Don’t miss out on the best deals of the season! Shop now 🎁
bioRxiv preprint doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/749705; this version posted August 29, 2019. The copyright holder for this preprint (which was not certified by peer review) is the author/funder, who has granted bioRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under
aCC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International license.
from https://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/features/what-temperature-is-the-water-where-discus-live/Heiko Bleher has collected data on Discus habitats for the past 40-50 years, so he knows the answer to this one...
Each species is found in waters of a specific temperature and chemistry and they have evolved to live in these conditions over millenia. This is also why they are isolated from each other, except during extreme floods.
I have collected data on the water they are found in over the past 40-50 years and used scientific equipment and taken measurements at depths of 1.5-2.5m/5-8.2’ where the Discus live.
Symphysodon discus, the Heckel Discus, lives in water with an average temperature of 28.6°C/83.5°F. The highest I measured was 31.7°C/89°F in one biotope and the lowest was 25°C/77°F. S. discus is a blackwater species.
Symphysodon aequifasciatus, the Green Discus, lived in waters with an average temperature of 28.2°C/82.7°F through 1997. Prior to 1996 the average was 27.4°C/81.3°F. The highest I measured was 31°C/87.8°F and the lowest in its biotope was 24.6°C/76.3°F. It also lives in blackwater.
Symphysodon haraldi, the Blue or Brown Discus, lives in a water average at 28.8°C/83.8°F The highest temperature I ever recorded was 32.4°C/90.3°F and the lowest was 23.5°C/74.3°F.
It is the most tolerant, as regards water parameters and temperatures, of all three species.
This item was first published in the September 2009 issue of Practical Fishkeeping magazine.
There’s some good points given , it’s a whole book not just one article and there cited scientific research listed for every topicVery interesting . The comments , not the article .
He didn’t say that they would be fine at a constant temp of 85 or 55If you think the author’s comments merit attention then set your tank at 85F or 55F and see what happens. That’s not an experiment worth trying.
But he is right about tropical fish and their water habitat going through rapid temperature changes in the different water layers and they swim through all of them with no harm done to them . How are they about to do it in the wild and not in our tanks ?
I think he is trying to say that a temperature change a couple degrees , rapid or not , isn’t going to harm them . Should you keep your fish at 85 or 65 no but I’ve seen a lot of people saying that even a 2 degree drop at night will kill the fish eventually and I just don’t agree with that from all the research I’ve done . My tank would drop 3 degrees maybe at night some nights and I went and got a huge heater but a few degree drop in the range over night and a few degree increase as the day goes on isn’t going to hurt themThis is not the same thing, far from it. It is certainly true that fish live at different water levels, as the text from Heiko Bleher explained. And I noted in my larger tanks that there was a difference between water near the substrate and closer to the surface. But this is not the same as what is being proclaimed in the article. Far from it.
I’m wanting to see research on WHY it temperature changes are detrimental to the fish, by a couple degrees in their range. Not to prove anybody wrong I am always down to learn something new if I’m misinformedThis is not the same thing, far from it. It is certainly true that fish live at different water levels, as the text from Heiko Bleher explained. And I noted in my larger tanks that there was a difference between water near the substrate and closer to the surface. But this is not the same as what is being proclaimed in the article. Far from it.
I’m wanting to see research on WHY it temperature changes are detrimental to the fish, by a couple degrees in their range. Not to prove anybody wrong I am always down to learn something new if I’m misinformed