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View Full Version : aquarium salt - can I use it??


K. Elliot
July 6th 03, 11:05 PM
Please forgive my ignorance on the topic, but I am wondering if I can
use aquarium salt in my 55 gallon freshwater aquarium. The current
inhabitants are as follows:
- otto (one)
- Clown Pl*co (one)
- Yoyo Botia or Pakistani Loach (three)
- Bleeding Heart Tetra (five)

I have read that the Tetras will benefit from having a bit of the
aquarium salt added but am worried about the Yoyo botias, Pl*co and
Otto and what effect the addition of salt will have on them.

Also, I have a gold algae eater in a separate 10 gallon freshwater
tank with some cardinal tetras, would the algae eater benefit or be
harmed by the use of the aquarium salt?

Any and all comments are welcome and appreciated. Thanks.

Kevin

NetMax
July 7th 03, 02:37 AM
"K. Elliot" > wrote in message
om...
> Please forgive my ignorance on the topic, but I am wondering if I can
> use aquarium salt in my 55 gallon freshwater aquarium. The current
> inhabitants are as follows:
> - otto (one)
> - Clown Pl*co (one)
> - Yoyo Botia or Pakistani Loach (three)
> - Bleeding Heart Tetra (five)
>
> I have read that the Tetras will benefit from having a bit of the
> aquarium salt added but am worried about the Yoyo botias, Pl*co and
> Otto and what effect the addition of salt will have on them.
>
> Also, I have a gold algae eater in a separate 10 gallon freshwater
> tank with some cardinal tetras, would the algae eater benefit or be
> harmed by the use of the aquarium salt?
>
> Any and all comments are welcome and appreciated. Thanks.
>
> Kevin

IMO you do not have any fish which would significantly benefit from the
addition of salt. IMHO, you would be better off keeping their water
parameters stable and closer to your source water by doing regular
partial water changes. If you begin adding salt (which is justifiable
for goldfish, livebearers esp. mollies and brackish water fishes), then
you will need to always continue to replenish the salt lost when you
remove water. It's better (JMO) to put your efforts into keeping stable
water conditions. If you are still convinced that you need to add salt,
then beware that your fish species are all salt intolerant, (coming from
rain and snow fed rivers), so keep your dosages low.

NetMax

Anna Hayward
July 7th 03, 09:35 AM
Hi Kevin,
>Please forgive my ignorance on the topic, but I am wondering if I can
>use aquarium salt in my 55 gallon freshwater aquarium. The current
>inhabitants are as follows:
> - otto (one)
> - Clown Pl*co (one)
> - Yoyo Botia or Pakistani Loach (three)
> - Bleeding Heart Tetra (five)
>
>I have read that the Tetras will benefit from having a bit of the
>aquarium salt added but am worried about the Yoyo botias, Pl*co and
>Otto and what effect the addition of salt will have on them.

Tetras hate salt as do ottos. Plecos generally aren't fond of it and I
don't know about yoyo's, but given similar fish don't like salt, I'd
assume they don't either.
>
>Also, I have a gold algae eater in a separate 10 gallon freshwater
>tank with some cardinal tetras, would the algae eater benefit or be
>harmed by the use of the aquarium salt?

Can't stand CAEs (if that's what it is) myself so I don't know. Why do
you want to use aquarium salt, btw?
--
Anna Hayward, Alien Visitor
mailto:

Anna's Pregnancy, Parenting and Autism page:
http://www.ratbag.demon.co.uk/anna/
--------------------------------------------------------------------------
"Everybody is somebody else's wierdo" - Dilbert (by Scott Adams)
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Mr.Nice.
July 7th 03, 10:29 AM
Twas 6 Jul 2003 15:05:34 -0700 when (K.
Elliot) put finger to keyboard producing:

>Please forgive my ignorance on the topic, but I am wondering if I can
>use aquarium salt in my 55 gallon freshwater aquarium. The current
>inhabitants are as follows:
> - otto (one)
> - Clown Pl*co (one)
> - Yoyo Botia or Pakistani Loach (three)
> - Bleeding Heart Tetra (five)
>
>I have read that the Tetras will benefit from having a bit of the
>aquarium salt added but am worried about the Yoyo botias, Pl*co and
>Otto and what effect the addition of salt will have on them.
>
>Also, I have a gold algae eater in a separate 10 gallon freshwater
>tank with some cardinal tetras, would the algae eater benefit or be
>harmed by the use of the aquarium salt?
>
>Any and all comments are welcome and appreciated. Thanks.
>
>Kevin

My tetras (including bleeding hearts) and sailfin plecs tolerate salt
well.

--
Regards.
Mark.(AKA, Mr.Nice.)
__________________________________________________ _________
"To know the character of a man, give him anonymity" - Mr.Nice.
http://www.mr-nice.rulestheweb.com mr.niceATsofthome.net
http://community.webshots.com/user/mrnice106
__________________________________________________ _________

K. Elliot
July 7th 03, 01:29 PM
Donald Kerns > wrote in message >...
> K. Elliot wrote:
>
> > The current
> > inhabitants are as follows:
> > - otto (one)
>
> In the words of a popular catfish site...
>
> "solo oto? oh no!"
>
> They would... really... really... really... want groups of three or
> more.
>
> -D

Yes, I know....I had three originally but two died very early
on.....and I have not yet had a chance to add more. I hear they are
fairly hard to keep around. My water parameters seem to be
okay....0-.5 PPM ammonia, 0 nitrites, 20-30 nitrates, ph - 7, kh - 3
to 4 PPM.

Mr.Nice.
July 7th 03, 03:05 PM
Twas Mon, 7 Jul 2003 09:36:21 -0400 when "NetMax"
> put finger to keyboard
producing:

>
>"Mr.Nice." > wrote in message
...
>> Twas 6 Jul 2003 15:05:34 -0700 when (K.
>> Elliot) put finger to keyboard producing:
>>
>> >Please forgive my ignorance on the topic, but I am wondering if I can
>> >use aquarium salt in my 55 gallon freshwater aquarium. The current
>> >inhabitants are as follows:
>> > - otto (one)
>> > - Clown Pl*co (one)
>> > - Yoyo Botia or Pakistani Loach (three)
>> > - Bleeding Heart Tetra (five)
>> >
><snip>
>> >Kevin
>>
>> My tetras (including bleeding hearts) and sailfin plecs tolerate salt
>> well.
>>
>> --
>> Regards.
>> Mark.(AKA, Mr.Nice.)
>
>Can you specify the dosage you use?
>thanks
>NetMax
>

3 cupfulls (709 ml) into a 385 Litre tank.

--
Regards.
Mark.(AKA, Mr.Nice.)
__________________________________________________ _________
"To know the character of a man, give him anonymity" - Mr.Nice.
http://www.mr-nice.rulestheweb.com mr.niceATsofthome.net
http://community.webshots.com/user/mrnice106
__________________________________________________ _________

VoskV
July 7th 03, 11:12 PM
"K. Elliot" > wrote in message
om...
> Please forgive my ignorance on the topic, but I am wondering if I can
> use aquarium salt in my 55 gallon freshwater aquarium. The current
> inhabitants are as follows:
> - otto (one)
> - Clown Pl*co (one)
> - Yoyo Botia or Pakistani Loach (three)
> - Bleeding Heart Tetra (five)
>
> I have read that the Tetras will benefit from having a bit of the
> aquarium salt added but am worried about the Yoyo botias, Pl*co and
> Otto and what effect the addition of salt will have on them.
>
> Also, I have a gold algae eater in a separate 10 gallon freshwater
> tank with some cardinal tetras, would the algae eater benefit or be
> harmed by the use of the aquarium salt?
>
> Any and all comments are welcome and appreciated. Thanks.
>
> Kevin

Hi Kevin,

I have 3 YoYo Loaches and 3 Clown Loaches in with my mollies and I use
Instant Ocean in the tank, my loaches don't seem to mind it. I use 1
Tablespoon per 10 gallons in my 55 and only replace the salt every other
weekly water change. As you may know, salt doesn't deplete when water
evaporates, the only way to remove it is by doing water changes. I use a
hydrometer to measure the salinity and keep the readings between 1.005-1.010
(for brackish conditions).

Tell me, why do you wish to use salt? I've always used it for my mollies,
but can't understand why you'd need to use it (based on the type of fish
you're keeping). Are you trying to treat a sick fish?

Hope This Helps!

NetMax
July 8th 03, 04:13 AM
"Mr.Nice." > wrote in message
...
> Twas Mon, 7 Jul 2003 09:36:21 -0400 when "NetMax"
> > put finger to keyboard
> producing:
>
> >
> >"Mr.Nice." > wrote in message
> ...
> >> Twas 6 Jul 2003 15:05:34 -0700 when (K.
> >> Elliot) put finger to keyboard producing:
> >>
> >> >Please forgive my ignorance on the topic, but I am wondering if I
can
> >> >use aquarium salt in my 55 gallon freshwater aquarium. The current
> >> >inhabitants are as follows:
> >> > - otto (one)
> >> > - Clown Pl*co (one)
> >> > - Yoyo Botia or Pakistani Loach (three)
> >> > - Bleeding Heart Tetra (five)
> >> >
> ><snip>
> >> >Kevin
> >>
> >> My tetras (including bleeding hearts) and sailfin plecs tolerate
salt
> >> well.
> >>
> >> --
> >> Regards.
> >> Mark.(AKA, Mr.Nice.)
> >
> >Can you specify the dosage you use?
> >thanks
> >NetMax
> >
>
> 3 cupfulls (709 ml) into a 385 Litre tank.

For preventive measures, I use 1 tablespoon (14.8ml) per 10g. For
goldfish & livebearers, I use 1 tablespoon per 7.5g. Your ratio is about
1 tablespoon per 2g.
thanks for the reply

> --
> Regards.
> Mark.(AKA, Mr.Nice.)
> __________________________________________________ _________
> "To know the character of a man, give him anonymity" - Mr.Nice.
> http://www.mr-nice.rulestheweb.com mr.niceATsofthome.net
> http://community.webshots.com/user/mrnice106
> __________________________________________________ _________

levittd
July 8th 03, 08:40 PM
"Earl D Fitzgerald" > wrote in message
...
> How do you prevent the level of salt in the tank from becoming toxic?
Each
> water change only dilutes the salt level so that if you add the same
amount
> each time the salinity will slowly increase over time.
>
> Just curious...
>
> Fishboy
>
You don't add the amount of salt for the whole tank, just the volume of
fresh water added. Specific gravity will remain the same.
levittd

Flash Wilson
July 9th 03, 09:13 AM
On Tue, 8 Jul 2003 11:14:13 -0700, Earl D Fitzgerald
> wrote:
>How do you prevent the level of salt in the tank from becoming toxic? Each
>water change only dilutes the salt level so that if you add the same amount
>each time the salinity will slowly increase over time.

You add the amount for the water you've replaced in a water change,
but you *don't* add salt to water topups to replace evaporated water.

That way the water level stays the same and the salt level is fairly
constant.



--
Flash Wilson
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Bother. Must not drink tequila before midnight on a weeknight.

Stan
July 9th 03, 01:49 PM
Fish stores get stressed out fish for stock, and they are just visiting a
short time. I would imagine a bit of salt is benificial for these poor
little visitors. Helps get their slime coats going again in their perlious
journey.


"Eduardo Alvarez" > wrote in message
at-atuin.net...
> Since the discussion is going on, I might as well ask. About a month
> ago I saw the caretaker of aquariums of a petshop putting small ammounts
> of salt (no more than a fistful), because according to her "it helped
> kill bacteria and parasites". She said the ammount she put was small
> enough to not aggravate the fish. The fish looked rather healthy, so
> I'm curious to find out whether anyone else has heard of such practices.
>
> In article >, Anna Hayward wrote:
> > Hi Kevin,
> >>Please forgive my ignorance on the topic, but I am wondering if I can
> >>use aquarium salt in my 55 gallon freshwater aquarium. The current
> >>inhabitants are as follows:
> >> - otto (one)
> >> - Clown Pl*co (one)
> >> - Yoyo Botia or Pakistani Loach (three)
> >> - Bleeding Heart Tetra (five)
> >>
> >>I have read that the Tetras will benefit from having a bit of the
> >>aquarium salt added but am worried about the Yoyo botias, Pl*co and
> >>Otto and what effect the addition of salt will have on them.
> >
> > Tetras hate salt as do ottos. Plecos generally aren't fond of it and I
> > don't know about yoyo's, but given similar fish don't like salt, I'd
> > assume they don't either.
> >>
> >>Also, I have a gold algae eater in a separate 10 gallon freshwater
> >>tank with some cardinal tetras, would the algae eater benefit or be
> >>harmed by the use of the aquarium salt?
> >
> > Can't stand CAEs (if that's what it is) myself so I don't know. Why do
> > you want to use aquarium salt, btw?
>
>
> --
> Eduardo Alvarez http://www.great-atuin.net/~punga
>
> "Stercus, stercus stercus, moriturus sum"
> -- Rincewind the Wizard, "Interesting Times"

NetMax
July 9th 03, 03:55 PM
This is essentially correct. Even if you only add the quantity of salt
corresponding to the water change performed, the saline concentration in
the water being removed is slightly higher due to evaporation decreasing
its dilution. You will also notice that there will be salt flakes
coating the underside of your canopy/glass cover. This precipitate works
in the opposite direction lowering the salt concentration over time
(until you pick it off back into the water because it looks awful ;~).
If the exact quantity of salt in the water was critical, our fish would
be in big trouble. Fortunately they regulate the amount of salt which
enters their bloodstream, so it's not a short term concern if we avoid
extremes.

FWIW, I let my salt concentration drop to near zero (through gravel
vacuuming and automated water changes), and then I unceremoniously drop
about 1/2 cup per 60g. I do this about twice a month, but I'm on an
industrial level (my water changer does 400g a day ;~). What's notable
is the fishes complete indifference to the salt level going from zero to
the level I use.

I avoid the 'slippery slope' by always letting the salt concentration
drop back down to zero, and then resetting it upwards. This works for
me, in a commercial application. I'm not suggesting that this be done
with home aquariums, but at least it gives you some idea of the fish's
apparent lack of susceptibility to varying amounts of _low_
concentrations of salt.

NetMax

"Earl D Fitzgerald" > wrote in message
...
> Actually the salinity levels would still rise slowly over time unless
you
> tap off the tank before each water change. Otherwise the evaporation
of the
> water would make the tank water salty with the water change being
slightly
> less salty.
>
> I believe adding salt to tanks can be a slippery slope...
>
> Fishboy
>
> "levittd" > wrote in message
> . ca...
> >
> > "Earl D Fitzgerald" > wrote in message
> > ...
> > > How do you prevent the level of salt in the tank from becoming
toxic?
> > Each
> > > water change only dilutes the salt level so that if you add the
same
> > amount
> > > each time the salinity will slowly increase over time.
> > >
> > > Just curious...
> > >
> > > Fishboy
> > >
> > You don't add the amount of salt for the whole tank, just the volume
of
> > fresh water added. Specific gravity will remain the same.
> > levittd
> >
> >
>
>

levittd
July 9th 03, 07:22 PM
"NetMax" > wrote in message
.. .
> Even if you only add the quantity of salt
> corresponding to the water change performed, the saline concentration in
> the water being removed is slightly higher due to evaporation decreasing
> its dilution.

I was assuming freshwater top-ups. Should that not keep the solution the
same?
levittd

Earl D Fitzgerald
July 9th 03, 07:33 PM
I guess my main concern is with the local Pet "notso" Smart pratice of
adding salt crystals to thier tanks. If you have seen this system it is a
shared water system such the added salt effects the entire system over time.
Having been able to watch a store from the first day to several years later
I have seen a problem with salt build up to almost toxic levels.

Hence I buy fish only to see them go into shock with my unsalted water... I
begin to wonder how many home tanks have high salt levels that cause the
deaths of newly introduced fish.

So I guess that if you decide to salt... be careful to following a standard
procedure to prevent salt build up.

Just my two cents,


Fishboy


"NetMax" > wrote in message
.. .
> This is essentially correct. Even if you only add the quantity of salt
> corresponding to the water change performed, the saline concentration in
> the water being removed is slightly higher due to evaporation decreasing
> its dilution. You will also notice that there will be salt flakes
> coating the underside of your canopy/glass cover. This precipitate works
> in the opposite direction lowering the salt concentration over time
> (until you pick it off back into the water because it looks awful ;~).
> If the exact quantity of salt in the water was critical, our fish would
> be in big trouble. Fortunately they regulate the amount of salt which
> enters their bloodstream, so it's not a short term concern if we avoid
> extremes.
>
> FWIW, I let my salt concentration drop to near zero (through gravel
> vacuuming and automated water changes), and then I unceremoniously drop
> about 1/2 cup per 60g. I do this about twice a month, but I'm on an
> industrial level (my water changer does 400g a day ;~). What's notable
> is the fishes complete indifference to the salt level going from zero to
> the level I use.
>
> I avoid the 'slippery slope' by always letting the salt concentration
> drop back down to zero, and then resetting it upwards. This works for
> me, in a commercial application. I'm not suggesting that this be done
> with home aquariums, but at least it gives you some idea of the fish's
> apparent lack of susceptibility to varying amounts of _low_
> concentrations of salt.
>
> NetMax
>
> "Earl D Fitzgerald" > wrote in message
> ...
> > Actually the salinity levels would still rise slowly over time unless
> you
> > tap off the tank before each water change. Otherwise the evaporation
> of the
> > water would make the tank water salty with the water change being
> slightly
> > less salty.
> >
> > I believe adding salt to tanks can be a slippery slope...
> >
> > Fishboy
> >
> > "levittd" > wrote in message
> > . ca...
> > >
> > > "Earl D Fitzgerald" > wrote in message
> > > ...
> > > > How do you prevent the level of salt in the tank from becoming
> toxic?
> > > Each
> > > > water change only dilutes the salt level so that if you add the
> same
> > > amount
> > > > each time the salinity will slowly increase over time.
> > > >
> > > > Just curious...
> > > >
> > > > Fishboy
> > > >
> > > You don't add the amount of salt for the whole tank, just the volume
> of
> > > fresh water added. Specific gravity will remain the same.
> > > levittd
> > >
> > >
> >
> >
>
>

NetMax
July 9th 03, 07:39 PM
"levittd" > wrote in message
a...
>
> "NetMax" > wrote in message
> .. .
> > Even if you only add the quantity of salt
> > corresponding to the water change performed, the saline concentration
in
> > the water being removed is slightly higher due to evaporation
decreasing
> > its dilution.
>
> I was assuming freshwater top-ups. Should that not keep the solution
the
> same?
> levittd

If you topped up with freshwater, then did your water change, and then
added salt to correspond with the amount of the water change, then you
will approximate a steady state. Salt does come out in other methods
(dead fish, plant matter removed, driftwood absorption, filter washing
etc) but it's probably insignificant. It still seems like a lot of work,
but everyone has a recipe, and when a recipe works....... ;~)

NetMax