I now have a bunch of damsels, a dogface puffer, trigger, and some
clowns. They all have been doing fine for about 3 months but the
trigger is showing major signs of trouble (I think he is near death).
I just tested my water today. Here are the results:
- pH at 7.7
- nitrate at 100 mg per litre
- nitrite at 0.2
- ammonia at 0.2
- hydrometer at 1.023
I think my pH is very low and nitrate very high. I plan to change
about 30% of the water this week - will this solve the problem. It has
been a few months since I last did a water change. By the way, I have
an external Magnum350 filter plus two 802 Powerheads which are
connected to a below-coral filter system - should this setup not keep
the water clean on its own for some time?
Another problem I recently found is a heavy build-up of black spots on
the glass inside. The worst is on each corner of the front glass which
covers about 1' x 1' area each - and I also have small black spots now
throughout. I tried to wipe this today and couldn't even take a bit
off. In the past I used to get a lot of green algea there, but it
easily wiped off with a rag tied to a stick. I did notice about 4
weeks ago that the green algea never returned but instead I got these
funny little white things (possibly plant life) hanging off the glass,
which were all bunched up and about 1mm long. These white things
gradually disappeared on there own in about 3 weeks, but now I have
this black buildup which I can not get ride of. I think it is mineral
buildup? What can I use to get ride of this without hurting the fish?
I really do not want to remove all the fish and empty the whole tank to
clean it - is there a product I can use with the fish and water still
in the tank? I've heard vinegar is good and safe for the fish.
Thanks
I would do some research on fish so you can get fish that are suitable
to live together. Damsels are pretty hardy, but can be troublesome
later on, triggers are iffy as are puffers which really should onlly
be kept once you get a fully established mature tank and a bit of
experiience first. Water changes made every couple of months is bad
fish keeping practice.........especially with a new setup...and
nothing works on its own very effectively without some form of human
intervention or periodically checking.
I would look for community type fish that will accept commercially
prepared feeds as a starter. Damsels fit that catagory if you like
damsels, as are some dwarf angels but angels can be finicky with
diets....
Have you kept a running record of water parameters? Its nice to see
fluctuations and its a good idea to do so until its matured.
On 25 Dec 2005 14:41:08 -0800, "dna_a...@yahoo.com"
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-----------oOOo(_)oOOo---------------
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The original frugal ponder! Koi-ahoi mates....
Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets
Wa...@WaynesPets.com
Captain Feedback wrote on 12/26/2005 8:46 AM:
> Not sure what your black buildup is, but you might want to try out the
> Penn Plax "Magnet Scraper". It was the only thing that could remove
> the hard green algae spots in my tank.
>
As much info as poss will help a lot.............
<dna_a...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1135550468.4...@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...
"It has been a few months since I last did a water change"
10% water change per week MINIMUM!!!!
You want to swim in your own piss for month's at a time??
Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets
Wa...@WaynesPets.com
But you don't have fish dying all over the place, Dodgy water params and a
black build-up over the tank etc etc like this guy does :)
But you don't have fish dying all over the place, Dodgy water params and a
black build-up over the tank etc etc like this guy does :)
See what i'm getting at?
"Captain Feedback" <dc2...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1135718048.4...@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
> >10% water change per week MINIMUM!!!!
>
> Err, there are quite a few experienced hobbyists who change their tank
> water less frequently than that.
>
> Of course, every few months is the other extreme.
>
Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets
Wa...@WaynesPets.com
I now have a bunch of damsels, a dogface puffer, trigger, and some
clowns. They all have been doing fine for about 3 months but the
trigger is showing major signs of trouble (I think he is near death).
I just tested my water today. Here are the results:
- pH at 7.7
- nitrate at 100 mg per litre
- nitrite at 0.2
- ammonia at 0.2
- hydrometer at 1.023
SNIP
More info Please
Substrate, Amount of rock, Lighting, Temp, Skimmer, water used to mix?
First, Your Ph is to low.
nitrate, nitrite mean nothing in a fish only tank.
"It has
been a few months since I last did a water change"
Granted I do not do water changes or test on a regular basis but being new
You really should do 10-20% a week untill you can just look and know something is not right.
For now just do weekly water changes.
Use a clean razor blade to clean off the glass
Salt creep?
Vinegar is great for cleaning equipment out of the tank or the outside glass.
Some of us use vinegar while dripping but thats another subject.
Check out reefcentral.com and read untill you think you eyes are going to fall out
Good luck and read on
> - hydrometer at 1.023
Drop this down some. 1.023 is fine for a temperature of 60 degrees. If you're up
near 80 (more likely), the specific gravity should be 1.021.
If my fish were behaving that way, I would set up for a 20% water change ASAP. I
would change another 20% a week later.
George Patterson
Coffee is only a way of stealing time that should by rights belong to
your slightly older self.
The aim for a reef tank, is to keep conditions like that
in nature. The salinity in sea water is 35ppt Since cold
water is heavyer than warm water, the specific gravity
(weight of water) will vary with temp.
Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets
Wa...@WaynesPets.com
Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets
Wa...@WaynesPets.com
--
Eoghan
Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets
Wa...@WaynesPets.com
Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets
Wa...@WaynesPets.com