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![]() "Bitey" wrote in message ... On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 20:21:03 -0600, "Rick" wrote: I have water stored in my basement that I keep heated and agitated with an airstone and this water I use in a lot of my tanks. My 77g tank upstairs and my 50 g hex tank are both planted tanks that I use the Python on to do 50% weekly water changes. When I am finished my tanks are full of bubbles, the glass is covered, the plants are covered, everything is covered. I do this week after week after week and have never lost a fish. I live in Canada and the water does have more gas content than in summer however I have never experienced a problem. However like everything in this hobby, YMMV. You heat the water up first so that would lessen the problem. When I did water changes in the summer, I would get a lot of bubbles, too, but no problems. I think bubbles are a indicator of dissolved gasses but the incoming water temperature determines the severity of the problem. In the winter, fish would be seen hyperventilating and hanging out at the surface. If you do a water change, watch your fishes' respiratory rate afterwards or better yet, during. It took me awhile to realize what the problem was (I finally did a Google newsgroup search). Search for gas bubble disease or gas emboli. Since then, I've been heating the water outside the tank and creating a waterfall with a powerhead. Then when I add the water hours later, gradually, there are no bubbles and no hyperventilating. Cichlids are pretty resistant to this but even they have limits. You might not reach them in the summer but a slightly bigger water change on a slightly colder day could do it. the stored water is only because I have a R/O system in my house and I can't stand the amount of waste water it takes to create a gallon of r/o water which I use in a lot of my Corydoras tanks. I run a drain line to the basement from the R/O system and can keep 3 large plastic garbage bins full all the time. So seeing as how it is sitting there anyway I have a 200 watt heater in one bin and an airstone and I simply move them from bin to bin as I empty one or the other. I don't use any preheated and agitated water in my upstairs tanks. The Hex contains angel fish and the 77 planted is a community tank with loaches, bala sharks, platty's, cardinals, neon's, Molly's etc and like I say I add directly from the python to the tank. Never had a problem, no fish appear stressed at all. I also have Otto's in that tank and they are very susceptible to change in water conditons and they appear fine. Just my experience and my lack of problem certainly is not an indication that someone else may not have one. Rick |
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