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#1
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does anyone change their tank temp with the seasons? if so what range, so
far since setting up my tank in janurary ive kept it pretty close to 75° |
#2
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![]() "Petebert" wrote in message ... does anyone change their tank temp with the seasons? if so what range, so far since setting up my tank in janurary ive kept it pretty close to 75° Temperature changes are stressfull on fish, in the wild as well as in captivity. If the temperature changes are gradual, the fish adapt, but why put them through it? Breeding sometimes requires temp changes, but otherwise you'd be doing your fish a favor by retaining a stable environment. billy |
#3
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![]() Temperature changes are stressfull on fish, in the wild as well as in captivity. If the temperature changes are gradual, the fish adapt, but why put them through it? Breeding sometimes requires temp changes, but otherwise you'd be doing your fish a favor by retaining a stable environment. billy Fish in the wild swim from surface to other depths at the flick of a fin. Have you ever noticed the huge difference in termperature at the surface (vs a foot or more down) of still water? (pond, creek, swamp, etc) I'm not advocating that you create those conditions, but a few degrees of quick change isn't as stressful as you indicate. Bob |
#4
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"Petebert" wrote in message ...
does anyone change their tank temp with the seasons? if so what range, so far since setting up my tank in janurary ive kept it pretty close to 75° Well... Sortof. After two incidents where heaters stuck and killed my fish, I don't use heaters anymore. The tank is in a heated room, which in winter is never cooler than 18C (64F) and in summer may briefly reach 30C (86F). The water temperature in winter varies between 20-24C and in summer 28-32C. The tank is also close to a window, so it gets much more light in summer than in winter. I've found that 1) everything breeds in spring/early summer, ('everything' here being gobies, platies, celebes rainbows, lampeyes, and neon tetras), and 2) nothing breeds in autumn/winter. I've had no temperature related problems apart from that it's darn difficult to get anything to breed during winter, and darn difficult to take care of the glut of fry in spring. Actually I'm a bit surprised that seemingly all species respond to increasing temperature and light by breeding, as at least some of them in nature tend to spawn during rainy season (less light, lower temp). |
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