they tend to make pests of themselves very quickly. More
information here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/PlantedTksSubWebIndex/snailsags.htm
.>
TIA, Joshua
Ludlow, Vermont
<Good luck with your fish/shrimp, Joshua! -Sabrina>
Clearing the Fog
I have a tropical fish tank which has developed grey water. It
has been set up for about 11 weeks. all the fish are very healthy but no amount
of water changes will clear the water.
Any hints, tips or clues to a solution?
<Well, to help you find out definitively what is causing this, can you tell
us more about your system? Is it freshwater, or saltwater? Are
you testing for ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, and pH? If so, what are
your readings? How large is the tank, and how many/what kinds of fish
are in it? Chances are, this cloudiness is a result of a
proliferation of bacteria in the tank, often brought on by overfeeding or other
means of getting too many nutrients in the water (overcrowding fish, etc). Let
us know more about your system, and we'll try to help you find a solution. Wishing
you well, -Sabrina>
Yours, Mark Holley
Need Clarity
Hi www crew!
<Hi, Don! Sabrina here, this evening>
Thanks for this great site!
<And thank you for the kind words.>
This is the second time I have ask a question, the first being about stocking.
But before I can really begin I need to solve a little problem. I have a 2 month
old 55 gallon tank filtered by an Emperor 400. No plants, just natural gravel
(1/2 pea size), some slate caves, one coconut cave and a small driftwood arch.
Current residents are 10 Zebra Danios and one Otto. The Danios were added to
start the cycling, the Otto after the brown algae started to form.
<Mmmm, algae....>
Plan is to return them to the LFS and house a breeding colony of L260 Plecos.
<Oh, you are after my very heart!! Of all the Loricariids out
there, this is by FAR my favorite!! I absolutely LOVE these little
plecs.>
Cycling was textbook perfect, with all the spikes and crashes occurring as you
would expect. Nitrates have never gone above 20 ppm due to daily, or almost
daily, 5 gallon water changes. Ammonia and nitrites have been at zero since
their initial spikes.
<So far, so good....>
That is until I added a very large knot of driftwood. It had been soaked for
about 2 weeks, the soak water being changed daily. This must have changed my
water chemistry enough to cause the tank to "re-cycle". The water went
cloudy and ammonia started to build up. The driftwood started to break down and
formed a white "mold" in the crevasses.
<Oh, that sucks. You might want to try running the wood through
the dishwasher (no soap!), or, if it's small enough, boil it.>
The ammonia spike crashed in about a day, but the resulting nitrites stayed
around 2.5 ppm for almost 2 weeks. I gave up and replaced the large knot of wood
with a the smaller arch and the coconut cave.
<Okay, so the problem wood's out of the picture, eh?>
Nitrites crashed in two days and the nitrates started to build up, but have been
kept below 20 ppm with frequent water changes.
<Sounds like you're having trouble battling those nitrates - there's gotta be
something making that so high; in a new tank, nitrates should be rather easy to
keep low.>
All the fish are doing very well, the Danios are very active and colorful. The
Otto appears to have doubled in length and tripled in weight. I feed the Danios
twice a day with a very small pinch of Tetra crisps
<Perhaps cut this back to once a day, and don't be afraid to skip a day every
now and then.>
and some dried blood worms twice a week. In the evening I drop half an algae
wafer in for the Otto.
<I'd cut this in half, too; a whole half of an algae wafer is a pretty big
meal for a single oto.>
Gravel is vacuumed during the FWCs. The only thing holding me back
from adding the Queen Arabesques is the water's appearance. It has always been
crystal clear (expect during the initial spikes) until the driftwood started the
second cycling. At that time the water became very white/cloudy. Today the white
has turned to murk. Much darker, almost muddy.
<Sounds perhaps like a sudden growth of bacteria, perhaps introduced or fed
by something with that hunk of driftwood, or maybe even something that would
have happened anyway - this is not an uncommon occurrence in new tanks, to be
honest.>
I did my water change last night and while pouring the tank water into the sink
you could see it was tinted green.
<Ahh, perhaps "greenwater" algae, then.>
You can't see this color in the tank, only against the white of my kitchen sink.
I never saw any green algae form anywhere in the tank, but with the Otto in
there I assumed that was normal.
<I would strongly recommend getting some hardy vascular plants in there
(anacharis/elodea, Vallisneria, water lettuce, etc.), as this will help with
removing nitrates which are probably feeding the bacteria and/or algae in the
water.>
I use treated tap water (Tetras "AquaSafe") for my FWCs, but nothing
else. No salt. We do have Chloramine in our water supply and I do see a trace of
ammonia in the new water after treatment. The tank continues to show zero
ammonia after the water changes, I assume because it is so diluted. I took a
water sample to a LFS to confirm my tests, all readings consistent with mine. Ph
is 6.8. So, what's causing this discoloration of my water?
<Excess nutrients, likely from extra food.>
I can understand the green algae, but what about the white haze?
<Again, likely bacteria.>
And am I causing harm to the fish by adding the trace of ammonia with all these
water changes.
<Consider making your water change water ahead of time in a seperate
Rubbermaid-type container. You might want to use a conditioner that
neutralizes ammonia as well.>
Would it help if I set up a slow siphon to replace the water though the filter
rather than just pouring it into the tank?
<As long as you match temperature and pH, you'll be fine.>
Or should I just break everything down and start over?
<Certainly not, I'm pretty sure you'd face this very same issue, anyway, if
only to a lesser degree.>
If I do start over, should I preserve the Bio Wheels or clean/replace them?
<They're likely fine, let 'em be.>
Although the fish do not seem affected, this tank is in our living room and
"She Who Controls The Love Life" is threatening the basement as a new
home for me and the tank if I can't get the water cleaned up.
<Hey, you've got a basement?? Excellent! No worries
about spills, and you can set up a whole WALL of plec tanks!>
So you see, this is becoming VERY personal.
<Yes, I can understand. Ask her to try to be patient, cut back on
feeding, and your problem should start to solve itself. Wishing you
well, -Sabrina.>
Don Clarke
Need Clarity - II
Hi Sabrina, or whoever gets this one, and thanks again for this great site.
<Sabrina here for ya>
I took your advice and have cut down feeding to once a day. I also cut back on
the algae wafers for my oto to a small (1/4) piece. About a week now and I still
have very cloudy green water. In fact it's now greener, you can see the color in
the tank, not just when poured in the sink as before.
<Not good, not good.... Well, not harmful, not a problem to the
fish, but very much not desirable, I'm sure....>
I knew that something has to be feeding this algae/bacteria, but the amount of
food I was giving the Danios was small enough that it was consumed in seconds. A
"whole half" of a wafer is a big meal for one oto, but the Danios
always ate any leftovers after it softened in the water.
<Yeah, if the problem is getting *worse*, despite less feeding....>
Still adding waste though, so I took your advice and cut all feeding in half.
But I also started looking for another source of the problem. Real easy, I check
my treated tap for more than just ammonia. It shows 20ppm of nitrate and 0.5
nitrite!
<Yikes! Bad news, indeed! You might want to double
check this with a different brand of test kits, just to be sure.>
Kind of explains why I can't get the nitrates below 20. So, am I banging my head
up against a wall in trying to clear this water?
<With nitrates that high in your tapwater - zowie! You are in for
a tough haul, at least.>
I really did not want to plant the tank as you had suggested,
<Well, something has to eat those nutrients - without vascular plants, algae
has a fine chance to grow.>
but adding ammonia, nitrite and nitrate to the tank during daily 10% water
changes can't be a good thing.
<Certainly not!>
My filter (Emperor 400) gives me 7+ turnover per hour and I never see any
ammonia or nitrite reading in the tank. It seems well cycled and doing it's
part.
<Good, that's very reassuring, especially with nitrite present in the tap -
yikes again!>
At first I was leaving the light (single 48" florescent) on from around
6:30am until I went to bed around 11:00pm. (I know, way too long.) I know this
could contribute to the green water, so I now leave it off until I get home from
work around 5:00pm and off at bedtime.
<Good, that's at least a bit of a start - but I'm pretty much convinced that
the nitrates are the biggest issue.>
Hasn't seemed to help. The tank is not set up against a wall, but is sticking
out from the wall, dividing our living and dinning rooms. The dinning room side
does get direct sunlight for about an hour in the AM, so I added a solid
background to that side last week. Plan was to be able to view the tank from
either side, but why double the viewing angles of green water?
<Might be nice, if you like the color green....>
Not much light enters from the front of the tank. Just a few lamps in the
evening.
<Okay.>
So I've got the nutrients down to the same level as my tap and darkened the
tank. Not sure what's next. Is there anyway to safely remove the nitrates from
the tap short of an R/O unit?
<An RO unit is an excellent option - perhaps the best option. You
could also use a UV sterilizer, which would kill the "greenwater"
algae, but still leave the door open for other algaes, which might have to be
manually removed. You could install an overflow/sump system and set
up a sort of a freshwater refugium (seperate tank on the system packed full of
hardy vascular plants). You could purchase RO water from a water
store for your water changes, could cost anywhere from fifteen cents to a dollar
a gallon. There are a few filter feeding animals, such as
bamboo/wood/Singapore shrimp and freshwater clams that would feed on the
"greenwater" algae, but I doubt that they could keep up with the
amounts of it. There is some evidence that using barley straw in
ponds inhibits algae growth as the straw decomposes; but to be honest, having
tried it in my own ponds, I am not at all convinced of its
effectiveness. Here is an article on it, in case you're interested in
trying this in your tank: http://www.aquabotanic.com/barleyarticle.html
. Be sure to open and read the PDF file linked at the bottom of the
page, as well; lots of info there - but again, I am very skeptical about the
effectiveness of this method, and do not know how it would affect an
aquarium. Again, planting the tank will probably help, as
well....>
If I stop doing water changes for a while will the algae/bacteria starve itself
out?
<I doubt it. And sooner or later, you'll have to do a water
change, and the nutrients will be back in the system, feeding the algae
again....>
Seems to me that I need a nutrient removal system that does not include adding
my tap water and it's 20ppm nitrates. Are plants the only answer?
<Still an option, but other options are available, as above. There
are also chemical algicides available, but I really do caution folks to use them
as an absolute last resort, as that is treating a symptom, not the problem, and
can lead to other problems, as well.>
I really want a rocky river bottom look for this tank. (I also really want a
Porsche, but drive a Ford, so I can handle disappointment)
<There are plants that can do well in many substrate types. Or
even better, you could use a regular sand/gravel substrate and cover that with
your "rocky river bottom" look, which would give you even more
aquascaping opportunity, perhaps look more natural, allow for better biological
filtration than large rocks alone, and give you a planting medium for some
vascular plants. Might be something worth implementing.>
Anything I could put in the extra media baskets that came with the filter? Just
a little extra charcoal in there now.
<Again, might try the barley straw idea....>
Any FW filter feeders that I could start a mutually beneficial relationship
with?
<As above - freshwater clams, filter feeding shrimp (which, incidentally, are
some of my favorite animals of all time).>
Anything but algae killing (fish/filter harming) chemicals.
<Ahh, good, glad to see you are not fond of that method!>
I fear that would just leave me with the white haze that started all this and a
dead bio filter.
<Likely. Again, algicides treat a symptom, not the problem.>
One the bright side, the fish are all doing great. The Danios came to me very
thin, pale and with clear fins. Now filled out and well striped on all fins,
tail. Beautiful gold edge on the dorsal.
<Wonderful!>
But this is going to be a pleco tank, not Danio Paradise. I need to get past
this water clarity problem so I can feel safe adding the Queen Plecos and get
SWCTLL off of my back.
<As for the plecs, the presence of the algae will not be an issue to them,
but I personally would hold off until done playing around for a solution,
especially with the readings from your tapwater.... Yikes again!>
Don
<I do hope you get this sorted out, Don. Please keep us
updated. Wishing you luck, -Sabrina>
Need Clarity, concluded!
Sabrina, Clarity has been achieved! Water looks so good I want to use it to
brew Coors!
<Excellent, wonderful! I'm so happy for you!>
Startling difference a few plants can make.
<Truly amazing, isn't it?>
Happened in the reverse order that it grew. First the green algae died off, but
left me with the white bacterial cloud that started this mess. Then within 2
days; CLARITY! You could almost watch it happen when it finally did.
Water reads 0/0/>5! Thanks for all your help with this.
<You bet, Don! I know it can't be nearly as exciting for me as it
is for you, but I really am very, very happy that this worked out for
you. It's always wonderful to be able to follow along with a problem
and see it finally fixed. Congratulations. Wishing you
well with your sparkling tank, -Sabrina>
Persistent nitrites/nitrates (11/22/03)
<Hi! Ananda here tonight...>
I have high readings of nitrate and nitrite in my aquarium.
<Gack! Time for water changes! Check for possible dead creatures in the
tank.>
I tried everything to get rid of the problem and it only seemed to be getting
worse. Today I notice that I had a dead snail.
<Bingo.>
I didn't know it was dead but I figure that it's been dead for a bout two weeks.
Would that have caused my water problem?
<Yup, that could definitely be the cause of it, especially if it was a big
snail that's taken a while to decay. You may want to institute some fairly large
water changes, and check your source water to make sure it doesn't have any
ammonia or nitrates. --Ananda>
Freshwater Nitrate Control (other than water changes) (11/21/03)
Greetings Bob, Anthony, and Crew!
<Hi! Ananda here today>
Does anyone have experience with Seachem's Matrix series (Matrix or Pond Matrix)
or Kent's Cell-Pore slabs for use in nitrate control?
<I've not used any of those. The cell-pore slabs are supposed to be great for
bio-filtration.>
Both products claim anaerobic break down of nitrates occurs within each product,
but I am suspicious as to the validity of these claims.
<Me, too.>
I have several very large fresh water cichlid tanks, and anything that would
allow me to reduce the number or volume of water changes would be a big bonus!
<Take a page from the marine aquarists and add a refugium. This would be a
separate tank that is plumbed to the main tank, rather like a sump. Check out
the WetWebMedia site for more info on plumbing a refugium. I would use Fluorite substrate and any
Vallisneria species or other fast-growing plant. Val.s are
tolerant of a wide range of conditions, so they should grow even in an African
cichlid tank. You want to plant the tank about 1/2 full of val.s, I think, to
allow them room to grow and multiply. Lighting for the refugium should be some
sort of fluorescent or compact fluorescent, depending on the size of the tank.
When the val.s grow so much that their tops are floating on the water surface,
either trim them severely (I use scissors) or pull up some of the large ones and
trade them in at the fish store for smaller ones. --Ananda>
"I love that clean tank water..."
My husband and I are having trouble with our water turning
cloudy. We use spring water because we thought that was better than
using tap water treated. When we cleaned both of our tanks we
cleaning them completely. The water will not clear up at all....what
do we need to do?
<You are over cleaning your tanks. This is recycling your tanks
causing a constant "New Tank Syndrome". Read this article
& all the recommended links: http://www.tomgriffin.com/aquasource/newtanksyndrome.shtml.> Thanks.....Julie
<Good luck--Pufferpunk>
Water quality
Hello. We are having real problems wit hour new tank. we have a 30 gallon
tank with about 8 fish, semi-aggressive.
<Yikes... how big will all these fishes grow to?>
The problem seems to be the water. We live in Florida and the water here isn't
that great.
<Generally very hard and alkaline, yes>
e have an undergravel filter and a power filter but we still get bad water
readings. Should we use non-tap water instead?
<Depends... mainly on the sorts of conditions that the particular species of
fishes you have enjoy, or will tolerate... Some groups like most Great Lakes of
Africa cichlids really enjoy the sort of water you have right out of your tap...
other areas of origin (the larger part of the Amazonas) prefer water that is
much softer and acidic... You can look up your livestock's preferences on
fishbase.org on the Net>
What would be the best thing to do with the fish if we changed all the water to
non-tap? Should we do this in spurts or all at once? Is this not a good idea?
HELP PLEASE! :)
Thanks for your time.
JJ
<Might well be that blending some filtered (RO, Deionized...) water with your
tap to a degree is beneficial... Again, you need to investigate your fishes
needs... including how big they are likely to get. Be chatting, Bob Fenner>
Another tank in the clouds
Thank you for taking the time to help me. I have a 55 gallon FW
tank, which I restarted after taking a few months off from fishkeeping, I have
been keeping fish for 4 years.
<Well, welcome back!! Sabrina here today>
My 55 gallons' water turned a milky white within one day. The ammonia
and nitrite is 0, the nitrate is about 30 ppm, and the pH is 6.9. It
was stocked with 6 Clown loaches, 4 angels(2 large, 2 small) 4 small Danios, 8
various tetras (all small) , and a small Albino channel cat.
<That high nitrate level and the stocking density are making me think this
cloudiness is from excess nutrients in the water causing a bacterial bloom;
essentially harmless, just an indicator of things getting a bit out of
whack.>
I lost all but one Loach, 2 of the Angels, a tetra, and the channel
cat, all within 3 days of this whiteness. The waters chemistry has
remained constant.
<Hmm.... was the nitrate level so high for a long time before the
cloudiness started?>
About 2 weeks before this, I had added one large piece of Malaysian driftwood,
and 2 small driftwood branches. I did not soak the Malaysian driftwood, for the
dealer said it would darken the water if I didn't, and I wanted to.
<Even after you soak it, it will still release the tannins that stain the
water. Some ways to clean driftwood to prepare it for the aquarium
are to put it in the dishwasher (no soap!), or boil it in a pot of water, pour
pots of boiling water over it, or bake it in the oven (not sure about that last
one, have heard of it being done, though). This will prevent any
nasties from being brought in. If you really like that dark stain (I
know I do), if the driftwood doesn't get the water to where you like it, add
some peat moss in the filter - this will also reduce the pH, so may be
desirable, may not - but will certainly stain the water quite well.>
The 2 small pieces had white "furriness" all over them after 2 days,
which I scrubbed off. Any suggestions as to what happened to my
tank, it seems to be improving after a 50% change, and new sponge and carbon
media (Fluval 304)??
<The cloudiness, a result of excess nutrients - the fish deaths, not
sure. *Possibly* something brought in off the wood, but that is a bit
far-fetched. What symptoms did they exhibit?>
Also, while I was vacuuming the gravel during this, I noticed dozens of thin,
long, greyish worms. All were in the gravel, mostly near low current
spots. What might these disgusting little things be??
<Worms exactly. Also due to excess nutrients in the water; channel
cats are messy (and not the greatest aquarium denizens, either), so he might
have been *partly* to blame, but excess food, overfeeding, not enough water
changes, not enough cleaning of the canister filter, all of these will add to
the excess nutrient issue. As you reduce these problems by feeding
less, vacuuming the gravel more, cleaning the filter out more regularly,
avoiding extremely messy fish, the worms (and cloudiness) will go away.>
Thank you, your website is an excellent resource for me.
<And thank you very much for the kind words! Hope everything
proceeds well for your tank, and again, welcome back to the
hobby! -Sabrina>
Foggy Fish tank
I have 3 tanks all freshwater-1 75gal, 2-20gal. One of my 20gal
tanks has become extremely cloudy I moved the fish and plants did a
complete cleaning including the gravel.
<Cloudiness in established tanks is usually due to a bacterial bloom in the
aquarium, which is often caused by an excess of nutrients in the water
(overfeeding, etc.). Cleaning out the tank so excessively isn't at
all necessary; just a vacuuming of the gravel, a water change, and reducing
feeding amounts will cure this.>
The first day the water was clear day 2 back to extreme cloudiness.
<Cloudiness in a newly set up tank is normal, will go away in a couple of
days (sometimes a bit longer).>
I tested the water (ph-ammonia-nitrite) nitrite showed 0 ppm, ammonia
0 ppm,
<After such an extensive cleaning, the tank will have to cycle again - do be
prepared for that.>
ph 7.6 - I purchased liquid neutral regulator which claims to adjust high or ph
to 7.0
<This might also be unnecessary, depending upon what fish you are keeping,
etc. - what is the pH in your established tanks? And your tap
water? If the fish are used to 7.6, it might be best to leave it
there (again, depending upon species, etc.). A steady pH is more
important than an exactly right pH.>
I also purchased Proquatics water conditioner, its been about 3hrs since I used
current purchases and there seems to be no change
<It'll take a little bit (2-3 days) for the cloudiness to go
away. Again, do be prepared for the cycle when you add fish again -
be testing for ammonia, nitrite, nitrate daily, and do water changes as
necessary. You should be just fine.>
any suggestions or reasons my 1 tank is in trouble
<No trouble at all; just natural things going on. A little less
food, perhaps more frequent water changes will prevent this from happening in
the future. Wishing you well, -Sabrina>
Cloudy tank with green water (10/17/03)
<Hi! Ananda here tonight...>
Hi guys, your website has been very helpful, but I can't seem to find a case
quite like mine. The water in my aquarium is cloudy; it has been this
way for MONTHS! I know that this is probably due to improper amounts
of "good" bacteria in the water (the cycle hasn't been established?).
<That's one probable cause, yes. The other is that you simply do not have
sufficient biofiltration capacity for the number of inhabitants in the tank. How
big is your tank, what's in it, and what are you using for filtration?>
And I know I'm not supposed to make large water changes of more than 25 or 30
percent, BUT...when I do change the water, the water I remove is
GREEN! I thought maybe this was due to a lot of algae in the water (
I don't have any Plecos or algae eaters. they all died!).
<Sounds like algae to me, too. You probably have a phosphate problem in
addition to the insufficient filtration problem. Check your phosphate
levels...for this situation, the SeaTest/FasTest kit would be a good one.>
So I've been trying to change a lot of the water to get rid of all the algae,
and use an algae kill chemical treatment...it's not working and my water is
still cloudy because of the large water changes!!
<Your algae kill treatment may also be adversely affecting the
bio-filter!>
I regularly put in "stress zyme" to add good bacteria to the water and
I've tried a chemical which is supposed to get rid of "new tank"
syndrome...
<"Stress Zyme" won't help cycle your tank. The one and only thing
I've ever seen that will is Bio-spira. It's refrigerated, contains live
nitrifying bacteria, and is thus expensive. But it won't immediately help with
the algae problem; it will do nothing to reduce the phosphate levels. And if you
don't have sufficient filtration equipment, your cloudy water may return shortly
after using the Bio-spira.>
How do I get rid of the green water (Algae?) and the
cloudiness???? Or should I just start the tank cycle from
scratch? Any suggestions would be GREATLY appreciated!
Thanks
<Test the tank water *and* your source (tap) water for phosphates. If you
have high phosphates in your source water, you're going to need to use either
RO/DI (reverse osmosis/de-ionized) water for the tank, or keep a phosphate
absorber in the system (do check the WetWeb forums at http://wetwebfotos.com/talk
for opinions about the various products available). Regarding whether you should
start from scratch, that depends somewhat on whether or not you have sufficient
filtration equipment for your tank size and bio-load... if I could get an idea
on what you've got for that, I'd be able to give you a better answer about that.
--Ananda>
RE: Cloudy tank with green water (10/18/03)
HI, it's me again with the green water...
<Hi! Ananda back again...>
I checked the levels in my tank today.. pH was 6.6, no ammonia or nitrates
. I do not have a way to check for phosphates as of yet.
<Definitely something to get soon...>
I have a power filter 30 (up to 150 gallons per hour) with 3 way filtration (a
mesh strain and carbon chips...I always keep the same frame in the filter. I
only change out the mesh and carbon).
<The frame doesn't do much for bio-filtration... the carbon itself probably
contributes more to the bio-filtration than the frame does. Saying the plastic
frame helps with the bio-filtration is, IMO, a bunch of hooey. However, there
should be a "retrofit" available to add some real bio-filtration: it's
a sponge, shaped to fit between the cartridge and the outflow. I would
definitely get one of those for the filter.>
My tank is a 20 gallon. I have 9 fish (4 gold barbs, 2 ghost glass
catfish, and 3 black tetras) which I feed a little every other
day. Do you think the filtration is OK?
<I think you need a lot more bio-filtration than what you have. If you can
swing it financially, you might also consider an additional filter, either one
with a bio-wheel, or a sponge filter and air pump.>
Should I continue to use the algae kill treatment?
<I would quit using it.>
Do you still recommend checking for phosphates?
<Definitely.>
Thanks again. you've been a big help!
<You're welcome. --Ananda>
Short cycle, stagnant water
Hi there,
<Hello, Sabrina here today, watching minutes tick by>
I have an aquarium that just lost 3 guppies. Did a water change and
cycled for about 3 days.
<Three days is not long enough for a tank to cycle
completely.... I assume there were no fish in it at the time?>
Now have a few cherry barbs and gold barbs (2 each). Now I have an
oil slick at the top of the tank. My ammonia is 0.
<Please test for nitrite, nitrate, and pH, as well - and keep testing for
ammonia. I expect you'll be seeing a spike in ammonia very soon
(unless it's happened and fallen back already), then shortly after, a spike in
nitrite, and as that falls, nitrate will rise. You'll need to do
water changes to keep ammonia and nitrite down until the cycle's
complete. After that, when adding fish, only add one or two at a
time.>
What is this slick and what should I do about it?
<This film is likely indicative of inadequate circulation in the tank - what
kind of filtration are you using? Any aeration? It may
also be a result of using aerosols in the room (hairspray, air freshener) or
from any other airborne contaminants. For a quick fix, dip a small
cup in at just the top of the water and pour the filmy water out; do this
repeatedly until it's gone. Another quick fix is to get a paper towel
and lay it on the surface of the water, then quickly remove it. You
might have to do that several times. For a long-term fix, be sure you
have a good lid on the tank, use adequate filtration, add aeration if you have
none, and do not use aerosols in the room. This is important, as too
much buildup on the surface will prevent gas exchange and effectively suffocate
the fish.>
Help! I don't want to lose my new fishies!
<Hope all goes well for your and your new finny
dudes! -Sabrina>
Thanks from a novice in Texas
Re: Tank Water ... and terrifying tanks
<Greetings! Ananda here tonight...>
One last thing, (hopefully) we went and purchased some bloodworms which we were
told were good for the fish.
<Frozen or live? Live bloodworms have a chance, however slight, of carrying
disease...>
This is the only thing 'new' that we have put in the water within the last week
and a half. Tonight one of our neon tetras began swimming around as
though they were paralyzed on one side, in the water bubbles upside down and
just nonsensically. We have had our greatest success with our tetras
than platys or any other fish we have tried to keep. It's like it
cant keep control of its body at all, what's wrong with it?
<Could be a pH problem. Tetras prefer acidic water, with a pH of below 7.
Platies, on the other hand, prefer alkaline water, with a pH of about 7.2 or
more. What is the pH reading in the tank?>
The other thing is we also went to a Wal-Mart and went to their fish dept and
was horrified by what we saw.
<We've heard this all too often...>
Numerous dead fish in 90% of the tanks and many infected with ich and ready to
die in others algae slime build up on the bottom and on the glass, it was really
putrefying really, I got a manager to look at the conditions of the tanks with a
promise that something to be done about it, however Wal-Mart is not notoriously
known (here anyways) as being good fish keepers.
<I have heard of exactly three Wal-Mart's with uniformly good, healthy fish
and clean tanks. In all cases, someone working in the store keeps fish (in two
cases, saltwater fish).>
I plan on revisiting the store in the next few days to see whether or not
anything has been done about it but if it hasn't, couldn't you call the humane
society even though they are a merchant?
<Hmmm. Definitely a possibility, though I'm not sure what the humane society
could do.>
Or what can be done because its just cruel to have them in such a neglected
environment.......... I am by no means no expert but any expert could and would
tell you that this is uncalled for.
<Agreed...and a pity that the department manager has not realized the cost to
the store in lost revenue, due not only to dead fish, but also to the fact that
customers will see the poor conditions and be less likely to get *any* pet
supplies there...as it seems a fair number of fish-keepers have other pets as
well, the store is also likely losing on the cat/dog/other pet supplies fronts,
too. I would write a letter to the manager of the local store, with a copy sent
to the regional and national headquarters. Those addresses should be available
at the company web site. It may seem like a drop in the bucket, but with enough
drops, the bucket will fill up! --Ananda>
Salad for fish? (10/11/03)
Hi,
<Hi! Ananda here tonight...>
I have a freshwater 45 gal hex tank. The filter is the bio-wheel. I started
feeding my fish romaine lettuce and frozen bloodworms.
<Romaine lettuce is not something I would recommend for many fish... a
commercial food based on spirulina algae would be more suitable....>
Before this the water was crystal clear. But now the water is
cloudy. I test the water frequently and so far no problems. What
might be causing this?
<Likely the filter cannot keep up with the extra fish waste from the
lettuce.>
Is there anything to clear this up?
<Yup. Start with a few water changes (maybe 30% the first day, and another
20% the next day). I would quit feeding the lettuce, as it has extremely little
food value for your fish. Algae tablets for your bottom feeders or spirulina
flakes for your other herbivores would be a good replacement. Also be careful to
not overfeed.>
Thanks, Judy Yocom
<You're welcome. --Ananda>
Help!
Thank you very much.
<Any time.>
I checked my tank last night when I got home and sure enough,, Major ammonia
spike. (between stress and unsafe level according to my testing
kit).
<Sounds like one of those 'ammonia indicator' thingies? I've heard
that those can be inaccurate, but haven't used them myself. I'd
recommend to get liquid reagent test kits for ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, and
pH.>
I hadn't tested the water levels before I left and I had found another dead barb
that had been a victim of Chiclet the Severum that I was not aware was whacked
(found it pretty much after I got home from taking her to her new tank). So I
have a feeling the ammonia may have been high when I left. Did about a 30 %
water change and put fresh ammo carb in the media basket.
<Plan on some more water changes, if necessary.>
Found I had run out of filters, so I'll replace that this weekend. I
was definitely worried about bothering the clown loaches w/ all the medicine and
one of my plants didn't look so great. My ph is typically
8.0-8.2.
<Yeah, that's worth bringing down. If you don't mind the stain,
get some peat.>
I think I will get a common Pleco for about the next 3-4 months to make sure
everything is stable as I am considering using distilled water to make my water
changes from now on. (do you think that is a good idea?)
<Not really, to tell you the truth; the plecs sold as 'common'
plecs get, well, monstrous, given the opportunity. Some reach a good
two feet; all 'common' plecs are destined to be well over a foot, in any
case. Best to just keep testing your water for ammonia, nitrite,
nitrate, and pH, and when all is stable and healthy, just get the plec you
want.>
Tested my tap water last night and the ph is 8.4! Also, it had some trace
nitrates as well.
<Blah. Might want to start preparing your water in a large
container (Rubbermaid trash can works great) with a bunch of peat in it to bring
the pH down (again, if you don't mind the stain).>
Once I know all is well, I will be ordering another gold nugget. I
have a huge driftwood centerpiece (is that the same as bogwood?)
<Yup.>
It discolors the water, but only very slightly. Most of the time my water is
pretty crystal clear. Oh and I was wrong on the filter. It's 240 (or
is it 260?) w/ one filter and basket and bio wheel. The 330 is on the
20 gal tank. (there's a whole other story as to why that one is so
over-filtered, but once again thanks to my husband and bad advice from a LFS I
don't go to anymore)
<heh, okay>
That tank is being upgraded to a 55 gal at the end of October. I will
eventually be putting a 330 on the 37 gal as well.
<Wonderful. Sounds like you've got a good plan going, glad to hear
it. -Sabrina>
-Tetra Freshwater Additives-
Hi everybody, I started out with a fish bowl with two goldfish in it, as a
present from my girl friend. Next day I was at the book store looking for a book
on goldfish. The day after the small bowl was changed with a 2 gallon bowl (it
had to be a bowl to preserve the original present :). I slipped in a small
filter and started doing 50% water changes every three days. Next, I added some
Tetra NitrateMinus, thinking it would help me keep the nitrate level low.
<Hmmm...> MISTAKE. Too little water, too much bioload. As it says on the
package, using NitrateMinus with high levels of nitrate did increase the Kh to
15dH Ph to 8.5+. The little guys were doing fine, but I owed them a proper tank.
So, I bought an 18 gallon tank, transferred the substrate (with the NitrateMinus
mixed in it), the filter and the little guys into their new home. It's been
three weeks and I have 0 ammonia, 0 nitrite and less than 5ppm nitrate. <I
wouldn't get so hung up in nitrate, it's the least toxic of the three. You need
to be concerned with ammonia, nitrite, and pH. The nitrate level makes little
difference.> This time the KH is stable at 5dH but the PH has gone up to
around 8.3 from first fill measurement of 7.2. The package says that the product
has a stabilizing effect on PH and KH. What do you think about this product, it
looks I don't need to make any water changes yet, but it somehow doesn't feel
right. <I would suggest a 25% water change every two weeks for these critters
with a gravel vacuum.> Should I do water changes to try to bring PH down
slowly. <I would stop using the NitrateMinus, and as the pH goes back down to
around neutral, pick up some Seachem Neutral Regulator to keep the pH buffered
at 7 if needed.> With Kh being around 5dH, I'm afraid to have a sudden Ph
crash. The fishes seems to be doing fine. Should I change anything? <Like I
said, once the pH drops back down (with goldfish this should happen on it's own)
use some Neutral Reg.>
Tetra also has another product called Easybalance, which is supposed
to decrease the water changes to %50 every six months. Sounds too good to be
true. Still you'd have to remove the solid waste from the tank bottom somehow I
guess. <They can come out with any magic juice and make any claim they want
but you'll be hard pressed to surpass the effectiveness of a good water change
with a gravel vac. I would save your money!>
So, do you have any ideas about these products? Are they any good, or needed?
<In short, you don't need either. Frequent partial water changes with a
gravel vacuum combined with conservative feedings are all you'll need to keep
these guys happy. Good luck! -Kevin>
Thanks,
Husnu
Bettas don't like nitrites!
<Hi! Ananda here tonight...>
I have a 2 week old tank containing a Betta splendens (male), 2 zebra Danios, 2
platy and 2 black molly.
<Ack! Your tank is far too new to be holding that many fish. You should have
let it cycle first.>
Everything was fine for the first week and a half until the nitrite level raised
to about 5ppm. I carried out a 25% water change and then things started to go
wrong with my Betta. He started to turn white, loosing his colour, his skin is
rough and raised and he sits lifeless at the top of the tank refusing to eat. As
the black mollies started to pick on him I put him in a large isolation net but
it has made no difference. His fins appear thin and straggly. What can I do?
It's my daughters fish and I can't let him die.
<Your Betta can *not* survive in water with nitrites. You need to temporarily
move him into his own tank, or, if you must, a bowl or something that can hold
at least a half gallon of water. There is a nice little 1-gallon tank with a
filtration system for under $10 that I've seen available at chain store pet
stores and even Wal-Mart and Meijers stores. Or if you can't do that, cut off
the top of a milk jug! This guy really needs pristine water conditions, pronto,
if he's going to survive. You will be doing *daily* partial water changes to
keep his water quality good! I would change about half of it a day, or more if
necessary. You need to keep the ammonia at zero, too, or his gills will get
damaged. Mollies, platies, and Danios are hardier fish, but I would continue
with daily partial water changes in the main tank so they are not stressed too
much. --Ananda >
Cloudy Water
Although I have read several articles on cloudy water, non relates to my
present problem. I'm hoping you can help. I have a 46 gal freshwater tank which
has done fine for two years. Suddenly the water has turned cloudy. Recently
there was a buildup of algae on rocks, so I boiled them in sea salt and rinsed
them well before replacing them. I also recently added a few new plants, which I
removed and tested in my guppy 10 gal tank, which didn't turn cloudy after 24
hours, so I reintroduced them
into the big tank.
pH and ammonia levels are fine.
Also there is a film of bubbles on surface.
Any ideas?<I wouldn't add any chemicals to the water... those wannabe miracle
cures, etc. I would just perform water changes ...once maybe every other day,
until the water isn't cloudy anymore... also check your filter cartridge for
blockage, buildup. Good luck, IanB>
Treating Tap Water Pt. II? No, Pt. III!
>Thank you again for your advice.
>>Quite welcome.
>When you suggest that I filter through some peat, is this something that I
can add directly to my filter.
>>Yes indeed.
>As I stated before, I am using an Ehiem Pro 2. It pulls water
into the bottom of the canister and then filters the water up through the
material. I have the mechanical filter (ceramic material covered by a
sponge) in the first stage. In the second stage I have the biologic
filter substrate with the ammo-chips resting in a bag on top of it.
>>Absolutely, but I want you to put the ammo-chips immediately after the
mechanical filtrant, and I would mix carbon with those as well, then the peat,
then the biological filtrant. You want the biological filtrant
portion to receive completely cleaned water. The peat, if it will not
fit with the ammo-chips, can also be placed along with the biological filtrant,
or you can even fill a used piece of pantyhose or knee-highs with the peat and
bury it in the gravel where it will receive some flow. (I just love
old pantyhose! Too bad I never wear 'em!)
>Can I put peat (in a bag or not in a bag?) in the bottom of the
canister? There is about an inch and a half space between the bottom
of the canister and the bottom of the first stage. There is almost no
room elsewhere in the system. Neil Markus
>>Yes, you could do that, and I see no reason why it would cause any great
problems. However, you may find that you want to substitute at least
half the ammo-chips with good quality carbon, because peat tends to stain the
water (think of South American streams that are stained dark with tannic
acid). Best of luck! Marina
Raising KH
>Hi Marina,
>>Good evening.
>I am using tap water for a planted freshwater aquarium. My tap water has a
GH of about 7 and a KH of about 2-3. What can I use to raise the KH safely? Is
it baking soda maybe? I have a 58g tank.
>>Yes indeed, you can, though if it's particularly soft or well-buffered
it may bounce. I would suggest in addition to that using a bit of
dolomite or crushed coral in a bit of old pantyhose buried in the substrate or
placed somewhere with decent water flow. This will instead slowly
buffer the water and hold it there.
>Thanks, Ken
>>Most welcome, and best of luck. Marina
Red Wag Platy - and a Whole Slew of Other Stuff
Please Help a newbie to the hobby,
<Sabrina here, to try to do exactly that>
I am VERY new to the fish experience and am learning quickly. Three
weeks ago, I gave each of my six year old twins a 1 1/2 gallon fish
tank for their birthdays. We followed the pet stores set-up
instructions. Came back a week later had the pH tested and then
bought our first fish. We purchased two red wag platies. They
were small, so we put them in the same tank. One died within the
week. So we took a water sample to the store and got a swordfish for
replacement. In the other tank we got a red tail shark and a male
guppy. The red tail shark died within two days. We took a
water sample in ( they didn't test it) and got a female guppy. NOBODY
in all of this tested my water or said hey you should test your pH.
<Okay.... It's definitely time for a new fish
store! Where to start.... Well, first off, please
understand that 1 1/2 gallons is a really, really small space. Not
many fish can squeeze into there comfortably - the only fish I'd recommend for a
1 1/2 gallon tank is a single male (or female, if you like 'em) Betta splendens
(Siamese fighting fish) - please never put two males in a tank together, though,
as they will fight to the death. They don't require filtration or
aeration, nor do they need a heater, and they're very tough, beautiful
fish. Next, the red-tailed shark reaches nearly five inches in
length, and gets to be an aggressive fish - won't even fit in a 1 1/2 gallon
tank, shame on your fish store! Also, double shame on them for not
testing your water! Definitely get a test kit for pH, ammonia,
nitrite, and nitrate, if you don't have them already. These are the
things your fish store should have sold you, not more fish! Also, are
you using a tap water conditioner, to remove
chlorine/chloramine? This is also quite crucial, as
chlorine/chloramine is toxic to fish.>
The male guppy aggressively chased my female guppy, so I had to separate them
within a few hours. So, we put the original red wag platy (now about
two weeks with us) in with the male guppy (now about 1 week with
us). This combination worked well. HENCE, my first
discovery that male guppies can be very territorial.
<Well, it's not so much a territory thing as that the male was trying
desperately to breed, and the female probably wasn't very
interested. Best to keep these fish in something larger (even a 10
gallon tank would suffice) where you can keep 2-3 females per male.>
The sword fish ( about a week with us) and the female guppy ( one day with us)
were paired together in the other tank. This seemed to work
well. We had harmony for two more days. Then our female
guppy dropped about 15 babies. She proceeded to die the next day.
<I'm sorry you lost her!>
So, now we chose to move the swordfish into the male guppy's tank while we set
up a third 1 1/2 gallon tank so that he would not eat the babies. The
male guppy tormented the sword fish so bad that we had to put the swordfish into
the third tank before the guppy killed / stressed it to death. HENCE,
our second lesson swordfish that have swords are males and won't get along with
testosterone driven guppies that are 1/2 their size!
<Well, check and see if your swordtail is a female, too; the easiest way to
tell is to look at the anal fin (that's the fin on the belly of the fish, near
it's tail). If this is round and fan-like, it's a
female. If it's pointed and thin, it's a male. Look at
your male guppy for reference on what it should look like. I've seen
male guppies try to breed with female platies, and swordtails aren't that far
off.>
Now the swordfish started swimming funny. He died 24 hours
later. I didn't think and didn't know to test its pH. WOW,
was it off. Hence, third lesson always keep an eye on pH.
<Well, unless the pH is changing drastically, or is way out of the fish's
tolerance range (most livebearers can take anything from 6.5 on up to 8.0), it
shouldn't be the root of the problem. I'm thinking this (and the
other deaths) is more likely related to ammonia or nitrite, as those are very
toxic to fish. Please check out the 'cycling' FAQ's at http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/estcycfaqs.htm
- this will give you a bit of an idea of what's going on in your tanks.>
Within two days the male guppy and the red wag platy developed
ICH. Hence, fourth lesson - It is great to live near a 24 hour super
Wal-Mart so that you can get ich treatment at midnight.
<Oh, yikes! Anything that can go wrong....>
We lost the male guppy before I figured out the ammonia is a second important
component to healthy fish. Now we have got the water
"de-ammonia-ized" and my red wag looks great.
<Indeed, ammonia is extremely important - the best way to be rid of it is
simply with water changes.>
We have experienced all of this in less than 3 weeks. My red wag is
still in isolation because it has been only a week since the first signs of ich
and she has only been totally ich free for about two days. Plus, I
don't want her to eat my 3 week old baby guppies.
<Here's an article on freshwater ich, so you can better understand the
lifecycle of this nasty parasite: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwich.htm
. Hopefully it's been wiped out by the medication - NOT a fun
parasite to deal with (not that ANY are....)>
Now lesson #5, Female guppies have a tiny black spot on their bellies
and they should be sexed and separated from their male counterparts by week 4 if
you don't want more babies! ! Wow, I can't believe I am still hanging
in there.
<Yup.... this little livebearer is sometimes known as the "Millions
Fish" due to its extremely prolific nature.>
I now have perfect pH and non-existing ammonia in all my tanks.
<Good. What about nitrite and nitrate?>
MY QUESTIONS ARE -
1.) How do I tell a male from a female in the red wag platies?
<Same way as swordtails, guppies, and most other livebearer - look for that
pointed anal fin of the male, rounded fan-like anal fin of the female.>
2.) Will I have the testosterone driven issues with a male red wag
plates that I had with my male guppy?
<Well, possibly, but again, this is a drive to breed, not aggression.>
3.) My water has a tendency to get cloudy in my small 1
1/2 gallon tanks. The tanks don't have any
filtration. They use only a air stone. Am I doing
something wrong or do I just need to get one of those very small filtering
systems for small tanks? In the one tank, I only have the red wag (
that been receiving medication for ich over the past week). The other
tank had the 15 baby guppies. I moved the 5 females out of there
today. I think there is another one or two females I can move out,
but they need another week for me to make sure they are females.
<Well, part of the cloudiness is probably attributable to the tanks
cycling. I would very, very strongly recommend getting a ten gallon
aquarium for all your fish (perhaps minus the babies). This can be
gotten quite inexpensively as a kit at a Wal Mart or most any pet store, but
please be sure to get one with fluorescent lighting, NOT incandescent lighting,
as the incandescents get too hot and can really mess with your tank's
temperature. It may cost a touch more, but it's worth
it. Most kits come with a hang-on power filter, which is far and
above what I recommend to new aquarists. The kit should also come
with a tap water conditioner for removing chlorine/chloramine from your tap
water. The reason I am recommending this is that, as I mentioned
earlier, 1 1/2 gallons is really a TINY space to try to keep fish in, and it
will be nearly impossible to keep ammonia and nitrite at zero; it's also
impossible to filter these tiny tanks efficiently.>
4.) How important is it that I check for Nitrates?
<Well, nitrates are only toxic to fish in very high amounts, and livebearers
are tough little fish - but in such tiny, tiny spaces, water quality can quickly
get out of hand, and the nitrates can easily get to toxic
levels. It's definitely a good idea to have a test kit on hand and
check occasionally. Far more important, though, it nitrite, which is
nearly as toxic as ammonia is to the fish, and definitely needs to be checked,
as it is the second step in the nitrogen cycle (again, I recommend you to the
Cycling FAQ's). Ammonia and nitrite, anything above zero should be
considered toxic, and should be remedied with a water change.>
5.) I read from your site that guppies and plates like a little salt
in their water. How do I know how much to put in? What
should my pH be if I add salt?
<In my tanks, I use one tablespoon of aquarium salt to every ten gallons of
water. Some people prefer to use one tablespoon to every five
gallons. In a 1 1/2 gallon tank, probably one-third to one-half of a
teaspoon would be about right. But do keep in mind that salt does NOT
evaporate, and after adding it initially, do not add any more when adding water
due to evaporation, ONLY when you do a water change. Again, tanks
this small are going to be so difficult to dose, I really, REALLY recommend
upgrading to a 10 gallon tank. Or even larger, if you
like. As far as the pH goes, again, livebearers are tough little
fish, and can tolerate a very wide range of pH - the important issue is to not
let the pH fluxuate - a steady pH that's a little low or a little high is far
better than a ph that is constantly fluxuating.>
Thanks for all the help. I have two local pet stores and they do not
seem very knowledgeable in the fish area! Lisa Stubbings
<Unfortunately, it seems a lot of pet stores don't seem so knowledgeable, at
times. Try to find a small, privately owned store dedicated to
aquarium fish only - they often have much more knowledgeable staff and might be
better able to help. But even with their advice, I also urge you to
do research on any fish you are interested in before purchasing, to prevent
ending up with things like a five-inch mean red-tailed shark. I wish
you much better luck, and keep us updated!>
Water Parameters for freshwater Angel Fish
Hi,
<Hello>
I have a 20 gallon aquarium and am new at this hobby. I bought the
aquarium as a kit from my LFS. They gave me everything I needed
including a heater and all the necessary water conditioning agents for my new
tank. I let it run for 24 hours as they said and then bought a small
angel fish for it. I had my water tested a while back and they said
it was at the stage where I could add another fish if I wanted
too. Well a couple months have passed and I have done 10-20 percent
water changes weekly adding stress coat with water conditioning in it to the
water when I change it.
<Nice record keeping. Stress coat may not be necessary, as long as
you are adding something to dechlorinate the water.>
I looked all over your sight and could not find a part where it told me what my
values needed to be in my aquarium for angel fish.
<The best site for this info is http://www.
fishbase.org - search for freshwater angelfish. Best pH range:
6.0 - 8.0>
I want to test my own aquarium so that I don't have to drive to the store every
time I want it tested.
<Right on>
What are the pH ranges for angel fish?
<As above.>
What should my nitrite, nitrate, and ammonia levels be at?
<Ammonia and Nitrite should be at zero, Nitrate should be as close to zero as
you can get. Your regular water changes will keep the Nitrate in
check.>
When reading what I could find it said that my ammonia should be very close to 0
if not 0. And my nitrates should be around the same. but I'm getting
confused with all the information and sometimes get confused what is supposed to
be 0 and what is supposed to be 5.0 and the like. If you could tell
me what I the values need to be at for angel fish I'd much appreciate it.
thanks for reading this lengthy question, Sam
<Thanks for asking. Sounds like you are on the right track, keep
it up. -Gage>
Surface Film
Hi All,
I have a small (but lovely) freshwater aquarium. I continually get a surface
film on the water (it looks cloudy). Will this inhibit gas transfer between the
water and the air?
<It is possible, and can also affect light transfer.>
If so are there ways of removing it (cheaply?)?
<It is possible that it is related to what you are feeding, make sure you are
not overfeeding, if you are feeding frozen food, thaw it out and toss the
juice. Sometimes a paper towel will soak up the surface
film. If really thick, a fine net. Running carbon in your
filter could help. They make surface skimmers that you might be able
to incorporate into your filtration scheme so the surface water is getting
filtered. Best Regards, Gage>
Thanks,
Adam L
Discus, peat and carbon
Hi Guys,
<Hello Adam>
I am about to setup my first discus tank! I hear peat is a good thing to add in
the filter system.
<Can be, yes... as a "natural" source of pH, alkalinity adjustment,
addn. of tannins, flavines...>
But, as with most things, there is a down side - the yellow colour it turns the
water. If I use carbon as well will I get rid of the colour AND the other good
stuff as well. If so then the carbon will defeat the purpose.
<Mmm, only to some extent. Fine to use both>
Some people suggest that peat leaches ammonia and phosphates. Is this true?
<Not "good" peats (non-alkaline treated, well-decomposed,
"darker" types), that have been properly prepared (lightly boiled,
left to cool)>
Also, if I do use peat how long should I use it before replacing?
<A month or so is about right. Best to place in (Dacron polyester) bags that
you can easily place, remove... twixt mechanical filter media... as in
in-between "fiber" in a corner, outside power or canister filter>
Some suggest only a day or two and others about a month! I tend to think that
more regular changes would be best otherwise the peat will act as a bio filter
(I'm assuming that is a bad thing ... is it?).
<Really best to "just experiment" here. For your type of source
water, substrate in the system, other interactive effects, to see what
"goes on" over time>
I know that the fish don't mind the yellow colour of the water but I do and I
want to have my cake and eat it too. Are there any additives that you recommend
in place of peat.
<A few "black water tonics" (e.g. those by Tetra, Dupla, others)
that are "extracts" from peat>
Thanks for having such a great site.
Cheers,
Adam Langman
Australia
<Thank you for being part of it. Bob Fenner>
FW environmental disease
>Hi my names Cora I've been doing tanks for years and until recently I've
never had any trouble.
>>Hello Cora, Marina here.
>A lady contacted me because I take in unwanted fish. Due to her
moving from Ohio to Maryland she needed a home for her fish (black
mollies). She told me to come get tank and all so I
did. Needless to say when I got there the water was black!
>>Ack! (And uh oh.)
>I felt bad for the fish caught them drained the tank and loaded it all up
into my car and brought it home. I gave that tank a good cleaning no
chemicals used of course and used water from my 55 gallon tank that had just had
a partial water change the night before.
>>Personal experience: mistake #1. (Groaning, because I learned
my mistake with a customer's fish.)
>I let the fish float for 15 minutes and then released
them. Needless to say a little while later I notice the fish were
starting to act really funny. I checked the temperature it was a
little high so I lowered it the water then started to get a milky white.
>>Free floating bacteria found plenty of nutrients--new tank syndrome.
>And the fish were still acting funny and 2 died. I pulled the
fish from that tank and floated them in my 55 gallon released them and they did
fine.
>>I wouldn't have done that, but you saved the rest. My concern
is the very real risk to your well-established tank by introducing the new
fishes with no quarantine whatsoever, coming out of a foul-looking (but
apparently healthy) tank.
>I left them in the 55 over night and by morning the other tank had turned
clear (no chemicals were used at any point of my set up ) so I put in 2 clown
loaches and a few mollies needless to say they started to fly through the tank
and act as though they were going to die I immediately put them back into my 55
and now they are fine but the other tank is milky white again. Can
you give me any ideas as to what might be going on? I've worked in
pet shops and have had tanks for years and never experienced anything to this
effect. Any information would be greatly appreciated!
Totally
Confused, Cora
>>Again, this sounds like new tank syndrome, though it usually takes a few
hours for the bacteria to get a good foothold. You never mentioned
the size of this new tank, and I cannot recommend adding so many fish so quickly
unless we're talking about a 75 gallon or larger set up. At this
point you MUST remove everything from the tank and fill it with water, then add
bleach at a ratio of 1Cup/5 gallons. Let it sit like this a few
hours, then drain and allow to dry. I would do this with everything
that was associated with that tank as well. If you're very worried
about the tank, do this procedure twice, and then when ready to set it up again
start with feeder gups first. Beyond that it's difficult to say what
to do, I'm assuming you know to match temperature and pH when transferring
fishes, and to never introduce water from one system into another. I
hope this has helped answer your questions. Best of luck with your
new wards, Marina
Re: Green With Something Other Than Envy (07/27/03)
<Hi! Ananda here today...>
Perhaps both salutations would be appropriate: learning and learned ones!
<Well, okay. :-) >
I am curious what kind of bio-media should I be running in the
Fluval? It came with carbon packs and the ceramic pieces for
capturing larger items. What else should I have?
<Hmm. Those ceramic pieces (short tubes, yes?) are the ones I was thinking
about -- they are often sold as a bio-media for the Fluval filters. The other
mechanical- and bio-media they usually have is a piece of sponge or two. With
either or both of those, you won't need any additional bio-media.>
Now one piece of information that I left was that I have been using only RO
water in the tank. So I know my tap water cannot be source since
there isn't any in there.
<Are you buying your RO water from someplace, or do you have an RO unit at
home? Have you tested it? I have heard of people finding that their RO water
isn't as clean as it might be -- that is most often caused by filters that need
to be cleaned or replaced.>
Now I did a 30% water change last Friday and that seems to have helped.
<Ah, good.>
Regarding the angelfish, I misspoke, it's not a dwarf angelfish.
<That's a relief. I didn't mention it last night, but there are some
retailers who sell the runts of a spawn as "dwarf" angelfish. These
are the fish that good breeders usually cull. I'm glad you don't have one of
those!>
This past Friday I added a CO2 infuser to help the plants along.
<That will definitely help decrease the pH.>
Any suggestions on softening the water?
<Since you're using RO water, your tank water *should* be soft! So the
hardness in the tank is coming from some other source. The most likely
possibility is your tank decorations: besides water, gravel, fish, and plants,
what's in the tank? Also, what kind of gravel are you using?>
Thanks a lot for your help!!!
<You're quite welcome. --Ananda>
Bacterial Blooms
Hi Guys,
Thanks for such a great website and expertise on all things fishy!
<Surely! Ryan with you>
I have a question about bacteria bloom in my 42 cichlid gallon
tank. I recently installed a nitrate reductor (www.Aquamedic.de) to
help eliminate nitrate from my tank It really does a great job at
reducing the nitrate
levels and I feel that my fish are better off without changing water too often
(which causes fluctuations in PH, Salt levels, etc.). Although I like
the effect of the nitrate reductor, I think that it also seems to create the
right conditions for a bacteria bloom (milky white). <Interesting> Each
time I shut off the valve for the nitrate reductor, the cloud disappears over
the course of a few days and then reappears of the course of a few days when I
open the valve back up. <Bizarre> My question is
two-fold: 1. Is it possible that the nitrate reductor is,
in fact, creating the right conditions for the bacteria to bloom or is it
possible that the milky white cloud is caused by something different like lime
production or some simple reason like overfeeding my fish? <Overfeeding,
under filtering my first 2 guesses. Do you have lots of rockwork/
driftwood? Proper circulation?> And 2. I have ordered a UV
Sterilizer to kill off the free-floating bacteria (if that is what I am
seeing). Once dead, will the bacteria be
filtered out by the filtration system or do dead bacteria cause clouds just like
live bacteria? <Depends on the type of filter you're
running. If you're looking to truly remove the particles, a micron
filter is your best choice. You may be able to rent one in your
area. Good luck! Ryan> I'm looking forward to your
answer.
Kind regards,
David Colcolough
Cloudy Water
>HELP!!!!!
>>Ehh..Hello.
>I have had a 55 gallon tank up and running since February of this
year. Since the late part of June, I have "chalky" or white
clouded water and if you look close it seems small particles are floating in the
water. I also have a 30 gallon tank that I've had for ten years and
it is crystal clear! I've been changing the water in the 55 gallon
weekly now to see if that helps.
>>Odd that it's only recently become cloudy if it's been up since
February, but everything you describe sounds like new tank syndrome; a situation
in which the benthic bacteria are being out-competed for available nutrients by
free-floating bacteria. The "cure" is to let the tank be,
and then when restarting regular water changes do NOT vacuum the substrate or
scrape down the tank walls. By doing this the benthic (attached to
surface/floor) bacteria are being removed. The same is true since
you're changing out the filter pads so frequently. As long as ammonia
and subsequent nitrogenous compounds do not reach harmful levels, the fish
suffer not.
>Still cloudy. The water seems to clear for about 24-48 hours and
then clouds again. I have tested the pH, ammonia, etc., all of which
are fine. I use the same water for the 30 gallon. The fish
eat and are active, no difference in behavior. The store I buy the
fish from suggested Curel, but that makes the water worse!
>>Indeed.
>The filtration is on the back of the tank and seems to "run over"
every week.
>>I'm assuming you mean a hang-on-tank power filter, not sure what you
mean by "run over", but that implies to me that the pads are becoming
clogged far too quickly. This does not equate with the
"fine" test readings, I am suspect of the kit itself. If
there is enough debris/detritus to be clogging these filter pads weekly, it does
not make sense that this waste would not be decomposing and creating nitrogenous
wastes.
>I am changing the carbonated filter pads every weekend as well as 25-30% of
the water. I only feed the fish 2 times a day. I am
concerned about my buddies. I love my fish and this has me wondering
what to do to help them! Please help!
>>As long as behavior is normal, not to worry. Continue
feeding, but if there is excess food (read: ANY food) leftover do know that
you're overfeeding. Give only what can be eaten within a very few
minutes (five or less). Other than that, do try to let the tank
be. Do not change out the carbon pads, but rather simply rinse them
in tepid water. This will help boost your population of desired
bacteria. Everything you speak of points to an issue of excess
nutrients with insufficient desirable bacteria population.
Thanks in advance! Dawnyel Barrett
>>You're welcome, I do hope this helps and best of luck. Marina
Working with Poor Source Water
I have been reading for hours on your site, both looking for answers to my
questions, and reading your responses. You seem to have great answers
for everything so here we go: I live in Kalamazoo, MI, which has some of
the worst water I have ever had in my life. I have both a water
softener, and a reverse osmosis machine. In the past, I have set up
my freshwater tanks with tap water (with the softener off, obviously), and
topped off with R/O, as to not build up minerals and "stuff" from the
tap water. I recently purchased a 29 gallon tank (emperor 400 filter)
for my new treasured electric blue crayfish, Sebastian (girlfriend named
him). I filled it up with all R/O water, that pH at about 5.5.
<Seems odd... RO/DI water should be at about a 7.0 pH.> I rose the pH to
seven using pH up (potassium carbonate, potassium hydroxide, and potassium
silicate were all mentioned on the container). I just put a 3"
Gourami in the tank now that it has been running for 24 hours. Here come
the questions....When is it safe to put my EB crayfish into the tank (he is only
3" or so)? <Once the water parameters are stable, any time you want.>
And should I use any additives in the water? <I think you've already added
them, yes? The 'answer' is, whatever you need to make the water compatible with
the livestock you intend to keep. In your case, raising the pH... but once that
is done, it's done. Just make sure the replacement water is of similar
quality.> My local fish store told me that I don't need additives because I
am using R/O... is that true? Is that because additives only treat
for impurities in water? <Depends on the additive.>
I have read that EB crayfish don't need or like heaters, however, I am planning
on making a community tank. Is it okay to put a heater in the tank,
and keep it set to 75 degrees or so (it is 77-78 now, but in the winter)? <Of
course.>
Are there side effects to using too much pH up? <Not in RO... in some cases
the alkaline reserves can be depleted, but in the case of RO/DI water, there are
none so all should be well.>
Should I only use it to adjust pH values when performing a transfer, or is it
safe in my tank before it enters solution? <I would mix in water outside of
the tank and give it a day before I present that to any livestock.> Should I
turn my filter off if I do use pH up or down to prevent any damage to the
filter? <It won't harm the filter.>
My filter has an empty compartment for what ever you want to put in it... is
there something you would recommend to do the job? <Perhaps not in that
filter box, but baking soda will work pretty well at helping bring up the pH.
Best to add a little, mix, test, and repeat if necessary.>
I have used peat granules in a nylon in the past with good luck, but that
doesn't help me raise it. Is limestone my best option? <I don't think that
would work either unless the water is already acidic... the limestone does not
readily dissolve. You might want to look into some of the RO/DI buffer
preparations available to the marine part of this hobby. Marine systems need to
be in the pH range of 8.2-8.4 so you can see... keeping the pH up is important
for these folks.>
I appreciate your time, and look forward to reading your
response. Ian
<Cheers, J -- >
- RE: High Ammonia in established tank -
Hi again,
<Hello, JasonC here this time.>
I put in more Cycle this morning and my ammonia was at zero when I got
home. I did do a water change anyway and everything seems okay in my
tank now. I know I am overstocked, but it's hard to decide who has to
go, as I just upgraded to the 48 gallon 2 months ago. I know
eventually that 2 of the blood parrots are going to have to go. It's
hard to give up fish you're attached to. <I hear you.>
Thanks...Irene <Glad we could be of service. Cheers, J -- >
Purified Water? (7/1/03)
Hey, this might be a stupid question... but I'm a 16 year old with only
the experience of cats, dogs, and snails. I searched for this in your
faqs but couldn't find anything that could confirm my question for sure.
Didn't want to take risks. So, the question: is it harmful to my betta's
if I use purified drinking water? Like from Deep Rock? I was told from
an unprofessional that it has chlorine in it.. but I think they might be
wrong... <As long as its not distilled or has no chlorine your
OK. Cody>Thanks for the help!!
Hazy Water
I have 35 gallon freshwater tank with an Emperor 280 filter. I
have 3 angels, 2 small rainbows, 2 Gouramis, a Congo tetra, Bala shark and a
Pleco. I have been having a problem with hazy water. It is
white so I am assuming a bacterial bloom. I did not feed them for two
and did a 20% water change. It has been established for three years.
Ph, ammonia, etc are all normal. should I continue the water changes and, if so,
how often?
<From the description I would have to say Algae or Bacteria as
well. Did you make any recent changes that would cause the tank to
cycle, cleaning the filter, changing the substrate, adding some sort of
product? Weekly water changes of about 1/3 of the tank volume should
get things straightened out. Test your water frequently to make sure
nothing is fluctuating or out of whack. -Gage >
Fish with problems
Hello there. My name is Miranda and I recently was given a 55 gallon tank
along with a iridescent shark. I have only had the tank for about 2 months maybe
3. The fish:
2 silver dollars
4 gold Gourami
2 blue Gourami
1 kissing Gourami
1 hatchet
1 tetra
1 upside down fish (?)
2 "sucking fish" Pleco.......
1 iridescent shark that has been in the family for about 6 years.
<a beautiful fish>
were doing fine for about the first 3-5 weeks then the water started to turn
cloudy (due to overfeeding)<or a bacteria bloom, algae bloom> I quit
feeding them as much and did a 25% water change.<good, should do a 25% water
change every other week> The tank looks 100% better now.<good to hear>
Then the shark got fin rot some how.<bacterial infection http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwfshparasites.htm> I
treated that about 2 weeks about and he now looks better.<good> Well I
thought things were fine but when I got home from work today my hatchet fish was
dead. He was stuck to the filter sucker with some form of growth on him
already.<take a look at this link-should help to find what was wrong with him
(don't have a pic so really can't tell, some peoples interpretations are
different http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwfshparasites.htm>
I do not understand what I am doing wrong to cause my fish to die ( glass
catfish died earlier this month as well as a tetra ). if you have any idea as to
what I could be doing wrong or maybe a suggestion on how to save my fish please
let me know.<keep the water quality in excellent condition and keep reading
about diseases and treatments/prevention at WWM> My stepmother would kill me
if anything happened to the iridescent shark. Thank you so much for your
help!!!<good luck my friend, IanB>
Miranda
Cloudy Water 5/27/03
Hello to the Crew!<And hello to you Corinne, you've got lucky crew member
Phil with you tonight. Sorry it took so long for an answer back.>I
love your site and all the help it offers, but I can't seem to find a cloudy
water question that matches my own. (Doesn't seem possible, does it?)<WWM has
tons of info, but we still don't have it all.> First, my tank: 20 gal.
lightly stocked community tank. Whisper 30-60 power filter. pH-7.4, Ammonia-0,
Nitrites-0, GH-6, temp-78 F. Substrate is a small gravel, and the only
decorations are lava rock and plastic plants. (Both of which I use in my other
tank, and it's crystal) The tank has been set up for 5 weeks, and the water has
yet to clear. From a distance it appears white, up close tiny particles are
visible. A neighbor has the same tank and recommended the Whisper to me. (her
tank, also crystal) I feed twice a day, Hikari micro-pellets, along with Hikari
sinking wafers ( for the Corys). I've been doing water changes once a week (
alternating use of the gravel vac every other week) trying to clear
this up. Even after the water change (about 30%) the water still looks cloudy.
Could it be the food causing this? They seem to eat every drop I put in. (I
heard a hungry fish is a healthy fish!) I understand that a bacteria bloom
usually causes the white water, but is it normal for it to last so long? Is it
possible that the water changes are to frequent? Thanks in advance! ( or do I
need to send a bribe? whatever works!)<Sure... please send a check to Phil
Bozek... lol!! No bribe needed, the crew works for
free. I'm willing to bet that your tank wasn't fully cycled when you
added your fish. Adding the fish only made the cycle take longer and
never fully complete. Your best bet would be to remove your fish for
1-2.5 weeks and allow the tank to cycle on its own over time. Just
put your fish in the hospital tank. Hopefully you have one as they
are something EVERY aquarist needs. 10 gallons would be
plenty. Keep doing water changes, 20-25% over the course of a week is
a good amount. The fish are eating so that is good. Just
let the tank cycle and you'll be in business.
Corinne<Hope this helps! Phil>
Filtering with Peat Moss
I'm thinking about filtering through peat in my planted Discus
aquarium.<have heard/seen this done before>
I understand that it will bring down the pH and Kh, which would be very
desirable in Discus aquarium.<yes, can>
I also understand that peat contains many trace elements needed by plants and
Discuses, which is also good.<agreed>
I'm wondering though, doesn't peat (Hagen brand, granules) contain phosphates,
like certain brands of carbon?<yes, "Initially, for the first two
months, some soils will release a significant amount of nutrients such as
nitrates, ammonia, phosphates and iron." I will give you the link to where
I found this info. http://www.easyfishkeeping.com/tropicalfish/succesfulplants.htm hope
this information helps, IanB>
Thank you, Luke
Spooked Corydoras
Hello,
<Hi there>
It seems as if all sources I go to between the Pet Shops, the Internet and even
Books and Articles are inevitably contradicting each other. After
going the rite of novice passage of purchasing too many ornamentation and
aquarium chemicals, and other, non-essential items, I've decided to go au
natural (which a friend of mine who used to work in a fish store told me to do
from the beginning) and leave things be for while.
<I have to agree with your friend here. The less chemical products we add to
our tanks the better off our tanks are.>
I started my 36 gallon bow front tank four weeks ago with two albino clawed
water frogs and 6 neon tetras. They are healthy to this
day. Two weeks ago I added three Corys. After water checks
my ammonia level is between 0 - 2ppm, PH is 7.4, my water is on the hard side
(200 to 250 ppm) and I keep the temp between 75 and 80 F. I've been
told that while the PH is not optimal, it will be a problem long term and I
should get it down.
Otherwise, the tank is going through its cycling process just fine. I
used Stress Coat after each addition and handling of the fish. I also
have been using the Stress Zyme for the bacteria colonies.
<OK, your main concern here is the ammonia (and probably nitrites too
although they aren’t mentioned). This is still a relatively new tank so it’s
not going to be fully cycled yet but your goal is to get the ammonia (and
nitrites) to a consistent 0ppm. The pH is not really something I’d be too
concerned with. Yes, it’s a bit high but not enough that you need to worry
about and it’s not going to cause any long term problems. My pH in my own
community tank is kept at a pH of 7.8 and my tetras and Corys are all doing fine
in it.>
This past Sat, at the recommendation of a pet store owner, I added 1 tsp of PH
Down to my tank each hour for three hours. He said to do it once an
hour for four hours, but I was going out and figured this could only help and
the less additions to the tank, the less osmotic stress. I returned home about 6
hrs after the last PH Down tsp was added. I turned on the light and
looked in the tank to see that all 6 of my tetras lost their blue and red
coloring and where a milky white and seemed kind of bloated. The
Cory's seemed to be doing fine, hanging out w/each other behind a plastic
plant. I could only locate two of the three Corys but figured he was
hiding elsewhere.
<The problem with products like pH down is that they do lower the ph but then
within a few hours to a day it will go right back up to almost what it was
before. It takes a long time to get your ph to stay down and it’s very
stressful on your fish while it’s happening. This fluctuation is probably what
caused the color fade of your tetras.>
After seeing the tetras I did a 50% water change. That seemed to do
the trick as their colors came back within 20 min. of completing the water
change. The Corys looked good too.
<Very good. Now just leave your ph alone and toss the ph down in the
trash>
The next day, I still could not find the third Cory. The other two
Corys however were exhibiting completely opposite behavior than they were for
the past two weeks. Originally they all hung together, swam
vertically up and down quickly, in both plain water and the air bubble
currents. They were sociable and fun to watch. They never
bothered or were bothered by any of the other fish. Now they seemed
spooked. These two Corys were hiding in either corner of the tank,
sometimes alone, sometimes on top of each other. Each time I approached the tank
and they saw me or other movement outside the front, they darted around as if in
a panic (almost as if a predator was after them).
<Probably a residual effect of the fluctuation. Make sure your ammonia and
nitrites are at 0ppm and then give them a few days and they should calm down. If
necessary, leaving the lights out for a day or two will help relieve some of
their stress.>
I figured they were behaving this way because they do good in schools and the
other Cory was missing. I decided to do an all out search (thinking I
may have mistakenly thrown him out in the garden with the bucket I used for the
change - never do water changes after you've had a few is the moral there...
<ROTFL! I’ll definitely remember that.>
However, after checking the floor around the tank and futilely the garden I went
back to the tank. I took out the two plastic rock formations I had and found the
third Cory was stuck in the bottom of one which had a hollow back. He
wedged himself in such a way that he could not move up or back: the
only ways out. He was like this for what must be approx 12 to 16
hrs. I freed him from this by slowly swaying the ornament in the
water. He popped out and immediately went to his
friends. Figuring he was stuck, I put the decoration
back. Within seconds he wedged himself in there again. I took him out
again and removed the ornament.
<Some fish do this and removing the decoration is the only solution. Even
then, they’ll often find something else to hide in.>
But instead of solving the problem, I got three paranoid, skittish, darting and
panicky Corys on my hands now. The behavior has been consistent for
the last three days. I see no signs of disease on their bodies, their
whiskers are only getting longer, eyes are okay, gills and fins are functioning
and full - if not puffed out as if in a defense mode. These are among
the hardier species, so I'm not sure what's going on. The tank is
still cycling, and when the ammonia level passed the 0-1 ppm on the chart, I
added the Ammo Lock (but that was three days ago - before the Cory got stuck
even).
<The darting may actually be caused by the ammonia/nitrites. If these have
risen again it’s causing your fish some discomfort, even at the small amount
mentioned. Ammo-lock helps but the best way to get your tank cycled and get the
ammonia/nitrites down is water changes.>
I thought perhaps one of the water frogs may have gone after the Cory (as
everyone is telling me they will eat one of the tetra's any day now, but I see
no sign of aggression from the frogs to them - actually, the other way around,
they will poke at the frog's back, distract him, while others run in to nip at
the wafer he's guarding. If anything, the Cory's chase the frogs
around in their bottom feeding ventures. There are no signs of
any aggression in my tank.
<Well, the frog may eventually eat any of the fish he can catch. But the
Corys should be a bit safer than the tetras because of their barbs. That’s not
saying it WILL happen, just that it MIGHT. Sometimes these frogs (and other
species) live peacefully with fish for ages, other times they’ll eat every
fish in the tank.>
I did make another change: I added twelve more neon
tetras. I figure cycling for an appropriate volume of fish, given my
other parameters, should be the priority, ph being second as it's not at such a
highly noxious level. I've got the ammo lock on hand in case of anything and am
checking the ammonia and ph daily.
<That’s a lot to add at one time so keep up with your testing and water
changes. Rely on the water changes the most and only use the Ammo-lock if it’s
an emergency.>
Thanks for reading all that but I wanted to be sure to convey all the detail.
Here are my questions:
<Thank you for being thorough>
What is going on with my Cory's? I was thinking that I should add 2
or 3 more as all info says they do better in schools of 5+. But I
don't want to add if there's any diseases, yet there are no signs of
any. Could this behavior have developed because they are "under
- schooled" (no pun intended)? Or could they be traumatized by
the removal and replacement of the ornaments and the large water
change? But the others seem fine.
<I don’t think there are any diseases but don’t add anything else until
the tank is fully cycled. Then you should be able to safely add another 2 or 3
Corys.>
Am I right in my priorities: cycling first and ph second? (given my
PH is on the low side of high)
<Definitely. Like I said above, don’t even worry about the ph at this
level.>
I was thinking of adding the PH Down 1 teaspoon per day until I've achieve
6.8-7.0, but am not sure it that's what caused all the stress to begin with.
<Nope, toss that stuff in the trash. Your fish are better off in a high but
stable ph than in a lower fluctuating one.>
I added 12 more tetras yesterday and everything seems fine. The frogs
seem to be a little annoyed at the increase no.'s of tetra's which swarm around
them and their wafers, but are otherwise fine. The Cory's are still
darting, spooked and skittish, but this morning they came out to feed -
tentatively and cautiously (as if watching for something) in the center of the
tank. My wife just called me now to say that they are still
"going absolutely crazy".
<You may notice your frogs going after the fish a bit more now that there are
more of them in there. And just give the Corys a bit of time, they should calm
down.>
so...what's happening with these Corys? Also - in order for them to
school, am I obligated to get the same species of Cory or can I get three of a
different species and still have a school of six?
<They will probably school with other types, most of them will.>
Also - what additional fish (colorful - as per the wife) would you recommend
adding (down the road, of course) to this hopefully successful community tank?
<Some options would be: Platies (these are livebearers so get 2 males unless
you want tons of babies that will get eaten by the other fish and frogs), some
of the less aggressive Barbs. I like the Cherry Barbs and the Rosy Barbs
although the Cherries turn more brown as they get older where the Rosies turn a
gorgeous red and green, or some of the other Tetra species like the Cardinals
(basically larger versions of the Neons), head & tail lights, Penguins
(these can be a bit ornery but not too bad), etc. Stay away from any fish that
gets more than about 2”-3” long because your Neons will become food for
them. A great place to look at pictures of different fish species is at http://www.wetwebmedia.com in
the photos section and also http://www.fishbase.org >
Thanks in advance for your help CJ
<You're welcome! Ronni>
Re: Cloudy, light green water!
Hi. I am hoping you can help! We have a 20 gallon aquarium
with one live plant and 5 fish. We have had the aquarium for 6 months
(and our neighbor had it for years before that) and it has always been sparkling
clear until about 2 weeks ago. The water turned a very cloudy,
faintly green color! I am guessing the cause was either:
1) over-feeding; I had a sick fish that didn't seem to be eating so I
started putting in "extra" food for him to get or 2) my plant has been
disintegrating and may have polluted the water.
<It’s most likely an algae bloom brought on by excess nutrients from when
you overfed.>
In any case, I have cut back on the food, pulled out the disintegrating plant
stems, changed 1/3 of the water every other day, and changed the
filter. There appears to be improvement immediately after the water
changes but by the next morning the water is as bad as ever. I tested
the water and there is no problem with nitrates or ammonia.
<Keep up the frequent water changes, it’s the best way to handle this
problem. You can also get a small amount of barley straw and put it in a mesh
bag (a nylon stocking works good) and place it in your filter. This helps
eliminate the algae/green water.>
Can you give me some advice? Should I change more of the water...like
1/2 or 3/4 of the tank? It seems like that might be hard on the
fish. Should I buy some sort of algae-killing solution? I
don't like the idea of introducing chemicals into the water. What
would you suggest? Thanks so much for your help!
<Avoid the chemicals, they often cause more problems than they solve. Do
smaller, frequent water changes (20% daily will work) for about a week. And try
the straw, many people use it in ponds to prevent and control algae blooms.
Ronni>
Re: Overcrowded Oscars
I have a 10 gallon tank with 1 sucker fish and 3 other fish. The
other fish are small (1-2 inch) Oscar fish.
<Whoa! Way too many fish for this tank! A full grown Oscar can reach nearly
18 inches long so even one Oscar is way too much for a 10 gallon tank. These 4
fish should be kept in no smaller than a 75 gallon aquarium, 100 gall |