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I have lost several fish in the last week due to what I believe may be the
alkaline being too low in my tank. I've done 2 water changes & even I've tried to raise the PH a little in attempts to raise the alkaline. The tank is 15 years old, however I've had it in storage for the last 5 years. I set it back up 2 weeks ago. Here are the test results. Nitrate (NO3) - 0 Nitrate (NO2) - .5 Hardness - 75 soft Total Alkalinity- 0 PH - 7.2 neutral Ammonia - .25 safe I am using the 5 tests in one strip (Quick Dip) to test. What I currently have in the tank is... 5 female bettas 2 black molly's 1 swordtail 3 green cory cats 1 Red tail shark 3 Black skirt tetra 4 White skirt tetra It is a 55 gallon tank Any suggestions? |
#2
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hopenfuture wrote:
I have lost several fish in the last week due to what I believe may be the alkaline being too low in my tank. I've done 2 water changes & even I've tried to raise the PH a little in attempts to raise the alkaline. The tank is 15 years old, however I've had it in storage for the last 5 years. I set it back up 2 weeks ago. Here are the test results. Nitrate (NO3) - 0 Nitrate (NO2) - .5 Hardness - 75 soft Total Alkalinity- 0 PH - 7.2 neutral Ammonia - .25 safe I am using the 5 tests in one strip (Quick Dip) to test. What I currently have in the tank is... 5 female bettas 2 black molly's 1 swordtail 3 green cory cats 1 Red tail shark 3 Black skirt tetra 4 White skirt tetra It is a 55 gallon tank Any suggestions? Well at the wish of not seeming flippant I would suggest posting on a freshwater group....however I do sympathise with your reasons for not wishing to post on the Usenet groups.....a good group is TFA and there are a great bunch of folks there that will help you:- http://groups.google.com/group/The-F...m?lnk=li&hl=en Your tank is cycling and you will probably find that you have added way too many fish too quickly and things may get worse before they get better. Check this link for details on cycling a tank in a freshwater environment:- http://faq.thekrib.com/begin-cycling.html Gilll |
#3
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"hopenfuture" u32892@uwe wrote in news:6fdeab9ff297a@uwe:
I have lost several fish in the last week due to what I believe may be the alkaline being too low in my tank. I've done 2 water changes & even I've tried to raise the PH a little in attempts to raise the alkaline. The tank is 15 years old, however I've had it in storage for the last 5 years. I set it back up 2 weeks ago. Here are the test results. Nitrate (NO3) - 0 Nitrite (NO2) - .5 Hardness - 75 soft Total Alkalinity- 0 PH - 7.2 neutral Ammonia - .25 safe I am using the 5 tests in one strip (Quick Dip) to test. What I currently have in the tank is... 5 female bettas 2 black molly's 1 swordtail 3 green cory cats 1 Red tail shark 3 Black skirt tetra 4 White skirt tetra It is a 55 gallon tank Any suggestions? First suggestion; a marine reef forum isn't the right location for your questions about a freshwater tank. Try rec.aquaria.freshwater.misc next time. Second: your tank is not yet cycled, and you have a big load of fish for a tank thats two weeks old. If you can return the bettas, mollys, swordtail, cories, and shark, then the seven tetra might have a reasonable chance at lasting. Notice that your ammonia and nitrites are present, but no nitrates are registering. The bacteria that convert ammonia and nitrites into nitrates haven't developed in your system yet. Keep an eye on ammonia and nitrite with only the tetras, and wait for both values to go to zero, with a corresponding increase in nitrates. You can then start to add more fish _slowly_. 0 alkalinity is also a potential problem, albeit much less than not being cycled. Add some (1 to 2 cups) aragonite sand, either into a nylon suspended in the power filter, as a layer in a section of a cannister filter, or scattered over the substrate. Others use "wonder shells" for improved buffering capacity, too. Check out www.netmax.tk and read up on the nitrogen cycle. Good luck! DaveZ |
#4
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hopenfuture wrote:
I have lost several fish in the last week due to what I believe may be the alkaline being too low in my tank. I've done 2 water changes & even I've tried to raise the PH a little in attempts to raise the alkaline. The tank is 15 years old, however I've had it in storage for the last 5 years. I set it back up 2 weeks ago. Here are the test results. I was going to suggest something like reef buffer to get the alk up, but then I see: Nitrate (NO3) - 0 Nitrate (NO2) - .5 Hardness - 75 soft Total Alkalinity- 0 PH - 7.2 neutral Ammonia - .25 safe Hardness?!?! And that PH is way to low... Hmmmm... WTF? and *0* alkalinity? Zero? I am using the 5 tests in one strip (Quick Dip) to test. What I currently have in the tank is... 5 female bettas 2 black molly's 1 swordtail 3 green cory cats 1 Red tail shark 3 Black skirt tetra 4 White skirt tetra It is a 55 gallon tank Any suggestions? Yes. I have a suggestion. Don't try to keep freshwater fish in a reef tank. The sal****er will kill them. |
#5
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atomweaver wrote:
Check out www.netmax.tk and read up on the nitrogen cycle. Good luck! DaveZ NetMax is a prolific poster on and a founder member of TFA...... Gill |
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Gill Passman wrote in news:460ad054$0$759
: atomweaver wrote: Check out www.netmax.tk and read up on the nitrogen cycle. Good luck! DaveZ NetMax is a prolific poster on and a founder member of TFA...... Gill Umm, was this comment directed at me? I know this, which is why I like his site so much, even though I don't like Google Groups. DaveZ |
#7
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"hopenfuture" u32892@uwe wrote in message news:6fdeab9ff297a@uwe...
I have lost several fish in the last week due to what I believe may be the alkaline being too low in my tank. I've done 2 water changes & even I've tried to raise the PH a little in attempts to raise the alkaline. The tank is 15 years old, however I've had it in storage for the last 5 years. I set it back up 2 weeks ago. Here are the test results. Nitrate (NO3) - 0 Nitrate (NO2) - .5 Hardness - 75 soft Total Alkalinity- 0 PH - 7.2 neutral That is way too low pH and alkalinity for a marine setup! ;-) |
#8
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atomweaver wrote:
Umm, was this comment directed at me? I know this, which is why I like his site so much, even though I don't like Google Groups. DaveZ Not aimed at you at all :-)....just a further advisory to the OP because you mentioned NetMax as a great resource of information.....google groups are not to everyone's taste and many prefer Usenet....they have their pluses and their minuses..... Gill :-) |
#9
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Oops sorry everyone. First time on this site, I thought I had posted on
fresh water, however I was mistaken. Sorry! hopenfuture wrote: I have lost several fish in the last week due to what I believe may be the alkaline being too low in my tank. I've done 2 water changes & even I've tried to raise the PH a little in attempts to raise the alkaline. The tank is 15 years old, however I've had it in storage for the last 5 years. I set it back up 2 weeks ago. Here are the test results. Nitrate (NO3) - 0 Nitrate (NO2) - .5 Hardness - 75 soft Total Alkalinity- 0 PH - 7.2 neutral Ammonia - .25 safe I am using the 5 tests in one strip (Quick Dip) to test. What I currently have in the tank is... 5 female bettas 2 black molly's 1 swordtail 3 green cory cats 1 Red tail shark 3 Black skirt tetra 4 White skirt tetra It is a 55 gallon tank Any suggestions? -- Message posted via PetKB.com http://www.petkb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx...-reef/200703/1 |
#10
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Thanks! I got on the cycling website you suggested. It helped alot! One
suggestion... "The nitrogen cycle can be sped up or ``jump started'' in a number of ways. Unfortunately, they require access to an established tank, which a beginning aquarist may not have available. The basic idea is to find an established tank, take some of the bacteria out of it and place them in the new tank. Most filters have some sort of foam block or floss insert on which nitrifying bacteria attach. Borrowing all or part of such an insert and placing it in the new tank's filter gets things going more quickly." I have a 5 gallon tank that is over 1 1/2 old. I'm going to try & jumpstart off of that tank. Gill Passman wrote: I have lost several fish in the last week due to what I believe may be the alkaline being too low in my tank. I've done 2 water changes & even I've [quoted text clipped - 23 lines] Any suggestions? Well at the wish of not seeming flippant I would suggest posting on a freshwater group....however I do sympathise with your reasons for not wishing to post on the Usenet groups.....a good group is TFA and there are a great bunch of folks there that will help you:- http://groups.google.com/group/The-F...m?lnk=li&hl=en Your tank is cycling and you will probably find that you have added way too many fish too quickly and things may get worse before they get better. Check this link for details on cycling a tank in a freshwater environment:- http://faq.thekrib.com/begin-cycling.html Gilll -- Message posted via PetKB.com http://www.petkb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx...-reef/200703/1 |
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