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On Sun, 24 Apr 2005 20:34:41 +0100, "Ken Wilson"
wrote: How much water movement is appropriate really depends on the species. Gouramis live in still water in the wild. They don't like moving water. Moving water also destroys their bubble nests. Yes - i noticed him (it? dunno - my wife wanted an electric blue fish and i know which side my bread is buttered - or rather who butters it) blowing bubbles - but his mate died in a loss of plot incident in my old tank (about half the size ) about a year ago. so it will have to remain spinsterish becuase i understand two male gouramis get territorial and that winds me up. Of my 3 Blue Gouramis, 2 are males. They have their territories and will sometimes attack the visitor, but not often and no damage has ever resulted in over 2 years. The males are about 6 inches in length. My advice is to turn your filter to maximum water flow and aim the water stream at the nearest wall. This way you have maximum water flow without the excessive water movement. My two 330s flow directly from back to front. I see fish swim in the flow all the time. Thanks. You are wrong. The filter does not remove nitrate. It converts ammonium and nitrite into nitrate. i understood that the bacteria turned ammonia to nitrite and that others turned that into nitrate - and that the name of the game was to encourage the wee beasties to grow on the filter media - but i also thought that the nitrate was gobbled up by the live plants (aside form the water change method) but that it needed lots of aeration of the water to do so. when i turn the flow up I twiddle the aeration button at the same time to give lots of bubbles and i thought that was helping to reduce the nitrate level BELOW the level coming in from my tap water (as it is eg today). Can't find where i got this notion from though - how far out is it? ken Have you measured your tap water for nitrates? Mine comes in at zero nitrates. |
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