Hi.
Is the tank cycled? It sounds like an algea bloom, caused by new tank cycling. What are the water statistics and how often are you changing the water?
Jack
You will need to do a 50% waterchange,
how big is the tank and what is the stocking? Also when was it set-up?
Jack
OK, stocking is fine.
I would reccomend a 50% waterchange then re-test the water.
Everytime the ammonia or nitrite is above 0, it means you need to do a waterchange.
Ie; Ammonia 0.25ppm =25% waterchange
Ammonia 0.50ppm= 50% waterchange etc.
HTH
Jack
I know the rainbow shark is rather small but when the reach adulthood they can become very territoral and the mininum size tank recommend is 55 gallons
I know the rainbow shark is rather small but when the reach adulthood they can become very territoral and the mininum size tank recommend is 55 gallons
Cloudy water usually comes from bacteria.
There are bacteria that live in the water (not the same ones as in the filter) and if there is excess organic matter or chemicals that bacteria can eat in the tank, these bacteria will suddenly have a population explosion and make the water cloudy.
How many fish do you have? What kind of filter do you have? How many LPH does it do? Do you have a gravel vacuum or siphon? How often do you clean your gravel?
These bacterial blooms could be causing the ammonia spike, as they'll break the organics in the water down into ammonia. Do as many water changes as necessary to keep the ammonia at zero, but don't worry about the bloom too much. With good tank maintainence, it should go away eventually.
Feed a tiny amount once a day or even cut down to once every two days for a while, pull out any dead leaves/dying plants, check for dead fish and make sure you clean your gravel really well at least once a week with a gravel siphon.
Bacterial Blooms Explained
Cloudy water usually comes from bacteria.
There are bacteria that live in the water (not the same ones as in the filter) and if there is excess organic matter or chemicals that bacteria can eat in the tank, these bacteria will suddenly have a population explosion and make the water cloudy.
How many fish do you have? What kind of filter do you have? How many LPH does it do? Do you have a gravel vacuum or siphon? How often do you clean your gravel?
These bacterial blooms could be causing the ammonia spike, as they'll break the organics in the water down into ammonia. Do as many water changes as necessary to keep the ammonia at zero, but don't worry about the bloom too much. With good tank maintainence, it should go away eventually.
Feed a tiny amount once a day or even cut down to once every two days for a while, pull out any dead leaves/dying plants, check for dead fish and make sure you clean your gravel really well at least once a week with a gravel siphon.
Bacterial Blooms Explained