ColombiaBill
New Member
Hello everyone, first day here
I am very new to the fish keeping hobby unless someone who had three goldfish for about a month some 45 years ago,. can be called an expert. I have a problem, that I think I know the answer to, but would like some input from the other members.
My wife bought a 10 gallon tank about three months ago, we went merrily on our way stocking it without any knowledge of the nitrogen cycle or input from the vendor, I live in Colombia, as my handle says, but communication is not an issue as we are both fluent Spanish, I am Canadian. The small tank was A BIG MISTAKE as I have seen on many sites that they can be much harder to care for, particularly with wáter parameters, than a larger tank would be. I think that we will soon be moving to a larger tank, perhaps a 180 once I have the confidence to proceed, I am getting a lot of satisfaction out of the one I have now. I have spent over 100 hours on the net researching community tanks, would dearly love a rainbow shark but the combatibility issue keeps rearing it´s ugly head, lol.
Back to my problem, I am sure that my tank is overstocked, I have perhaps 16 inches of fish in it and based on the gallonage and surface área guidelines, it looks to be so. I had some fish die off, specifically cardinal tetras, and read that they are succeptable to high nitrate levels. Out I went and bought the API freshwater test kit and my readings confirmed my suspicions, Ammonia was 2.0 PPM, Nitrites .25 PPM and Nitrates 80 PPM. That was five days ago, since then I have done two 25 percent wáter changes, one 50 percenter and vacuumed the whole tank twice. My readings are now 0 for Ammonia and Nitrates but still 40 PPM for Nitrates. I have read that 60 PPM is acceptable but other sites indicate that many hobbyists aim for zero or close to that, in any event I would dearly love to get that reading below 20.
If your input is that I am overstocked, I would look at buying a larger tank, perhaps 40 gallons, and use it as my sump should we go to the 180. I have also considered taking some fish back, the problem is that my wife has named them all so I´m sure she would not sanction their return. And remember, when mama´s not happy, no one´s happy. I will also tell you that my wáter here is nitrate free.
So the question is, do I continue as now in the short term, are my fish at serious risk, or do I opt for the larger tank right away to be safe. I guess the second part of the question is whether a 40 is sufficient size as a sump for the 180. The last thing I want is a bunch of money tied up in equipment that I am not likely to ever need. Input from the experts would be greatly appreciated.
I am very new to the fish keeping hobby unless someone who had three goldfish for about a month some 45 years ago,. can be called an expert. I have a problem, that I think I know the answer to, but would like some input from the other members.
My wife bought a 10 gallon tank about three months ago, we went merrily on our way stocking it without any knowledge of the nitrogen cycle or input from the vendor, I live in Colombia, as my handle says, but communication is not an issue as we are both fluent Spanish, I am Canadian. The small tank was A BIG MISTAKE as I have seen on many sites that they can be much harder to care for, particularly with wáter parameters, than a larger tank would be. I think that we will soon be moving to a larger tank, perhaps a 180 once I have the confidence to proceed, I am getting a lot of satisfaction out of the one I have now. I have spent over 100 hours on the net researching community tanks, would dearly love a rainbow shark but the combatibility issue keeps rearing it´s ugly head, lol.
Back to my problem, I am sure that my tank is overstocked, I have perhaps 16 inches of fish in it and based on the gallonage and surface área guidelines, it looks to be so. I had some fish die off, specifically cardinal tetras, and read that they are succeptable to high nitrate levels. Out I went and bought the API freshwater test kit and my readings confirmed my suspicions, Ammonia was 2.0 PPM, Nitrites .25 PPM and Nitrates 80 PPM. That was five days ago, since then I have done two 25 percent wáter changes, one 50 percenter and vacuumed the whole tank twice. My readings are now 0 for Ammonia and Nitrates but still 40 PPM for Nitrates. I have read that 60 PPM is acceptable but other sites indicate that many hobbyists aim for zero or close to that, in any event I would dearly love to get that reading below 20.
If your input is that I am overstocked, I would look at buying a larger tank, perhaps 40 gallons, and use it as my sump should we go to the 180. I have also considered taking some fish back, the problem is that my wife has named them all so I´m sure she would not sanction their return. And remember, when mama´s not happy, no one´s happy. I will also tell you that my wáter here is nitrate free.
So the question is, do I continue as now in the short term, are my fish at serious risk, or do I opt for the larger tank right away to be safe. I guess the second part of the question is whether a 40 is sufficient size as a sump for the 180. The last thing I want is a bunch of money tied up in equipment that I am not likely to ever need. Input from the experts would be greatly appreciated.