I thought I'd ask the question about keeping an acidic tank. I've noticed a few posts recently where new aquarists have naturally low KH source water and are asking good questions about cycling. Our instinct is to advise raising their water's KH to ensure the pH doesn't drop low enough to the point where nitrification ceases.
They appear to be in a tricky spot where really, they're potentially in an ideal and envious situation - depending on what fish they wish to keep.
The tricky part is that their source water may have a starting pH of around 7, however their KH is low, and so days into cycling, the nitric acid created from nitrifying bacteria eats away at the miniscule KH and creates an acidic environment, thus stalling the cycle - ammonia in low ph conditions exists as ammonium.
Ammonium is harmless (?) to fish, and so if someone keeps (suitable) fish in a low ph tank where ammonium exists, they do not need to concern themselves with a cycle. Many people who keep such fish might use RO water to ensure such conditions exist.
Old Tank Syndrome (OTS) is where a neglected tank's water has become acidic due to the build up of (not just) nitric acid which has "eaten away" at the buffering KH. The ammonia exists as ammonium and the fish are living relatively ok. The owner decides to perform a water change and in doing so, raises the ph back up to their source water's value. The ph goes up and the ammonium switches back to deadly ammonia, killing most of the fish.
If a person has low kh source water, yet the ph is around 7 and they want to keep acidic fish (betta, corydora, tetra, gourami....), they'd be best keeping an acidic tank where the normal nitrogen cycle doesn't apply. What is the best advice for them?
Because come water change, they're going to raise the pH and experience OTS.
@Essjay (cycling specialist)
@itiwhetu (acidic tank connoisseur)
@Byron (God)
They appear to be in a tricky spot where really, they're potentially in an ideal and envious situation - depending on what fish they wish to keep.
The tricky part is that their source water may have a starting pH of around 7, however their KH is low, and so days into cycling, the nitric acid created from nitrifying bacteria eats away at the miniscule KH and creates an acidic environment, thus stalling the cycle - ammonia in low ph conditions exists as ammonium.
Ammonium is harmless (?) to fish, and so if someone keeps (suitable) fish in a low ph tank where ammonium exists, they do not need to concern themselves with a cycle. Many people who keep such fish might use RO water to ensure such conditions exist.
Old Tank Syndrome (OTS) is where a neglected tank's water has become acidic due to the build up of (not just) nitric acid which has "eaten away" at the buffering KH. The ammonia exists as ammonium and the fish are living relatively ok. The owner decides to perform a water change and in doing so, raises the ph back up to their source water's value. The ph goes up and the ammonium switches back to deadly ammonia, killing most of the fish.
If a person has low kh source water, yet the ph is around 7 and they want to keep acidic fish (betta, corydora, tetra, gourami....), they'd be best keeping an acidic tank where the normal nitrogen cycle doesn't apply. What is the best advice for them?
Because come water change, they're going to raise the pH and experience OTS.
@Essjay (cycling specialist)
@itiwhetu (acidic tank connoisseur)
@Byron (God)
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