Hey -
A couple months ago, I had a mass fish die off after a single water change. I had a tank full of Tetras and Guppies and within a day, half of them were gone. I did an emergency 85% water change, and the next day the rest were gone.
The lone survivor was a Bristle-nose Pleco who has lived in the tank for going on 2 years.
After consulting the forum, I made some changes. I replaced all my plastic plants for live plants. I had one live plant before - an Amazon Sword. I added a Java Fern, and floated some Anacharis. (The LFS did not have a wide variety.) I changed the fertilizer to the recommended brand and dosage. And all was looking good. About 3 weeks ago - after almost 2 months without any fish, I tried to add more.
I added 6 Harlequin Rasboras and a Dwarf Gourami. For the first week all looked good. The Rasboras played in the bubbles, and the Gourami explored.
After a week, I did my regular 50% water change. Within hours all the Rasboras were dead. Sunk to the bottom. (!)
The Gourami held on. Last week I did another water change - and had no problem. A week later (this weekend) I did another and no problem. Or so I thought. It's two days later, and the Gourami was dead at the bottom of the tank. The Pleco, gnawing away at his tail. (I removed him.)
I tested the water and here's the results:
pH: 8.2
Nitrite: 0 ppm
Ammonia: 0 ppm
Nitrate: 5 ppm
My pH has always been on the high side and it tends to fluctuate between 7.6 and 8.2. I checked the water after the Rasbora's died, and the only difference was a slightly higher Ammonia measurement. (.5 ppm.)
I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. Up until July, I had a thriving tank. Now I'm starting to get nervous about buying new fish for fear that any water change will kill them.
I have a 30 Gal tank, and as I said, I change 50% once a week. Am I changing too much of the water? Should I change it more often? (twice a week) Or change it more often but less water per change?
Any thoughts or suggestions? Maybe a more hardy fish that might be able to handle the stress of a water change, or the higher pH? I've had a frustrating summer.
A couple months ago, I had a mass fish die off after a single water change. I had a tank full of Tetras and Guppies and within a day, half of them were gone. I did an emergency 85% water change, and the next day the rest were gone.
The lone survivor was a Bristle-nose Pleco who has lived in the tank for going on 2 years.
After consulting the forum, I made some changes. I replaced all my plastic plants for live plants. I had one live plant before - an Amazon Sword. I added a Java Fern, and floated some Anacharis. (The LFS did not have a wide variety.) I changed the fertilizer to the recommended brand and dosage. And all was looking good. About 3 weeks ago - after almost 2 months without any fish, I tried to add more.
I added 6 Harlequin Rasboras and a Dwarf Gourami. For the first week all looked good. The Rasboras played in the bubbles, and the Gourami explored.
After a week, I did my regular 50% water change. Within hours all the Rasboras were dead. Sunk to the bottom. (!)
The Gourami held on. Last week I did another water change - and had no problem. A week later (this weekend) I did another and no problem. Or so I thought. It's two days later, and the Gourami was dead at the bottom of the tank. The Pleco, gnawing away at his tail. (I removed him.)
I tested the water and here's the results:
pH: 8.2
Nitrite: 0 ppm
Ammonia: 0 ppm
Nitrate: 5 ppm
My pH has always been on the high side and it tends to fluctuate between 7.6 and 8.2. I checked the water after the Rasbora's died, and the only difference was a slightly higher Ammonia measurement. (.5 ppm.)
I can't figure out what I'm doing wrong. Up until July, I had a thriving tank. Now I'm starting to get nervous about buying new fish for fear that any water change will kill them.
I have a 30 Gal tank, and as I said, I change 50% once a week. Am I changing too much of the water? Should I change it more often? (twice a week) Or change it more often but less water per change?
Any thoughts or suggestions? Maybe a more hardy fish that might be able to handle the stress of a water change, or the higher pH? I've had a frustrating summer.