I have had enough with one of my tanks. It's always been swamped with hair algae which re-appears in no time at all, despite regular cleaning and large water changes. I take out and bleach the plants that have become little more than green streamers with long blossoms of algae, likewise all the other movable stuff. It has a large piece of bogwood which also gets a good scrubbing with a wire brush. This is in the centre to sort of split the swimming area into a left and right to keep potentially battling species apart. I have an external Oscillaris filter and also I have had a sponge filter in a rear corner and also another filter alongside internally to try to keep on top of things. They all gunge up pretty quickly. I squeeze clean every couple of weeks on the internal filters and do the external whenever the flow from the input pipe is noticeably slow.
Most plants die quickly, or grow very slowly with a couple of exceptions. The substrate was sand with a fine grain.
Water is very hard here, something I have recently discovered to my horror. I mean in the order of 22PH. I have seen reference to hard water being something that hair algae thrives in so that might explain things a bit. I might add that there is no direct daylight in the room. The room has no windows and the only natural light is from the kitchen to the rear of the study where the tank is located. The artificial lighting is the standard Aqua One that came with the tank. I do have a few snails but only about a dozen or so. They aren't increasing in any numbers so don't point to overfeeding as the algae problem.
Current inhabitants are the leftovers of larger numbers. These are a pair of Kribs which reside in a clay tunnel in the right of the tank, a pair of Firemouth, now fully grown and who are exhibiting breeding behaviour, a single Pearl Gourami also fully grown but sadly no mate as I think the male Firemouth saw him off, a single GBR who has never had a partner, a single Golden Ram which was bought as a pair and who has become the single survivor, a single Green Tiger Barb who wanders around alone hanging head down, he is the survivor of a group of 6 from mid 2018, 4 of the Striata Loach as they are a social fish that needs companions, and 2 Bristlenose which are starting to get a bit on the big size but have shown no breeding behaviour. They may not be a true pair anyway. There are so many battles. The Kribs hate the Firemouths and the GBR, The Firemouth Male hates them back and also flares at and fights with the Pearl Gouram and GBR. The GBR chases the Golden Ram. It's like watching a MAGA march with BLM onlookers. I also have a pair of Dwarf Gouramis that I moved into another tank that I would like to bring back. They were showing breeding signs and weren't getting any peace in this tank.
The lump of bogwood has hollows under the base, sort of tunnels that the Striatas and Bristlenoses inhabit.
On Thursday I did a complete overhaul of the tank.Everything was taken out. I changed the substrate to black Hugo Kamishi 4mm size granules. I Squeeze cleaned the internal sponge filter and removed the other internal altogether. I changed the filter wool in the external but left everything else to maintain the biologically good bacteria.
I threw out the plants and scrubbed the bogwood once more. In fact I bleached it first then let it stand overnight in fresh water. The whole plumbing was dismantled and given a good going over to remove as much green as possible inside and outside the tubes.
I have bought some plants and will be getting more today to put in. I have also set up a CO2 system at 1 bubble a second to give nutrition to the plants. Is there any way to check the CO2 content of the water, by the way?
Due to the potential of chemical spikes with the overhaul I'm doing daily checks and will change water as often as needed to keep things under control.
What I want to do now is sort out the inhabitants to the best effect. My LFS will take whatever I don't want for store credit so I can at least move some stock to them. Where do I go from here then?
The water hardness is the major problem I see and can probably account for many lost fish in the past. I would like a busy tank. Not overly stocked and not with fish that grow to any great size, but smaller and active. I am open to suggestions.
Most plants die quickly, or grow very slowly with a couple of exceptions. The substrate was sand with a fine grain.
Water is very hard here, something I have recently discovered to my horror. I mean in the order of 22PH. I have seen reference to hard water being something that hair algae thrives in so that might explain things a bit. I might add that there is no direct daylight in the room. The room has no windows and the only natural light is from the kitchen to the rear of the study where the tank is located. The artificial lighting is the standard Aqua One that came with the tank. I do have a few snails but only about a dozen or so. They aren't increasing in any numbers so don't point to overfeeding as the algae problem.
Current inhabitants are the leftovers of larger numbers. These are a pair of Kribs which reside in a clay tunnel in the right of the tank, a pair of Firemouth, now fully grown and who are exhibiting breeding behaviour, a single Pearl Gourami also fully grown but sadly no mate as I think the male Firemouth saw him off, a single GBR who has never had a partner, a single Golden Ram which was bought as a pair and who has become the single survivor, a single Green Tiger Barb who wanders around alone hanging head down, he is the survivor of a group of 6 from mid 2018, 4 of the Striata Loach as they are a social fish that needs companions, and 2 Bristlenose which are starting to get a bit on the big size but have shown no breeding behaviour. They may not be a true pair anyway. There are so many battles. The Kribs hate the Firemouths and the GBR, The Firemouth Male hates them back and also flares at and fights with the Pearl Gouram and GBR. The GBR chases the Golden Ram. It's like watching a MAGA march with BLM onlookers. I also have a pair of Dwarf Gouramis that I moved into another tank that I would like to bring back. They were showing breeding signs and weren't getting any peace in this tank.
The lump of bogwood has hollows under the base, sort of tunnels that the Striatas and Bristlenoses inhabit.
On Thursday I did a complete overhaul of the tank.Everything was taken out. I changed the substrate to black Hugo Kamishi 4mm size granules. I Squeeze cleaned the internal sponge filter and removed the other internal altogether. I changed the filter wool in the external but left everything else to maintain the biologically good bacteria.
I threw out the plants and scrubbed the bogwood once more. In fact I bleached it first then let it stand overnight in fresh water. The whole plumbing was dismantled and given a good going over to remove as much green as possible inside and outside the tubes.
I have bought some plants and will be getting more today to put in. I have also set up a CO2 system at 1 bubble a second to give nutrition to the plants. Is there any way to check the CO2 content of the water, by the way?
Due to the potential of chemical spikes with the overhaul I'm doing daily checks and will change water as often as needed to keep things under control.
What I want to do now is sort out the inhabitants to the best effect. My LFS will take whatever I don't want for store credit so I can at least move some stock to them. Where do I go from here then?
The water hardness is the major problem I see and can probably account for many lost fish in the past. I would like a busy tank. Not overly stocked and not with fish that grow to any great size, but smaller and active. I am open to suggestions.
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