Both ammonia and nitrite should be zero. Have they always been 0.5?
Ammonia 0.5, Nitrite 0.5, Nitrate 20ppm.
NTL aquarium test kit.
Only fish left are some green neon rasbora , sparkling gourami and 1 peppered cory
I've never managed to get them down, why I was adding more biological media.
When's the next water change due? Only it's hard for us to figure out why you're getting ammonia and nitrite readings in the tank, if we don't know whether it's coming from the source water or the tank inhabitants...No I haven't recently, should have done it at the same time, will do at next water change.
Had 6 raboras, 6 blue neon tetra, 5 corys and 6 sparkling gouramis..
There are live plants, Amazon swords and anuabis on wood and java fern.
20% water change weekly and sponges washed in tanks water. New media was soaked in tank water before it went in filter, added 600g over 3 weeks.
Thanks for your help, I'll test the tap water later today and take action as you suggest.When's the next water change due? Only it's hard for us to figure out why you're getting ammonia and nitrite readings in the tank, if we don't know whether it's coming from the source water or the tank inhabitants...
Sorry that we're like, pelting you with questions! Especially if I seem short, don't mean to just a bit pushed for time, but want to try to help puzzle out what's wrong, and since we can't see the tank or fish ourselves, we have to hurl questions at you.
Have you added any of these fish recently?
The filter cleaning in old tank water is good
Personally, I recommend doing a large water now - 60-75%, then test the water again. There shouldn't be any ammonia or nitrite in there, and if they've been living with a constant low level of ammonia and nitrites, they'll be stressed and succumb to more illnesses, eventually dying from it. Remember that ammonia burns their gills... imagine breathing in something that's burning your lungs, over an extended period of time. That's how it is for fish living in ammonia/nitrite. It might be low enough for them to survive for a while, but they will be hurting and stressed, and eventually die. If the ammonia rises sharply, they die faster.
Thanks for your help, I'll test the tap water later today and take action as you suggest.
The last fish to go in were the guoramis about a month ago and they seem fine
I was even considering adding a ram as everything seemed.settled.
I don't know those products or that guy I'm afraid, @Essjay is the chemist here, perhaps she can help! Shame about changing conditioners since Prime helps detoxify nitrites for 24 hours or so, so would help keep the fish safe between daily water changes.Tap water came clear for nitrite and ammonia, retested tank water, ammonia clear but there was a bit of colour for nitrite, not clear but not pink enough to be first level, 0.25.
Did make one other change when I added the biogravel and changed from seachem prime to API tapsafe , as recommended by the filtepro guy.
Ooohh, @Byron is here! If anyone could figure it out, it's him
When you have live plants, especially fairly rapid growers like swords (floating plants are incredibly good for this too), biological filtration is not necessary and should not be encouraged. In other words, let the plants do the work. A filter is good to move the water around and provide adequate surface disturbance, but all this fancy media is generally a waste. And there is always the possibility that regardless of what the manufacturers say, this or that may have some reaction.
This is good to know, thank you
Incidentally, when I tried to use an established sponge filter to start a new tank, it took far longer to mini-cycle than I expected, given that the filter had been running on another tank for a year or so. Someone suggested then that since the tank it came from was heavily planted with fast growers, that the plants were essentially outcompeting and starving off the nitrifying bacteria - so the sponge filter was helping a little, but mainly just doing some mechanical filtration and adding some bubbles/surface disturbance.
Is that the kind of thing you mean? That adding a fancy bio-media to that heavily planted tank would have been a waste of money, and that it's better to rely on plants?
Sorry to keep banging on about it, but I still have to say how wonderful it is to see you back, and to read your posts again! You bring so much wisdom here, and your posts are a joy to read.
Edited to fix spelling and grammar. Must proof-read more.