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Hi Cichlidiot,
I have found that it is much safer to let the fish go without food for several days rather than rely on someone unaccustomed to looking after fish. Having said that if it was caused by your filter dying combined with the high temps then the fish would have died with no one looking after them also. Either way it is not good to return home and find them as you did. John. "rmc" wrote in message ... I'm truly sorry to hear of your loss. Mark http://www.cichliddomain.com |
#2
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In rec.aquaria.freshwater.cichlids John McCormick wrote:
Hi Cichlidiot, I have found that it is much safer to let the fish go without food for several days rather than rely on someone unaccustomed to looking after fish. Having said that if it was caused by your filter dying combined with the high temps then the fish would have died with no one looking after them also. Either way it is not good to return home and find them as you did. Pretty sure it was the temps and not the food. May not have even been the filter. I found out after further investigating that she had not turned on the AC Tuesday evening either. Nor did she open windows or turn on fans to bring in the cool night air. So basically, it sounds like the fish tank room was an oven (temperature wise) from Tuesday until I got home Weds evening at 11pm. The larger cyprichromis fish had been dead long enough for their eyes to go white and fungus to start growing. The smaller fish that survived the temps I think were killed off by the ammonia caused from the dead cyps and the food. Their gills were bright red, which I believe is what happens with ammonia poisoning. How my roommate could have failed to notice 8 floating dead fish and kept dumping in the food without calling me is beyond me. The stench in the tank makes me pretty sure that these fish were dead before Weds's feeding. Can't see how so much stink could have occured in just a few hours even given the temps. The food I vaccuumed off the gravel was not fungused, so I think it was from Weds afternoon feeding. I'm beginning to think that most of the fish were already dead then and the non-eaten food and/or dead fish and/or snails is what clogged the filter and made it stop. I have had problems in the past with the snails forming a mass on the intake grill and then getting mulm stuck between the snails so that filter flow is reduced. Never had it completely cut off filter flow, but then I've always noticed when the flow is reduced. |
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