lots_to_learn
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In January I started a 55 gallon aquarium and filled it with community fish (mollys, neons, plattys, and glo fish). I have had some ups and downs but love my tank and friends a bunch. Right now I have a setup that I am used to and grew up with. I have an undergravel filtration system run with air pumps, tubing, and the carbon filters. It is bedded with your standard aquarium gravel and I have a variety of fake plants and a few decorations. Overall the aquarium is quite open with the exception of a tightly clustered fake plant for hiding fry.
My problems: I have had two encounters that I am sure was brought on by buying sick beta fish. The first beta had a fungal infection. I noticed after a few days of putting him in the aquarium he started acting very odd and showed some swim bladder issues. I put him in a beta bowl and watched carefully doing water changes every day. Then I noticed the fungus and started treatment but it was too late. Luckily the tank remained unaffected. The second beta brought velvet with him which spread throughout the tank. I treated and the treatment was succesfull and he started to thrive...however, only to get into a battle with the australian rainbow fish inherrited from a sibling and both suffered deadly injuries.
It has been about 2 months since the second beta fish died and I have had no problems except I have started loosing fish starting with my male balloon molly dying suddenly of dropsy and now my female balloon molly sick and having swim bladder issues but no sign of bloating or pineconing. Observing the other fish closely and noticing bloat in my neons after eating, stringy poo in most of the fish, and clamped fins, I suspect an internal bacterial infection. How it was brought on I am unsure. Just before I started having these problems I made several changes to the tank (ie: I added a tank divider for the fry, the cluttered fake plant for the fry and I added aquarium salt hoping that would encourage my mollys to birth their overdue fry. Could adding the salt have caused the bigger issues with my mollys? Or maybe the plant having something? I rinsed it thouroughly before adding it to the tank. Anyway, back on subject...
I was thinking of having live plants because I heard they are really beneficial to the fish for several reasons and also help keep the water oxygenated. This is to start my series of questions:
Would live plants be okay with the undergravel filtering system?
I was looking up live plant aquariums and most use sand and some type of plant media. Since my experience is soley on gravel how does this work as far as cleaning and maintenance? I am used to cleaning with a syphyon and digging it into the rocks/gravel to remove the fish waste and in doing so performs the 25% water change. I'm sure this changes when using sand and other media since it would only get sucked right out of the tank. So how does cleaning the fish waste from the bottom of the tank work?
From a maintenance perspective: which is easier to maintain, requires less time/work, promotes less health issues, etc?
Also, as far as breeding and fry are concerned...I would think using fake plants would be the best for allowing fry hiding places since you can get conjested type plants for them to hide. Could I mix the two? How about floating type live plants? I heard they can be messy but provide lots of advantages for several types of fish because they can eat from the roots, gain nutrients, and the plants still promote higher O2 and lower CO2 levels. Suggestions? Oh, and other types of live plants...would it be fine to keep them in the pots with my system?
With my current system I am thinking of removing the divider when I can manage to obtain more plants for the fry and populate the tank with more decorations then what I have. I believe my current community desires more plant cover anyway.
I am working on a bit of a budget so I can't afford a nice fancy, high-tec setup and my time is somewhat valuable so the less maintenance and worry-free the better.
Would I be doing better to change my aquarium set-up or stick to what I have or mix...? So, I definately have a lot of ideas but not sure which direction to go. What are your takes and suggestions?
My problems: I have had two encounters that I am sure was brought on by buying sick beta fish. The first beta had a fungal infection. I noticed after a few days of putting him in the aquarium he started acting very odd and showed some swim bladder issues. I put him in a beta bowl and watched carefully doing water changes every day. Then I noticed the fungus and started treatment but it was too late. Luckily the tank remained unaffected. The second beta brought velvet with him which spread throughout the tank. I treated and the treatment was succesfull and he started to thrive...however, only to get into a battle with the australian rainbow fish inherrited from a sibling and both suffered deadly injuries.
It has been about 2 months since the second beta fish died and I have had no problems except I have started loosing fish starting with my male balloon molly dying suddenly of dropsy and now my female balloon molly sick and having swim bladder issues but no sign of bloating or pineconing. Observing the other fish closely and noticing bloat in my neons after eating, stringy poo in most of the fish, and clamped fins, I suspect an internal bacterial infection. How it was brought on I am unsure. Just before I started having these problems I made several changes to the tank (ie: I added a tank divider for the fry, the cluttered fake plant for the fry and I added aquarium salt hoping that would encourage my mollys to birth their overdue fry. Could adding the salt have caused the bigger issues with my mollys? Or maybe the plant having something? I rinsed it thouroughly before adding it to the tank. Anyway, back on subject...
I was thinking of having live plants because I heard they are really beneficial to the fish for several reasons and also help keep the water oxygenated. This is to start my series of questions:
Would live plants be okay with the undergravel filtering system?
I was looking up live plant aquariums and most use sand and some type of plant media. Since my experience is soley on gravel how does this work as far as cleaning and maintenance? I am used to cleaning with a syphyon and digging it into the rocks/gravel to remove the fish waste and in doing so performs the 25% water change. I'm sure this changes when using sand and other media since it would only get sucked right out of the tank. So how does cleaning the fish waste from the bottom of the tank work?
From a maintenance perspective: which is easier to maintain, requires less time/work, promotes less health issues, etc?
Also, as far as breeding and fry are concerned...I would think using fake plants would be the best for allowing fry hiding places since you can get conjested type plants for them to hide. Could I mix the two? How about floating type live plants? I heard they can be messy but provide lots of advantages for several types of fish because they can eat from the roots, gain nutrients, and the plants still promote higher O2 and lower CO2 levels. Suggestions? Oh, and other types of live plants...would it be fine to keep them in the pots with my system?
With my current system I am thinking of removing the divider when I can manage to obtain more plants for the fry and populate the tank with more decorations then what I have. I believe my current community desires more plant cover anyway.
I am working on a bit of a budget so I can't afford a nice fancy, high-tec setup and my time is somewhat valuable so the less maintenance and worry-free the better.
Would I be doing better to change my aquarium set-up or stick to what I have or mix...? So, I definately have a lot of ideas but not sure which direction to go. What are your takes and suggestions?