Cloudy water

Katielady0501

New Member
Joined
Sep 5, 2020
Messages
43
Reaction score
10
Location
Canada
So I have a 29 gallon tank and a 10 gallon tank but the 29 gallon tank is always more cloudy than the 10 gallon. Why is this? I’ve tried so much things to help reduce it but it’s always so cloudy. I’ve had it since July 21st so shouldn’t it not be so cloudy? Plus I clean it so why is it so cloudy?
 

Attachments

  • 31458940-0DDC-4714-AF57-EE3BD77A0936.jpeg
    31458940-0DDC-4714-AF57-EE3BD77A0936.jpeg
    197.7 KB · Views: 44
  • D3A4F95C-F166-4576-BF27-C56B8E2ED37B.jpeg
    D3A4F95C-F166-4576-BF27-C56B8E2ED37B.jpeg
    212.8 KB · Views: 58
  • E0D8B9FA-0921-4EC1-9730-555C8C540219.jpeg
    E0D8B9FA-0921-4EC1-9730-555C8C540219.jpeg
    158.2 KB · Views: 52
  • 6007BC01-ED80-4BA8-A984-D4B333FAE2B5.jpeg
    6007BC01-ED80-4BA8-A984-D4B333FAE2B5.jpeg
    183.1 KB · Views: 59
  • 26A7BC96-2F8E-420A-BD0D-B6A71B59DB21.jpeg
    26A7BC96-2F8E-420A-BD0D-B6A71B59DB21.jpeg
    257.3 KB · Views: 49
I will just note that each tank is a unique biological system, so even when we have several tanks and think we are doing the same in all of them, there are subtle differences biologically.

The cloudiness in the photos is likely a bacterial bloom. In general terms, these can be avoided for the most part by regular (once weekly) substantial (50-70% of the tank volume) partial water changes, vacuuming into the substrate, keeping the filter well rinsed, not overstocking, and not overfeeding. New tanks are often subject to a bacterial bloom, and I have known them last from a few days to several weeks, even longer once.

On no account use any of the "clarifiers" fish stores may try to sell you. These are harmful to fish.
 

Most reactions

Back
Top