MarcoPereira
Mostly New Member
Thank you. I will report on what happens....wish me luck!
MarcoPereira said:Thanks guys. Great to hear from you. I do have floating plants, amazon frogbit. As for the rocks, I thought they may add the buffering to the water? as they leach the carbonate hardness to maintain the Ph at a certain level? am I way off here? ha ha
I guess I would like the aquarium water to be at same Ph as tap water...and would not a WC of 50-60% throw the occupants out when they are in water of lower Ph? I mean, if the tank is at 5-6 Ph and one adds large water volumes that is at 7 Ph will that not harm the fish/shrimp? as it seem that there would be a huge Ph change in a brief time.
MarcoPereira said:Ok well, I will just leave it alone and start adding 1-3 fish and see how I go....if there is a large spike in ammonia after the fish are introduced what is the right steps to rectify this? water changes? and if said BB are not active at low Ph should one add zeolite or some other source to negate ammonia?
Anything one can do to rid the tank of detritus worms....very unsightly...
jag51186 said:Byron, correct me if I'm wrong on this, but if the water authority is adding something to affect pH that will dissipate out...Couldn't he let the water intended for changes, sit out for a day beforehand to allow this dissipation before using it for his changes??
Byron said:
Ok well, I will just leave it alone and start adding 1-3 fish and see how I go....if there is a large spike in ammonia after the fish are introduced what is the right steps to rectify this? water changes? and if said BB are not active at low Ph should one add zeolite or some other source to negate ammonia?
Anything one can do to rid the tank of detritus worms....very unsightly...
Any idea which fish you are intending? Some are better than others in new tanks, not thinking of "cycling" here but "established" versus new. Also numbers matter, obviously, but the species determine this too, and how many might be best.
I wouldn't worry about ammonia. Though I would recommend some floating plants for this. But with acidic water the ammonia is ammonium which is not going to hurt the fish. And I wouldn't worry about nitrifying bacteria and pH.
The worms I can't help much with...strikes me as odd that they should appear in a new tank with no fish? Maybe a remnant from the dead shrimp added for ammonia?
And, no, no idea what they are adding to the water supply....
I am planning on nano fish such as ember tetras or chilli rasboras? neons? cardinals? would love a pair of Bolivian rams but am sure everyone here would be typing in uppercase and bold lettering "NO".....lol what would you recommend?
MarcoPereira said:Yes, I see what you mean. Could I add Corydoras? maybe 2 to keep substrate clean?
And in regard to fish stocks, how many to add? I would rather have one substantial school of one type than a mis mash of different things....I would feel it more harmonious that way....your thoughts?
And, as far as floating plants....I have frogbit but it gets pushed to outer corners of tank via HOB flow, what other things can I add to shade the tank in as far as floating plants? I have tried to find water sprite here but no luck...I have plenty of Elodea in the pond...would that work as floting plants? or foxtail?