I looked and it says only chlorine couldn't find anything about chloramines for my city.
I also just tested the tap and it says 0 ammonia!
My bad lol! SorryHad to do a small edit, let's keep it family-friendly, please and thank you
How are those corys doing? Still floating and gasping after a WC?
No problem.My bad lol! Sorry
But nope they're not going to the surface at all anymore.
I dropped them a few months ago??
Where's your test tubes?
I had duck weed but it got stuck to the rims, glass, or sucked into the filter so I gave up on it. I have no idea what the plants are in my tank except the Java moss.OK. Both can be sources for ammonia, so best to know. If you have live plants, especially floating plants that are obviously growing (as opposed to failing and dying), I would not fuss over ammonia testing at 0.25, unless it increases.
I dropped them a few months ago
I had most then one by one they would roll and breakBroken API test tubes is another reason I favour alternatives to API lol
OoopsI dropped them a few months ago
I had duck weed but it got stuck to the rims, glass, or sucked into the filter so I gave up on it. I have no idea what the plants are in my tank except the Java moss.
I may have missed this information in your previous posts so forgive me if this is redundant but how long have you had the fish that are dying in that tank? And if they are new, how did you acclimate them? I ask because it almost sounds as if they suffered PH shock or ammonia shock while acclimating. As I said, if this has already been answered and evaluated, just ignore me!Sooo I'm really starting to get frustrated. I had 9 panda Cory's, 6 peppered corys, and 6 bronze corys. I'm left 5 bronze and 1 peppered Cory. Well I got 5 new peppered corys and now one of my bronze corys died. So peppered corys and 4 bronze at the moment.
They eat a very big range of foods, blood worms, veggies, flakes, egg, etc.
The water parameters are
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 0
Nitrate 10
Ph 7.6
Water hardness 7
They're all extremely active and healthy, as well as eating a ton. Until I just wake up and they're dead. There's no parasites or illness either.
It's a planted tank as well
Temp is 73
Gravel and rock for substrate
I really have no clue what is going on. And it's only the corydoras dying, literally all of my other fish are fine and I had my corys for about a year now and got them all pretty young.
Other tank mates, 1 kuhli loach, 2 rainbow sharks that don't touch the corys at all, 2 red bristlenose plecos that are still young and don't go near the corys unless eating but they eat algae wafers or stems, while the corys eat the smaller bits, and now I have 4 cherry barbs who are juveniles. As well as a bunch if baby snails. They've been dying way before the cherry barbs or snails came into the tank. Their bodies when dead have no marks on them either.
Some new ones died bust mostly fish that have been in the tank for over a year. I'm guessing probably the ammonia since it was so high at the point I put them in the tank (I'm guessing) they died probably as well as chlorineI may have missed this information in your previous posts so forgive me if this is redundant but how long have you had the fish that are dying in that tank? And if they are new, how did you acclimate them? I ask because it almost sounds as if they suffered PH shock or ammonia shock while acclimating. As I said, if this has already been answered and evaluated, just ignore me!
Are any of these high maintenance plants? At the moment I don't do fertilizer or c02 doses but my plants have been growing like crazy since I got them. They were only 4 small stems when I got them not they have like 6 sprouts on each which I have been trimming and replanting to make more!Duckweed is a help, but more substantial plants are better. Water Sprite, Frogbit, Water Lettuce.