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Hello everyone,
I know this topic has been discussed before, but I'm very new at this and would like to know what I can do and not do with my aquarium. After all, advice that's good for one particular tank may not be as good for another. I recently got one of those Nutrafin Natural Plant System CO2 injectors. After it started working at full capacity (providing me with long hours of entertainment with those little climbing CO2 bubbles), I decided to get a second one. My aquarium is 40 gallons and each canister is supposed to be good for up to 20 gallons. I assume even one canister could help my plants, but I figure I'm better off not doing things half-assed, else I might not see any results at all. Both injectors seem to be working just fine, though it's still too early to see any results. Now, my problem is that I'm a little worried about my air pump and stone. Since I don't want to lose the CO2 I inject into the water, I'd like to turn the thing off, ideally for good. However, I don't know if my fish will get enough oxygen that way, especially during the night. There's also the pH issue to consider. It's fine if it's under 7.0, even a good thing, but I don't want it to go too low (like close to 6.0). As I said, I have a 40-gallon aquarium with a Fluval 304 filter. It has a large surface area (36" x 18") and is very heavily planted. However, it also contains a full load of fish. About 45 or so. Almost all are small fish (many neon tetras, eight rasboras, a few barbs and a few other small fish), with a couple of pearl gouramis. I don't think it's really excessive, but I admit my aquarium is rather densely populated, and thus the fish must use up a lot of oxygen. So anyway, I'm wondering if the fish would still get enough oxygen if I turned off my air pump and got rid of all those annoying bubbles. On the one hand, my filter causes some surface turbulence (though nothing heavy), and I know that a heavy load of healthy, CO2-fed plants will produce a good quantity of oxygen for my fish. On the other hand, I do have many fish , and turning off the oxygen at the same time I start injecting CO2 seems a bit radical. Then again, maybe my tank contains way more oxygen than my fish will ever need and can afford to lose some. Besides, with the air bubbles on I'm more or less wasting the CO2 I'm injecting. Any advice would be welcome. Thank you in advance. Francois |
#2
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If your tank has many plants in it and is not overstocked with fish
just put your air pump on a timer and run it @ night only. Be sure to watch the fish the ist day for sign and sypmtoms of o2 depravation but generally they will be fine Marcus http://www.aquatic-store.com/ Co2 tanks on sale Power compact bulbs and MH the lowest on the net Co2 regulator and bubble counter with needle valve $75 do you want a FREE CO2 Regulator or FREE CO2 DIFFUSOR???? Swing on by our webbforum to see how to get one!! http://aquatic.yupapa.com/phpbb/index.php On Thu, 20 Nov 2003 22:31:30 -0500, "François Arsenault" wrote: Hello everyone, I know this topic has been discussed before, but I'm very new at this and would like to know what I can do and not do with my aquarium. After all, advice that's good for one particular tank may not be as good for another. I recently got one of those Nutrafin Natural Plant System CO2 injectors. After it started working at full capacity (providing me with long hours of entertainment with those little climbing CO2 bubbles), I decided to get a second one. My aquarium is 40 gallons and each canister is supposed to be good for up to 20 gallons. I assume even one canister could help my plants, but I figure I'm better off not doing things half-assed, else I might not see any results at all. Both injectors seem to be working just fine, though it's still too early to see any results. Now, my problem is that I'm a little worried about my air pump and stone. Since I don't want to lose the CO2 I inject into the water, I'd like to turn the thing off, ideally for good. However, I don't know if my fish will get enough oxygen that way, especially during the night. There's also the pH issue to consider. It's fine if it's under 7.0, even a good thing, but I don't want it to go too low (like close to 6.0). As I said, I have a 40-gallon aquarium with a Fluval 304 filter. It has a large surface area (36" x 18") and is very heavily planted. However, it also contains a full load of fish. About 45 or so. Almost all are small fish (many neon tetras, eight rasboras, a few barbs and a few other small fish), with a couple of pearl gouramis. I don't think it's really excessive, but I admit my aquarium is rather densely populated, and thus the fish must use up a lot of oxygen. So anyway, I'm wondering if the fish would still get enough oxygen if I turned off my air pump and got rid of all those annoying bubbles. On the one hand, my filter causes some surface turbulence (though nothing heavy), and I know that a heavy load of healthy, CO2-fed plants will produce a good quantity of oxygen for my fish. On the other hand, I do have many fish , and turning off the oxygen at the same time I start injecting CO2 seems a bit radical. Then again, maybe my tank contains way more oxygen than my fish will ever need and can afford to lose some. Besides, with the air bubbles on I'm more or less wasting the CO2 I'm injecting. Any advice would be welcome. Thank you in advance. Francois |
#3
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Hello Marcus,
If your tank has many plants in it and is not overstocked with fish just put your air pump on a timer and run it @ night only. Be sure to watch the fish the ist day for sign and sypmtoms of o2 depravation but generally they will be fine My tank is rather well stocked, with about 45 fish for 40 gallons (at times it can contain a few more). But almost all of them are quite small, including 15-20 neon tetras. Only the two pearl gouramis are on the larger side. And I do have lots of plants. Still, while my tank isn't ridiculously overpopulated, I think your advice of having the air pump run during the night is a very good idea. Since plants don't do photosynthesis during the night, they don't need the CO2 anyway. The first time I tried turning off the air pump while using the CO2 canisters it was off for 16 hours. I noticed that some of the fish were breathing faster, though they weren't going to the surface. But they don't seem to mind 12 hours. A 12/12 cycle might be good for the air pump. The plants just won't get as much CO2 for a few hours during the bright period. Seems like a good compromise to me. Thank you very much for the advice. Francois |
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