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I had posted about my big oranda and how he had been either sitting on the
bottom, or hovering up at the top of the tank. I took him out and put him in a 6 gallon tank for 5 days, changing the water every day, all water treated with CopperSafe. He was just fine, and got put back in the tank. After a week of him being active and back to normal, he's started doing it again. Now one of my others is acting a bit "tired" as well. I'm starting to think that maybe I need to do a total water change? I did over 50% last week and will again today. 4 full sized fish in a 40 gallon tank (two babies in a fry netting at the top of the tank, only about 1/2 in long), Emperor filter, sand substrate, 6 plastic and ceramic based 'plants'. Any other suggestions, or should I just plan for a total cleanout next weekend? Tahnk, Devin |
#2
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Checked PH, Ammonia and Nitrates and all are coming back with excellent
readings. -Devin |
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Sorry that I wasn't clear. I am reading 0 on ammonia, 0 on nitrates and
acceptable on PH. I thought 20% changes once a week were more than enough on a well established and cycled tank? -Devin "Gunther" wrote in message t... In article k.net, says... Checked PH, Ammonia and Nitrates and all are coming back with excellent readings. -Devin What does that mean? You should have ammonia = 0, nitrites =0, and nitrates something 40ppm. Anything else is not excellent. What you describe sounds like an uncycled tank, and you're not doing water changes frequently enough to keep the water ammonia and/or nitrites tolerably low. Start doing daily tests for ammonia, nitrites, and nitrates, and do daily partial water changes as required. See http://faq.thekrib.com/begin-cycling.html for details. G |
#5
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In article k.net,
says... Sorry that I wasn't clear. I am reading 0 on ammonia, 0 on nitrates and acceptable on PH. What you described was a sick fish that got better when you gave it provably good water. What more proof do you need that you have a water quality issue? And seeing a reading of zero for nitrAtes is not normal unless you just finished a 100% water change. You probably had a bio-filter crash. (Or maybe you have old test kits that are giving false results?) I thought 20% changes once a week were more than enough on a well established and cycled tank? For a well established and cycled tank, you change whatever it takes to keep nitrates to an acceptable level. How much and how often depends on a lot of factors -- stocking levels, live plants or not, etc. The point is not sticking to a rote formula: it's to keep the water clean so the fish stay healthy. I strongly suspect that if you start doing 25-50% PWCs daily for a couple of weeks, your fish will improve. Ok, _now_ will you go read http://faq.thekrib.com/begin-cycling.html? |
#6
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there is something wrong with something in the tank. remove all the "stuff" and do a
100% water change. what is the temp? what kind of aeration do you have in the tank? wash that sand out really well. dont put the "stuff" back into the tank, it is most likely the source of the problem. sometimes it takes months to years for material to start breaking down. all the water parameters can look wonderful, but the CO2 level is elevated and something toxic is going on in the tanks. only thing to do is a strip down. Ingrid "Devin" wrote: I had posted about my big oranda and how he had been either sitting on the bottom, or hovering up at the top of the tank. I took him out and put him in a 6 gallon tank for 5 days, changing the water every day, all water treated with CopperSafe. He was just fine, and got put back in the tank. After a week of him being active and back to normal, he's started doing it again. Now one of my others is acting a bit "tired" as well. I'm starting to think that maybe I need to do a total water change? I did over 50% last week and will again today. 4 full sized fish in a 40 gallon tank (two babies in a fry netting at the top of the tank, only about 1/2 in long), Emperor filter, sand substrate, 6 plastic and ceramic based 'plants'. Any other suggestions, or should I just plan for a total cleanout next weekend? Tahnk, Devin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#7
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Water temp runs 78 - 80 degrees, aeration is provided by a 24" bubble bar
with a Tetra Deep Water 18 pump and the filter, which is an Emperor 280. I'll do the total clean out, it's what I was leaning towards anyway. Is there a way to check CO2? I have the Doc Wellfish kit, and it tests for almost everything but that (and I know the test kit works properly as I have a 6 gallon hospital tank and it does show Nitrates and Ammonia readings on that water). What would cause this to happen so soon after setting it up? This tank completed its cycle only about 6 months ago. -Devin p.s. Thanks for the suggestion several months back of putting polyester fill in the extra media cartridge of the Emperor. I've never had such clear water! wrote in message ... there is something wrong with something in the tank. remove all the "stuff" and do a 100% water change. what is the temp? what kind of aeration do you have in the tank? wash that sand out really well. dont put the "stuff" back into the tank, it is most likely the source of the problem. sometimes it takes months to years for material to start breaking down. all the water parameters can look wonderful, but the CO2 level is elevated and something toxic is going on in the tanks. only thing to do is a strip down. Ingrid "Devin" wrote: I had posted about my big oranda and how he had been either sitting on the bottom, or hovering up at the top of the tank. I took him out and put him in a 6 gallon tank for 5 days, changing the water every day, all water treated with CopperSafe. He was just fine, and got put back in the tank. After a week of him being active and back to normal, he's started doing it again. Now one of my others is acting a bit "tired" as well. I'm starting to think that maybe I need to do a total water change? I did over 50% last week and will again today. 4 full sized fish in a 40 gallon tank (two babies in a fry netting at the top of the tank, only about 1/2 in long), Emperor filter, sand substrate, 6 plastic and ceramic based 'plants'. Any other suggestions, or should I just plan for a total cleanout next weekend? Tahnk, Devin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#8
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Hi Devin,
Sounds like you may have an AP Doc Wellfish Master FW test kit - Is that right? I do, and mine measures ammonia, nitrIte, Hi & Low range pH, kH & gH - but for some annoying reason does not include a nitrAte test, and IME the nitrAte kit is not to be found in any LFS, so unless you ordered a nitrAte test kit online you probably don't have one. Is it possible that everywhere in this thread that you discuss nitrAte you really mean nitrIte? I get my AP nitrAte liquid test kit from http://www.thatpetplace.com/intro/mainf.html search from there under: fish-testing equipment-Aquarium Pharm.-nitrAte Toxic stuff (dissolved organic compounds?) and other bad juju build up in gravel or sand substrate over time unless (or even if?) regularly cleaned. Stirring the substrate with big cleaning releases toxins that can make fish really sick or dead. IMO the fish should be temporarily removed during the big substrate cleaning, at least until water is clear again. These kind of toxins (ask others about DOCs & POCs?) are not measurable with simple test kits. This is why many here have come to recommend no substrate, just glass bottom tank for GF. Not as pretty but avoids any hidden buildup. To determine CO2 with your Dr. Wellfish test kit, measure pH & kH and see Chuck Gadd's site http://www.csd.net/~cgadd/aqua/art_plant_co2chart.htm I add CO2 with Nutrafin DIY reactor to maintain a lower pH without chemicals. http://www.drsfostersmith.com/produc...=6&pCatId=8981 Without it tank pH is around 8.2 - 8.4, with it, 7.6 By Chucks chart the CO2 "measures" only ~3.5 ppm, but it's enough to measurably lower the pH. BTW - If you go the Nutrafin CO2 reactor route ask about a DIY recipe, don't buy the pricey refills ![]() All it needs is hot water, sugar, yeast & baking soda HTH ~ MattO "Devin" wrote in message ink.net... Water temp runs 78 - 80 degrees, aeration is provided by a 24" bubble bar with a Tetra Deep Water 18 pump and the filter, which is an Emperor 280. I'll do the total clean out, it's what I was leaning towards anyway. Is there a way to check CO2? I have the Doc Wellfish kit, and it tests for almost everything but that (and I know the test kit works properly as I have a 6 gallon hospital tank and it does show Nitrates and Ammonia readings on that water). What would cause this to happen so soon after setting it up? This tank completed its cycle only about 6 months ago. -Devin p.s. Thanks for the suggestion several months back of putting polyester fill in the extra media cartridge of the Emperor. I've never had such clear water! wrote in message ... there is something wrong with something in the tank. remove all the "stuff" and do a 100% water change. what is the temp? what kind of aeration do you have in the tank? wash that sand out really well. dont put the "stuff" back into the tank, it is most likely the source of the problem. sometimes it takes months to years for material to start breaking down. all the water parameters can look wonderful, but the CO2 level is elevated and something toxic is going on in the tanks. only thing to do is a strip down. Ingrid "Devin" wrote: I had posted about my big oranda and how he had been either sitting on the bottom, or hovering up at the top of the tank. I took him out and put him in a 6 gallon tank for 5 days, changing the water every day, all water treated with CopperSafe. He was just fine, and got put back in the tank. After a week of him being active and back to normal, he's started doing it again. Now one of my others is acting a bit "tired" as well. I'm starting to think that maybe I need to do a total water change? I did over 50% last week and will again today. 4 full sized fish in a 40 gallon tank (two babies in a fry netting at the top of the tank, only about 1/2 in long), Emperor filter, sand substrate, 6 plastic and ceramic based 'plants'. Any other suggestions, or should I just plan for a total cleanout next weekend? Tahnk, Devin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#9
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Devin,
In my previous message I wandered off my point possible nitrIte vs. nitrAte confusion and toxic buildup in established substrate. To follow up: In an established tank, gunk will collect in the substrate. NitrAte in the water will rise measurably, to levels well over recommended limit of 20ppm and eventually becoming toxic. And in this case water changes will not make much of a difference in nitrAte levels until root source in substrate is removed. So - If you are really measuring nitrAtes as you say, and they are zero, your tank is probably not cycled. In that case, as Gunther said you need to monitor ammonia & nitrIte & do water changes daily until both are zero and the tank is cycled - about 8 weeks - and follow the link Gunther sent for more on that. If you are actually measuring nitrItes (which I suspect is the case) and they are zero, and ammonia is zero, unless you are doing daily water changes your tank is probably cycled. But if you are measuring zero nitrItes and your tank is well established, you probably have high nitrAtes, which could be toxing your fish. Nevermind the immeasurable DOCs & POCs, high nitrAtes are easy to see with the right test kit. In that case get a nitrAte test kit ASAP, and as Gunther advised, do water changes based on that reading to keep nitrAte below 20 ppm. If you find the nitrAte level is not reduced by 50% a few hours after a 50% water change, then your substrate is probably fouled. In that case you can worry about POCs/DOCs. In any case do frequent water changes until you sort it all out - it never hurts. HTH Till recently I've always had gravel. Tried plants, hi-watt CF lighting, CO2, the works- finally gave up - Have thought about sand but after recent GF death went directly to glass bottom. Since then tank is pristine, 'cept for the diatoms (brown algae). ~ MattO "MattO" wrote in message news:kc7cb.564964$uu5.93088@sccrnsc04... Hi Devin, Sounds like you may have an AP Doc Wellfish Master FW test kit - Is that right? I do, and mine measures ammonia, nitrIte, Hi & Low range pH, kH & gH - but for some annoying reason does not include a nitrAte test, and IME the nitrAte kit is not to be found in any LFS, so unless you ordered a nitrAte test kit online you probably don't have one. Is it possible that everywhere in this thread that you discuss nitrAte you really mean nitrIte? I get my AP nitrAte liquid test kit from http://www.thatpetplace.com/intro/mainf.html search from there under: fish-testing equipment-Aquarium Pharm.-nitrAte Toxic stuff (dissolved organic compounds?) and other bad juju build up in gravel or sand substrate over time unless (or even if?) regularly cleaned. Stirring the substrate with big cleaning releases toxins that can make fish really sick or dead. IMO the fish should be temporarily removed during the big substrate cleaning, at least until water is clear again. These kind of toxins (ask others about DOCs & POCs?) are not measurable with simple test kits. This is why many here have come to recommend no substrate, just glass bottom tank for GF. Not as pretty but avoids any hidden buildup. To determine CO2 with your Dr. Wellfish test kit, measure pH & kH and see Chuck Gadd's site http://www.csd.net/~cgadd/aqua/art_plant_co2chart.htm I add CO2 with Nutrafin DIY reactor to maintain a lower pH without chemicals. http://www.drsfostersmith.com/produc...=6&pCatId=8981 Without it tank pH is around 8.2 - 8.4, with it, 7.6 By Chucks chart the CO2 "measures" only ~3.5 ppm, but it's enough to measurably lower the pH. BTW - If you go the Nutrafin CO2 reactor route ask about a DIY recipe, don't buy the pricey refills ![]() All it needs is hot water, sugar, yeast & baking soda HTH ~ MattO "Devin" wrote in message ink.net... Water temp runs 78 - 80 degrees, aeration is provided by a 24" bubble bar with a Tetra Deep Water 18 pump and the filter, which is an Emperor 280. I'll do the total clean out, it's what I was leaning towards anyway. Is there a way to check CO2? I have the Doc Wellfish kit, and it tests for almost everything but that (and I know the test kit works properly as I have a 6 gallon hospital tank and it does show Nitrates and Ammonia readings on that water). What would cause this to happen so soon after setting it up? This tank completed its cycle only about 6 months ago. -Devin p.s. Thanks for the suggestion several months back of putting polyester fill in the extra media cartridge of the Emperor. I've never had such clear water! wrote in message ... there is something wrong with something in the tank. remove all the "stuff" and do a 100% water change. what is the temp? what kind of aeration do you have in the tank? wash that sand out really well. dont put the "stuff" back into the tank, it is most likely the source of the problem. sometimes it takes months to years for material to start breaking down. all the water parameters can look wonderful, but the CO2 level is elevated and something toxic is going on in the tanks. only thing to do is a strip down. Ingrid "Devin" wrote: I had posted about my big oranda and how he had been either sitting on the bottom, or hovering up at the top of the tank. I took him out and put him in a 6 gallon tank for 5 days, changing the water every day, all water treated with CopperSafe. He was just fine, and got put back in the tank. After a week of him being active and back to normal, he's started doing it again. Now one of my others is acting a bit "tired" as well. I'm starting to think that maybe I need to do a total water change? I did over 50% last week and will again today. 4 full sized fish in a 40 gallon tank (two babies in a fry netting at the top of the tank, only about 1/2 in long), Emperor filter, sand substrate, 6 plastic and ceramic based 'plants'. Any other suggestions, or should I just plan for a total cleanout next weekend? Tahnk, Devin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#10
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Matt,
Well, it all comes down to the letters A and I, I guess. Yes, I'm checking NitrItes, not NitrAtes. I'll bet those are up pretty high. I'll do the total clean-out this weekend and be sure to get a NitrAte test. Thanks for the help, from everyone, Devin "MattO" wrote in message et... Devin, In my previous message I wandered off my point possible nitrIte vs. nitrAte confusion and toxic buildup in established substrate. To follow up: In an established tank, gunk will collect in the substrate. NitrAte in the water will rise measurably, to levels well over recommended limit of 20ppm and eventually becoming toxic. And in this case water changes will not make much of a difference in nitrAte levels until root source in substrate is removed. So - If you are really measuring nitrAtes as you say, and they are zero, your tank is probably not cycled. In that case, as Gunther said you need to monitor ammonia & nitrIte & do water changes daily until both are zero and the tank is cycled - about 8 weeks - and follow the link Gunther sent for more on that. If you are actually measuring nitrItes (which I suspect is the case) and they are zero, and ammonia is zero, unless you are doing daily water changes your tank is probably cycled. But if you are measuring zero nitrItes and your tank is well established, you probably have high nitrAtes, which could be toxing your fish. Nevermind the immeasurable DOCs & POCs, high nitrAtes are easy to see with the right test kit. In that case get a nitrAte test kit ASAP, and as Gunther advised, do water changes based on that reading to keep nitrAte below 20 ppm. If you find the nitrAte level is not reduced by 50% a few hours after a 50% water change, then your substrate is probably fouled. In that case you can worry about POCs/DOCs. In any case do frequent water changes until you sort it all out - it never hurts. HTH Till recently I've always had gravel. Tried plants, hi-watt CF lighting, CO2, the works- finally gave up - Have thought about sand but after recent GF death went directly to glass bottom. Since then tank is pristine, 'cept for the diatoms (brown algae). ~ MattO "MattO" wrote in message news:kc7cb.564964$uu5.93088@sccrnsc04... Hi Devin, Sounds like you may have an AP Doc Wellfish Master FW test kit - Is that right? I do, and mine measures ammonia, nitrIte, Hi & Low range pH, kH & gH - but for some annoying reason does not include a nitrAte test, and IME the nitrAte kit is not to be found in any LFS, so unless you ordered a nitrAte test kit online you probably don't have one. Is it possible that everywhere in this thread that you discuss nitrAte you really mean nitrIte? I get my AP nitrAte liquid test kit from http://www.thatpetplace.com/intro/mainf.html search from there under: fish-testing equipment-Aquarium Pharm.-nitrAte Toxic stuff (dissolved organic compounds?) and other bad juju build up in gravel or sand substrate over time unless (or even if?) regularly cleaned. Stirring the substrate with big cleaning releases toxins that can make fish really sick or dead. IMO the fish should be temporarily removed during the big substrate cleaning, at least until water is clear again. These kind of toxins (ask others about DOCs & POCs?) are not measurable with simple test kits. This is why many here have come to recommend no substrate, just glass bottom tank for GF. Not as pretty but avoids any hidden buildup. To determine CO2 with your Dr. Wellfish test kit, measure pH & kH and see Chuck Gadd's site http://www.csd.net/~cgadd/aqua/art_plant_co2chart.htm I add CO2 with Nutrafin DIY reactor to maintain a lower pH without chemicals. http://www.drsfostersmith.com/produc...=6&pCatId=8981 Without it tank pH is around 8.2 - 8.4, with it, 7.6 By Chucks chart the CO2 "measures" only ~3.5 ppm, but it's enough to measurably lower the pH. BTW - If you go the Nutrafin CO2 reactor route ask about a DIY recipe, don't buy the pricey refills ![]() All it needs is hot water, sugar, yeast & baking soda HTH ~ MattO "Devin" wrote in message ink.net... Water temp runs 78 - 80 degrees, aeration is provided by a 24" bubble bar with a Tetra Deep Water 18 pump and the filter, which is an Emperor 280. I'll do the total clean out, it's what I was leaning towards anyway. Is there a way to check CO2? I have the Doc Wellfish kit, and it tests for almost everything but that (and I know the test kit works properly as I have a 6 gallon hospital tank and it does show Nitrates and Ammonia readings on that water). What would cause this to happen so soon after setting it up? This tank completed its cycle only about 6 months ago. -Devin p.s. Thanks for the suggestion several months back of putting polyester fill in the extra media cartridge of the Emperor. I've never had such clear water! wrote in message ... there is something wrong with something in the tank. remove all the "stuff" and do a 100% water change. what is the temp? what kind of aeration do you have in the tank? wash that sand out really well. dont put the "stuff" back into the tank, it is most likely the source of the problem. sometimes it takes months to years for material to start breaking down. all the water parameters can look wonderful, but the CO2 level is elevated and something toxic is going on in the tanks. only thing to do is a strip down. Ingrid "Devin" wrote: I had posted about my big oranda and how he had been either sitting on the bottom, or hovering up at the top of the tank. I took him out and put him in a 6 gallon tank for 5 days, changing the water every day, all water treated with CopperSafe. He was just fine, and got put back in the tank. After a week of him being active and back to normal, he's started doing it again. Now one of my others is acting a bit "tired" as well. I'm starting to think that maybe I need to do a total water change? I did over 50% last week and will again today. 4 full sized fish in a 40 gallon tank (two babies in a fry netting at the top of the tank, only about 1/2 in long), Emperor filter, sand substrate, 6 plastic and ceramic based 'plants'. Any other suggestions, or should I just plan for a total cleanout next weekend? Tahnk, Devin ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
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