Ok, well guess what happened to me (what a coincidence)
My water has been in low KH lately, my PH crashed today.
(It's like I jinxed myself talking to you about this)
I tested 0 Ammo, 0 Nitrite and 10ppm Nitrates, but when I checked my
PH it was down around 6.0 maybe a tad under that. My Pleco instantly died.
This was only 4 days after a thorough cleaning and 30% water.
When i checked KH it was 0, I mean 0, there was none.
Now with a 50% water I'm still down at 6.5 and KH is a bit better
but still bad at 15ppm. Damn why is it still so low? Those city guys?
I took some tap water, let it sit for 12 hours and tested KH at only 25ppm.
Why is it so low all of the sudden? My tapwater KH use to be around 80ppm
Those city guys, i blame the city giys for killing Mr. Victor "the cleaner"
(Pleco).
This is bad news. I know i need calcium rock based spring, crushed
oyster shells etc but right now all i have is baking soda. Can anyone
recommend proper dosage? how many tablespoon per 5 gallon so as
not to bring it up over 0.5 per 24hour? I know this is temporary, am i
wasting time or will this at least bring temporary relief?
Anyone with experience using baking soda, please help.
....Kodiak
"Kodiak" wrote in message
. ..
Ok, just a guess, when my Nitrate gets over 50, my PH is usually crashing.
If your KH was getting low, you have nothing to support PH, then water
usually
goes acidic very fast, maybe your fish has suffered more from PH crash
than Nitrate poisoning. Sometimes my city water KH gets down to 30ppm,
normally it's around 80ppm or more. Maybe the city guys forgot to harden
the water.
...Kodiak
"Gunther" wrote in message
t...
In article ,
says...
Yesterday I noticed a previously active and precocious white+yellow
Oranda was feeling punk. I measured some basic chemistry and was
astounded to see +0.5 nitrites and 80ppm nitrates, but ammonia
still zeroish. This was 6 days since my last PWC (according to
the log), and the first trouble I've had in this tank since it
first cycled up over 18 months ago.
A quick 90% PWC perked everyone up in almost no time. There was some
damage done -- the Oranda's dorsal fin shows some red streaking --
but I think the situation is under control now.
I keep a Duetto-50 cycled up and running just for such emergencies,
and moved it into the tank with the PWC. It's too small for a
slightly overloaded 20G, but it's better than nothing. (Slightly
means 3 fish, 2" max.)
The big mystery is - What happened??
I find it curious that at least some bio-filtration survived
whatever calamity struck. Note that ammonia reading was zero,
and nitrates were _way_ elevated. The nitrIte did the damage.
Some possible factors -
- as of about 3 weeks ago, my water district switched to chloramine;
I was aware of this and switched from Novaqua to Amquel, at least
that was the plan. Did I have a blond-moment and forget it when
doing PWCs this month? Did chloramine kill some biobugs?
- The white Oranda had just recently laid a monster load of eggs
over
a 24 hour period; all but a half dozen well hidden ones were
then consumed. She went punkish about 48 hours after the egg were
laid. Did this extra "food" contribute more waste than the system
could handle?
Any and all theories (except those based on notions of Karma or
feng shui) are welcomed and solicited.
Dentist visit was fine...I even got a sugar-free sucker :-D
Water tests done this AM and again this evening (12 and 24 hours
after the emergency) read goodness: ammonia=0, nitrites=0,
nitrates 10ppm.
It is possible that the water district boys, being new to this
chloramine stuff, gave us a hot-shot (overdose) at first? I now recall
a distinct swimming-pool like odor from the tap the for the
first few days of the change-over which I don't notice now.
That could be either because (a) it's not there anymore, or
(b) I'm used to it.
But if an OD was the cause, why are the other two tanks in the
house doing fine?
Donald, how's your office tank doing? I seem to recall your
house is on well water (or rain water, or maybe a bucket-brigade
of UCSC students?), but your office is within spitting distance
of my place. I know because I spit on the Libby's can every
chance I get.
Any problems there?
I'm really concerned about this: I do my best to keep my goldies
healthy, and when something goes awry, I want to know why so
I can avoid it in the future. This one's got me stumped.
BTW: Is there such a thing as post-partum immune deficiency?
(wondering why only one fish succumbed to the nitrite poisoning.)
Gunther