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Black Neon Fry
I haven't been paying attention to my quarantine tank, since I haven't had
fish in it in several months. There has been no heater since the last time I had fish in it, although there's a corner filter that's been running continuously. I was quite surprised with today I noticed a .5" neon tetra in there. The water temp was around 65f so I turned on the heater to bring it up to about 70f. I tested the water and ammonia and nitrates are zero, pH is off the scale to the high side. What do I need to do before I can put this little guy into my community tank? It's heavily planted, but I'd still worry a bit about him getting eaten. I also don't want him to just die of shock. Is .5" really small for a fry that has to be at least 3 or 4 months old? Since I haven't been feeding him I guess he's just been living off whatever was in the tank. What should I start feeding him? -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ |
Black Neon Fry
Sweet i've never heard of imaculate conseption in fish!
"Ben" wrote in message ... I haven't been paying attention to my quarantine tank, since I haven't had fish in it in several months. There has been no heater since the last time I had fish in it, although there's a corner filter that's been running continuously. I was quite surprised with today I noticed a .5" neon tetra in there. The water temp was around 65f so I turned on the heater to bring it up to about 70f. I tested the water and ammonia and nitrates are zero, pH is off the scale to the high side. What do I need to do before I can put this little guy into my community tank? It's heavily planted, but I'd still worry a bit about him getting eaten. I also don't want him to just die of shock. Is .5" really small for a fry that has to be at least 3 or 4 months old? Since I haven't been feeding him I guess he's just been living off whatever was in the tank. What should I start feeding him? -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ |
Black Neon Fry
"Ben" wrote in message ... I haven't been paying attention to my quarantine tank, since I haven't had fish in it in several months. There has been no heater since the last time I had fish in it, although there's a corner filter that's been running continuously. I was quite surprised with today I noticed a .5" neon tetra in there. The water temp was around 65f so I turned on the heater to bring it up to about 70f. I tested the water and ammonia and nitrates are zero, pH is off the scale to the high side. What do I need to do before I can put this little guy into my community tank? It's heavily planted, but I'd still worry a bit about him getting eaten. I also don't want him to just die of shock. Is .5" really small for a fry that has to be at least 3 or 4 months old? Since I haven't been feeding him I guess he's just been living off whatever was in the tank. What should I start feeding him? Feed sparingly and experiment a bit. I like Sally's frozen baby brine shrimp for small growing tetras, but there are many other options. Do try to give him some food that he would eventually get in the community tank. When you eventually set him loose, do it unobtrusively, though the back of the tank, in the evening, with the lights off. Will he ever be surprised by all the room :~) NetMax |
Black Neon Fry
"NetMax" wrote in message ... Feed sparingly and experiment a bit. I like Sally's frozen baby brine shrimp for small growing tetras, but there are many other options. Do try to give him some food that he would eventually get in the community tank. When you eventually set him loose, do it unobtrusively, though the back of the tank, in the evening, with the lights off. Will he ever be surprised by all the room :~) Since the main tank is "heavily planted" I'm going to assume that the PH is 7 or below. Wouldn't it be a good idea to slowly lower the PH in the Q-tank to avoid shocking the little bugger? |
Black Neon Fry
On Mon, 01 Mar 2004 05:26:21 GMT, Dinky
wrote: "NetMax" wrote in message ... Feed sparingly and experiment a bit. I like Sally's frozen baby brine shrimp for small growing tetras, but there are many other options. Do try to give him some food that he would eventually get in the community tank. When you eventually set him loose, do it unobtrusively, though the back of the tank, in the evening, with the lights off. Will he ever be surprised by all the room :~) Since the main tank is "heavily planted" I'm going to assume that the PH is 7 or below. Wouldn't it be a good idea to slowly lower the PH in the Q-tank to avoid shocking the little bugger? pH in my planted tank is right around 7. I have some pH down, but doesn't that just eat up the hardness? Is there a better way to do it? -- Using M2, Opera's revolutionary e-mail client: http://www.opera.com/m2/ |
Black Neon Fry
"ben" wrote in message ... On Mon, 01 Mar 2004 05:26:21 GMT, Dinky wrote: "NetMax" wrote in message ... Feed sparingly and experiment a bit. I like Sally's frozen baby brine shrimp for small growing tetras, but there are many other options. Do try to give him some food that he would eventually get in the community tank. When you eventually set him loose, do it unobtrusively, though the back of the tank, in the evening, with the lights off. Will he ever be surprised by all the room :~) Since the main tank is "heavily planted" I'm going to assume that the PH is 7 or below. Wouldn't it be a good idea to slowly lower the PH in the Q-tank to avoid shocking the little bugger? pH in my planted tank is right around 7. I have some pH down, but doesn't that just eat up the hardness? Is there a better way to do it? Good point Dinky. Start pouring your main tank water into your q-tank to acclimate him. NetMax |
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