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Discus Aquaruim Maintenance
Hi,
I need some advice, I am currently prepareing my 50 gallon aquaruim to keep about 4 or 5 discus. I hear that you must vacuim the gravel or in my case sand every week. I currently have 4 Angels in the tank and each time i vacuim the sand the fish go frantic. Angels get over this quite quickly, but what about discus? Another thing what about changing the substrate from sand to gravel and make an undergravel filter, so all the waste produced will end up in the gravel filter then just suck everything outfrom underneath, without inserting anything in the aquaruim. The waste problem came about when i introduced a Pleco, they are excellent fish in controling algea but at a price. Thanks for your help |
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"Brian Azzopardi" wrote in message
om... Hi, I need some advice, I am currently prepareing my 50 gallon aquaruim to keep about 4 or 5 discus. I hear that you must vacuim the gravel or in my case sand every week. I currently have 4 Angels in the tank and each time i vacuim the sand the fish go frantic. Angels get over this quite quickly, but what about discus? Another thing what about changing the substrate from sand to gravel and make an undergravel filter, so all the waste produced will end up in the gravel filter then just suck everything outfrom underneath, without inserting anything in the aquaruim. The waste problem came about when i introduced a Pleco, they are excellent fish in controling algea but at a price. Thanks for your help You vacuum gravel to remove the detritus before it dissolves (reducing your buffer, acidifying the water, adding to your biological load producing ammonia etc). On a sand substrate, the detritus mostly rolls over the sand until it settles into an area of low turbulence (back of the tank, beside rocks ornaments etc). One sand-substrate strategy would be to arrange your filters so that they are more consistently vacuuming this detritus, and then clean your filters more often and do regular water changes. This is most easily done by increasing the turbulence and directing the flow so that the detritus rolls around to where filter intakes are located. With Discus/Angelfish, as these fish suffer under turbulent conditions, there is a limit to how much you can use greater water flow to serve your purpose. This makes it a bit more challenging, but not impossible. Bank your gravel from the back. If you have a lot of water-blocks (rocks, driftwood, plants etc), then position your filter intake at the front of the tank opposite your filter returns, and direct your flow at your intake. If you don't have too much water-blocks, then set up a U shaped turbulence, so the water flows along the back and across the front back to the filter (lengthwise to the tank). The back-flow will break-up the current somewhat, and then the front-flow should drop down and 'slide' across the bottom pushing the detritus towards the filter intake. Adjust your intake to find the optimal depth where you get the most crap and the least amount of sand is taken in. Going to a gravel/UGF setup will not solve your problem as it traps the detritus, you still need to vacuum, and you are never 100% effective at removing it. Another method is to set up an automatic gravel-vacuum, but this is not applicable to heavily planted tanks, or tanks with foreground plants, so ymmv. http://www.2cah.com/netmax/diy_projects/vac/vac.shtml . Of course, with a big Pleco, you probably don't have a lot of delicate plants ;~). Angels tend to be jumpy when disturbed (gravel-vacuuming). Try to move slowly, and feed them when you are finished (so they associate a reward after the intrusion). Having dither fish and lots of shelter will also help keep them calmer. hth -- www.NetMax.tk |
"NetMax" wrote in message m...
"Brian Azzopardi" wrote in message om... Hi, I need some advice, I am currently prepareing my 50 gallon aquaruim to keep about 4 or 5 discus. I hear that you must vacuim the gravel or in my case sand every week. I currently have 4 Angels in the tank and each time i vacuim the sand the fish go frantic. Angels get over this quite quickly, but what about discus? Another thing what about changing the substrate from sand to gravel and make an undergravel filter, so all the waste produced will end up in the gravel filter then just suck everything outfrom underneath, without inserting anything in the aquaruim. The waste problem came about when i introduced a Pleco, they are excellent fish in controling algea but at a price. Thanks for your help You vacuum gravel to remove the detritus before it dissolves (reducing your buffer, acidifying the water, adding to your biological load producing ammonia etc). On a sand substrate, the detritus mostly rolls over the sand until it settles into an area of low turbulence (back of the tank, beside rocks ornaments etc). One sand-substrate strategy would be to arrange your filters so that they are more consistently vacuuming this detritus, and then clean your filters more often and do regular water changes. This is most easily done by increasing the turbulence and directing the flow so that the detritus rolls around to where filter intakes are located. With Discus/Angelfish, as these fish suffer under turbulent conditions, there is a limit to how much you can use greater water flow to serve your purpose. This makes it a bit more challenging, but not impossible. Bank your gravel from the back. If you have a lot of water-blocks (rocks, driftwood, plants etc), then position your filter intake at the front of the tank opposite your filter returns, and direct your flow at your intake. If you don't have too much water-blocks, then set up a U shaped turbulence, so the water flows along the back and across the front back to the filter (lengthwise to the tank). The back-flow will break-up the current somewhat, and then the front-flow should drop down and 'slide' across the bottom pushing the detritus towards the filter intake. Adjust your intake to find the optimal depth where you get the most crap and the least amount of sand is taken in. Going to a gravel/UGF setup will not solve your problem as it traps the detritus, you still need to vacuum, and you are never 100% effective at removing it. Another method is to set up an automatic gravel-vacuum, but this is not applicable to heavily planted tanks, or tanks with foreground plants, so ymmv. http://www.2cah.com/netmax/diy_projects/vac/vac.shtml . Of course, with a big Pleco, you probably don't have a lot of delicate plants ;~). Angels tend to be jumpy when disturbed (gravel-vacuuming). Try to move slowly, and feed them when you are finished (so they associate a reward after the intrusion). Having dither fish and lots of shelter will also help keep them calmer. hth Thanks for your help Netmax, I will try to find the correct balance in turbulence not disturb the fish. |
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