scotfishkeeper
New Member
hi I am bit of lurker but sorry my first post has to be a problem and quite a long mess. Some details:
55l cube tank which I have had for 1 year with no loses apart from old betta who died from boating + 2 recent snails.
4 harlequin rasbora's + 6 tetras plus 1 betta + 1 kuli loach + 1 platy + 1 tiny platy fry
good amount of plants all very healthy looking and growing
virtually 0 algae
i water change once per week 25% and never miss one.
API test results showing:
6 PH (possibly lower this is lowest on chart)
1 ammonia (down from 2-4 from water changes)
0 nitrates
0 nitrites
Have done some fiddling maybe month or 2 ago to get rid of green water algae. Mostly just more aggressive water change (40% instead of 25%), scrubbing the filter with aquarium water but i was careful with sponge!! I also added some more plants and changed up a few rocks. 3 weeks ago added new betta to replace on that died.
So, you can probably see from above my problem. All the fish look great and have great colours etc. That is, all apart from one platy that looks great but is spending a lot of time at the bottom. Not really coming up to eat but did so today, foraged a little bit, went back down again.... Only other thing is just lost 2 snails which i had for around 2 months. Wondered if 0 algae could be cause but not sure.... I read snails shouldnt starve in planted tank but they never seemed to go near plants. Only glass and rocks ..
So, i have used test strips for some time and in my ignorance I always thought fine as 0 on nitrates, nitrites, PH always very low but since fish were fine i was happy. Now I am reading up it is simply odd to me that i can never have detected nitrates in the past so how can be tank have ever been cycled .. Perhaps the test strips i used were rubbish but as you can see from new API kit, it seems to show this the case. Note i stopped using ammonia test strips when they ran out 4 months ago. Each time they showed 0.
So then i panic seeing this ammonia and 0 nitrates so either a crashed cycle or never had a cycle to begin with!!!
So, i have done 25% water changes each day for past 4 days. It has gone down from 2/4 to 1. Now, from my reading it seems possible that my ultra low PH + plants are some how allowing an uncycled tank to keep my fish alive by eating ammonia/keeping balance of NH4/NH3 on the side of harmless ammonium ? Otherwise i have no idea how i can possibly have this bright colourful fish for a full year. No nitrates mean tank never cycled and i never even had a colony of bacteria ... ???
So question is what to do now. If my low PH is in fact keeping fish alive by making ammonia harmless ammonium, i cant raise it. However, i need to raise it to get my tank to cycle right? Its sort of a catch 22.
I guess option1 is to try and cycle tank with this low PH over 4 weeks. Water changing if ammonia gets to 1+ , prime each day. A lot what i read suggests bacteria wont like PH this low and this might be even possible.
Or option2 is to used crushed coral or something to raise PH slowly, dose with prime and try to start a proper fish in cycle?
Or maybe option 3? Or maybe above is yet more ignorance? I cant be sure how long ammonia has be there as I havnt tested for it in many months.
55l cube tank which I have had for 1 year with no loses apart from old betta who died from boating + 2 recent snails.
4 harlequin rasbora's + 6 tetras plus 1 betta + 1 kuli loach + 1 platy + 1 tiny platy fry
good amount of plants all very healthy looking and growing
virtually 0 algae
i water change once per week 25% and never miss one.
API test results showing:
6 PH (possibly lower this is lowest on chart)
1 ammonia (down from 2-4 from water changes)
0 nitrates
0 nitrites
Have done some fiddling maybe month or 2 ago to get rid of green water algae. Mostly just more aggressive water change (40% instead of 25%), scrubbing the filter with aquarium water but i was careful with sponge!! I also added some more plants and changed up a few rocks. 3 weeks ago added new betta to replace on that died.
So, you can probably see from above my problem. All the fish look great and have great colours etc. That is, all apart from one platy that looks great but is spending a lot of time at the bottom. Not really coming up to eat but did so today, foraged a little bit, went back down again.... Only other thing is just lost 2 snails which i had for around 2 months. Wondered if 0 algae could be cause but not sure.... I read snails shouldnt starve in planted tank but they never seemed to go near plants. Only glass and rocks ..
So, i have used test strips for some time and in my ignorance I always thought fine as 0 on nitrates, nitrites, PH always very low but since fish were fine i was happy. Now I am reading up it is simply odd to me that i can never have detected nitrates in the past so how can be tank have ever been cycled .. Perhaps the test strips i used were rubbish but as you can see from new API kit, it seems to show this the case. Note i stopped using ammonia test strips when they ran out 4 months ago. Each time they showed 0.
So then i panic seeing this ammonia and 0 nitrates so either a crashed cycle or never had a cycle to begin with!!!
So, i have done 25% water changes each day for past 4 days. It has gone down from 2/4 to 1. Now, from my reading it seems possible that my ultra low PH + plants are some how allowing an uncycled tank to keep my fish alive by eating ammonia/keeping balance of NH4/NH3 on the side of harmless ammonium ? Otherwise i have no idea how i can possibly have this bright colourful fish for a full year. No nitrates mean tank never cycled and i never even had a colony of bacteria ... ???
So question is what to do now. If my low PH is in fact keeping fish alive by making ammonia harmless ammonium, i cant raise it. However, i need to raise it to get my tank to cycle right? Its sort of a catch 22.
I guess option1 is to try and cycle tank with this low PH over 4 weeks. Water changing if ammonia gets to 1+ , prime each day. A lot what i read suggests bacteria wont like PH this low and this might be even possible.
Or option2 is to used crushed coral or something to raise PH slowly, dose with prime and try to start a proper fish in cycle?
Or maybe option 3? Or maybe above is yet more ignorance? I cant be sure how long ammonia has be there as I havnt tested for it in many months.