adhdan
New Member
Im battling diatoms and algae in my planted tank, its around 5month old so i maybe should of just left it, but i gave a single dose of hydrogen peroxide, i dosed around 2.5ml 3% per US gallon of water, turned my filter off, left the powerheads on, left it for about 2 hours then switched the filter back on, i then went to work and when i returned i found the tank suffering, the filter had all but clogged and water quality was down, it was also cloudy. My tank background that had previously looked brown with diatoms was now almost back to its original colour.
Immediately i turned off the filter, removed the clogged sponge, tested for ammonia, nitrite, nitrate and PH, ammonia spike of 0.5 up from the 0 it usually tests at, nitrite was 0 and nitrates were maybe 10-20ppm, i tested ammonia again a little later and it was almost back at 0. I had 3 dead rosy tetras and 1 dead cardinal tetra. I removed dead fish straight away. I did a 40% water change over the next few hours (its a large tank) .
what happened?
I suspect the diatoms and algae died off and caused a spike in ammonia while i was at work and by the time i had got back from work was on its way back down, the filter being clogged shows just how much biological detritus was sent into the water column.
Has anyone else had similar experiences with HP, does my explanation sound right?
I was a little surprised at how effective at killing/removing algae and diatoms HP is and should of been a lot more careful, in hindsight i should of given myself the full day to monitor the tank and could of avoided fish deaths if i was here to catch the problems. I would warn those using HP to be prepared to deal with the ammonia spike from the dying bacteria and algae even though the HP is 'fish safe' when properly used.
Thanks
ADHDan
Immediately i turned off the filter, removed the clogged sponge, tested for ammonia, nitrite, nitrate and PH, ammonia spike of 0.5 up from the 0 it usually tests at, nitrite was 0 and nitrates were maybe 10-20ppm, i tested ammonia again a little later and it was almost back at 0. I had 3 dead rosy tetras and 1 dead cardinal tetra. I removed dead fish straight away. I did a 40% water change over the next few hours (its a large tank) .
what happened?
I suspect the diatoms and algae died off and caused a spike in ammonia while i was at work and by the time i had got back from work was on its way back down, the filter being clogged shows just how much biological detritus was sent into the water column.
Has anyone else had similar experiences with HP, does my explanation sound right?
I was a little surprised at how effective at killing/removing algae and diatoms HP is and should of been a lot more careful, in hindsight i should of given myself the full day to monitor the tank and could of avoided fish deaths if i was here to catch the problems. I would warn those using HP to be prepared to deal with the ammonia spike from the dying bacteria and algae even though the HP is 'fish safe' when properly used.
Thanks
ADHDan