![]() |
|
Aquarium Cluedo
In the past few months, several of the fish I've added to my tank have
died soon afterwards. They are bought from a very reliable LFS and I am certain it is not that they are unhealthy or diseased when I get them. The most recent victims have been a beta and an otocinclus. The water is fine and there are a number of healthy, active fish - both old and new - so we suspect they're being attacked by something else. I don't think any of the other fish in the aquarium are of a violent tendency. Currently there are mollies, ancistrus, one surviving otocinclus and clown loaches. It doesn't seem likely that any of these would be the culprits. There are also three shrimp, one of which has grown quite large (about 1.5 inches long); I note that if there is a dead fish in the tank, the shrimp are very quick to get to it - but are they likely to attack a live fish? -- FishNoob |
Aquarium Cluedo
"K" wrote in message . org... I'm sceptical about the mollies or clowns being the guilty ones, because they seem peaceful, don't bother the other fish when I'm watching, and have spent so much time in the tank with other fish before these problems. ========================= Are you acclimating the new fish before you add them to the tank? You don't just bring them home, float them awhile and dump them in do you? The TDS may be the problem. The PH and hardness of the water from the Pet store and your tank may be vastly different. I learned this the hard way. :*( -- RM.... Zone 6. Middle TN USA ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
Aquarium Cluedo
|
Aquarium Cluedo
|
Aquarium Cluedo
In article 1a79afd4-e378-4e18-b6d5-a86fcc6ded29
@e25g2000prg.googlegroups.com, says... = O Wow! That's a rare shop you have there. Yeah, I know. Where is this shop located? A shop that goes to that much trouble before selling is worth getting some free advertising. = ) I don't think there's anyone else here in my area, and the website's not up-to-date, but - www.grosvenor-tropicals.co.uk I'd have put it down to that too, except that when we had the other bettas, it was several weeks before the last one was dead. So even if it was shock this time, it wasn't before. I'd just like to figure out what it was before I condemn anything else to its death :-( The fact that the other bettas in the past died several weeks after you got them vs. 24 hours after you got these.... means the deaths are like 99.9% unrelated. So what would be your guess about the reason for the previous deaths? However, the fact that this stores Bettas aren't lasting more than several weeks int he first place is red flag. Are you sure they're quarantining the bettas as well? I wouldn't assume if I didn't know. They quarantine everything. You know those places that sell bettas in cups? Well, they're kinda the opposite of that ;-) -- FishNoob |
Aquarium Cluedo
"K" wrote in message . org... They quarantine everything. You know those places that sell bettas in cups? Well, they're kinda the opposite of that ;-) ====================== Just for curiosity sake - check the PH and hardness of the water in the pet store (not in the bag when you get home) and the water in your tanks. Even with faithful partial water changes I've had the PH and hardness sneak up on me over time. Another time I had it crash in a slightly overcrowded tank of young goldfish. -- RM.... Zone 6. Middle TN USA ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
Aquarium Cluedo
|
Aquarium Cluedo
On Dec 10, 4:12 am, K wrote:
In article , says... Just for curiosity sake - check the PH and hardness of the water in the pet store (not in the bag when you get home) The water in the bag comes from the same tank as the fish; the ph and hardness wouldn't change during the journey home - would they? -- FishNoob Ph changes in the bag. Once its sealed and the fish eliminates in the bag or just dissapates co2 etc through normal respiration it will build up but as long as the bag is still sealed its relatively stable for a period of time but once that bag is opened the ph can change drastically.thats why you do not need to check the ph etc of "bagged" water...........get a sample of the lfs water to compare with, that has not been sealed up with a fish. ON top of that.you can take a sample of water.and carry it home or just let it set there for an hour and it can change PH......thats why its a freaking joke when lfs ask for water samples and the first thing they check is the PH. Ph can change from morning to night and it can vary due to amount of ventilation a house has. |
Aquarium Cluedo
"K" wrote in message . org... In article , says... Just for curiosity sake - check the PH and hardness of the water in the pet store (not in the bag when you get home) The water in the bag comes from the same tank as the fish; the ph and hardness wouldn't change during the journey home - would they? ============================ Yes it can if fish or ghost shrimp or frogs are in the bag. -- RM.... . Zone 6. Middle TN USA ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:24 PM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FishKeepingBanter.com