dasaltemelosguy
New Member
Hello, I'm not sure this is the correct category to post this but perhaps someone with experience with Cardinal Tetras may know what might be going on here. It is a 75G and has a SunSun704b canister and the output was modified to distribute the spray across the entire length to reduce the current so they could eat on top or in the column. I try to over filter my tanks and accommodate these tiny fishes.
I have a 75G planted tank that has been cycled for months as I've used it for grow out of juvenile cichlids until they're large enough to join a larger tank. The parameters below have been extremely consistent for many months:
In this tank now (for about 2 weeks so far), I have 12 juvenile Silver Dollars (about 3/4" in size) and 50 circa 3/4" Cardinal Tetras. The Dollars love it. Actively swimming end to end in schools and no visible shyness. The Cardinals look robust and school as well as explore the tank and as far as I can tell, all of them eat well. The little algae eater and small plecos are active and eat well too (obviously they're in here for grow-out) .
Every day since getting the Cardinals, I lose about 2-3 of them/day. I don't sense any stress or obvious illness and I see nothing externally on them. I find a dead ones in seemingly perfect condition lying on the gravel throughout the day which naturally I remove. Each day I find more bodies. No evidence of trauma, I'd have to pick them up and verify they're dead.
After two weeks, there's perhaps 1/2 of them left.
I have never kept Cardinals before. They currently share this 75G with two juvenile plecos and a small algae eater (also in grow-out) and the aforementioned juveniles, 12 Silver Dollars. NONE of the others exhibit any sign of distress nor illness. Very active, eating and already some visible growth. And the surviving Cardinals eat voraciously yet ONLY the Cardinals seem to be slowly dying.
When I bought the school of 60, I assumed there would be some mortality with that many but there's now less than half of them left after only 2 weeks.
I did ask the shop where I got them and they said "they were acclimated to a 7.4PH environment". When they arrived, the PH in the bag was only 6 so I set up a drip overnight and introduced them into my tank at 7.8PH at which point, they matched.
At that point, I had only 9 die and the other 50 were looking excellent.
I have no experience with these fishes. I've only kept large cichlids and this is my first foray into schooling fishes. And I should note it is planted but not heavily. I'm not confident there are enough hiding places for the Cardinals.
I see a great deal of discussion about PH for Cardinals but I was wondering if others had ideas on how truly significant that is. With most fishes, if properly acclimated, they'll adapt to most any PH.
But again, I've never had Cardinals. My other tanks have Severums, Acaras, Oscars, Pacu's, Plecos, all grown from <=1" to +14" in some cases over 2+ years with very few incidents. I've never had an entire species just start dying with no apparent (to me) cause.
Does anyone out there have any thoughts on what I might be doing/have done wrongly that is killing off the Cardinals and if it's possible to save the rest? Thanks so much everyone.
I have a 75G planted tank that has been cycled for months as I've used it for grow out of juvenile cichlids until they're large enough to join a larger tank. The parameters below have been extremely consistent for many months:
- pH = 7.8
- Nitrates = 5ppm
- Hardness = 140
- Nitrite = 0
- Ammonia = 0
- KH/Buffer = 70
- Water Temperature = 80*
In this tank now (for about 2 weeks so far), I have 12 juvenile Silver Dollars (about 3/4" in size) and 50 circa 3/4" Cardinal Tetras. The Dollars love it. Actively swimming end to end in schools and no visible shyness. The Cardinals look robust and school as well as explore the tank and as far as I can tell, all of them eat well. The little algae eater and small plecos are active and eat well too (obviously they're in here for grow-out) .
Every day since getting the Cardinals, I lose about 2-3 of them/day. I don't sense any stress or obvious illness and I see nothing externally on them. I find a dead ones in seemingly perfect condition lying on the gravel throughout the day which naturally I remove. Each day I find more bodies. No evidence of trauma, I'd have to pick them up and verify they're dead.
After two weeks, there's perhaps 1/2 of them left.
I have never kept Cardinals before. They currently share this 75G with two juvenile plecos and a small algae eater (also in grow-out) and the aforementioned juveniles, 12 Silver Dollars. NONE of the others exhibit any sign of distress nor illness. Very active, eating and already some visible growth. And the surviving Cardinals eat voraciously yet ONLY the Cardinals seem to be slowly dying.
When I bought the school of 60, I assumed there would be some mortality with that many but there's now less than half of them left after only 2 weeks.
I did ask the shop where I got them and they said "they were acclimated to a 7.4PH environment". When they arrived, the PH in the bag was only 6 so I set up a drip overnight and introduced them into my tank at 7.8PH at which point, they matched.
At that point, I had only 9 die and the other 50 were looking excellent.
I have no experience with these fishes. I've only kept large cichlids and this is my first foray into schooling fishes. And I should note it is planted but not heavily. I'm not confident there are enough hiding places for the Cardinals.
I see a great deal of discussion about PH for Cardinals but I was wondering if others had ideas on how truly significant that is. With most fishes, if properly acclimated, they'll adapt to most any PH.
But again, I've never had Cardinals. My other tanks have Severums, Acaras, Oscars, Pacu's, Plecos, all grown from <=1" to +14" in some cases over 2+ years with very few incidents. I've never had an entire species just start dying with no apparent (to me) cause.
Does anyone out there have any thoughts on what I might be doing/have done wrongly that is killing off the Cardinals and if it's possible to save the rest? Thanks so much everyone.