Thanks I never used a newsgroup really before and hit reply instead of reply
to group. I will try and cut back it does seem to look like a snowstorm
when I feed. The trouble is the fish always seem hungry. I didn't realise
how big there stomachs were either.
As for the snails I spent 3 hours yesterday removing them into an old water
butt.
Its a shame about the clown loach though. Can I fit any more different fish
or am I overstocked (Exclude snails in this equation)
Steve
"NetMax" wrote in message
...
"NetMax" wrote in message
. ..
"steve" wrote in message
...
Hi I have an aquarium running for 2 months now 36x14x14 inches
nitrites
0.
3 adult guppies 7 baby guppies 1 Queen Pleco 5 neon tetra 3 black
tetras and
1000 snails. I change 10 litres water a week. I vacuumed the gravel
a
month ago and a day later the water went greeny brown so bad I
couldn't
see
the fish. I had to clear it by using greenaway. The same thing has
just
happened again after gravel vacuuming. Is it really necessary to
clean
the
gravel my tank is well planted. It is fine until I clean the tank.
Also
could I keep a clown loach with the fish and size tank .
Hope you guys can help I am still learning.
Steve (UK)
Tank size is 30g us. When your water gets easily polluted by just
gravel
vacuuming, then it is not balanced, and the next clue is that to have
1000 snails, you have to be feeding them. They survive off of uneaten
food, so they are becoming your main bio-load. A fish's stomach is
about
the size of their eye. Feed so that no food reaches the bottom of the
tank. Give your pleco one sinking wafer and let him fight the snails
for
it.
Well-planted tanks need little or no gravel vacuuming if there is a low
fish load. Note that fish-load (or bio-load) includes rotting uneaten
food and other living organisms, so your load is much higher than the
fish you see.
I'd also be curious how much of the biological filtration is being done
by your filters.
Regarding the Clown loach, nope. You would really want to have several
of them, and in a 30g, you don't have the room for even one for that
long.
--
www.NetMax.tk
From: "steve"
Reply-To: "steve"
To: "NetMax"
Subject: Cloudy Water
Date: Wed, 26 May 2004 21:24:41 +0100
So when I clean all the gravel im spoiling the water. My tank is
heavily
planted and I have been overfeeding due to the baby Guppies The Tank
does
smell very earthy also. Would I be correct in assuming if I remove and
dispose of nearly all the snails this could also cause an imbalance. I
dont
like killing anything even the snails and would prefer them to be a part
of
the food chain is there an "environmentally friendly" way to get rid of
them. I also thought you have to feed guppies several times a day which
is
probably why I have a snail explosion.
Steve
The problem is not how often you feed, as snails don't eat fish poop
(afaik). The problem is uneaten food is getting to the bottom, polluting
the tank. The snails are multiplying to take advantage of the imbalance
you have created. Rotting feces will release a lot of ammonia into the
water, but rotting food is worse. Feed sparingly 2 or 3 times a day
(baby Guppies eat lots of things besides fish-food), and then google for
a snail removal strategy which works for you.
ps: I flipped you back to the newsgroup from email so others can add
their learned comments as well, and catch my mistakes too ;~)
NetMax