... or the great self cleaning tank.
My last two tragic deaths were very easy to take care of as they simply dissappeared from the tank. No carcas sitting at the bottom, no floaters, nothing stuck to the filter intake, they were just gone.
Unless they are disintegrating, which I think I would notice, I think my other fish are eating them.
I can't tell if they are killing them first, then eating them or simply taking advantage of a new food supply that's just appeared, I don't know.
What I do know is that my survivers are a hardy bunch. 3 Serpae Tetras, 4 Danios, and 2 Blood Fin Tetras. They've been in my tank for about a year, or more. Happy as can be. The tanks not too big - 10 gallon, which gives each about a gallon a piece. (I've read that that's an acceptable amount of space.) The largest Serpae is about the size of a nickle, so they are not large fish.
The new intros have been a small Cory Catfish which lasted about 2 weeks, and most recently, a Chinese Algae eater which lasted about 3 weeks.
The first was a puzzlement. (where did it go??) The second was a tragedy. I liked the Algae Eater, he was like a vacuum and my tank was never cleaner when he was around.
The others used to chase them a bit, but no more than they do each other and I never saw any overt nipping.
The water quality is good except for a high PH which I haven't tried to control. (It reads up in the 8.8 range on my chart which is as high as my chart goes.)
However, when I introduce new fish, I always drip acclimate them for a couple hours. And the fact that they don't die outright feels like it's not my water that's doing them in.
The tank sits in a room that gets sunlight - thus the extra algae - so could the algae eater have had *too* much to eat? Maybe he over ate and died of a bloated stomach ache?
Could I be feeding my others too little? They go through the food I give them very quickly, nothing to spare and nothing floating to the bottom. (which is what I read means too much) Are they so hungry that any new fish looks good to them?
I'd like to get another Algae Eater but I'd like to try to figure out what killed the first one, and I want to make sure I'm not simply dropping in new fish food for the others.
Any thoughts?
My last two tragic deaths were very easy to take care of as they simply dissappeared from the tank. No carcas sitting at the bottom, no floaters, nothing stuck to the filter intake, they were just gone.
Unless they are disintegrating, which I think I would notice, I think my other fish are eating them.
I can't tell if they are killing them first, then eating them or simply taking advantage of a new food supply that's just appeared, I don't know.
What I do know is that my survivers are a hardy bunch. 3 Serpae Tetras, 4 Danios, and 2 Blood Fin Tetras. They've been in my tank for about a year, or more. Happy as can be. The tanks not too big - 10 gallon, which gives each about a gallon a piece. (I've read that that's an acceptable amount of space.) The largest Serpae is about the size of a nickle, so they are not large fish.
The new intros have been a small Cory Catfish which lasted about 2 weeks, and most recently, a Chinese Algae eater which lasted about 3 weeks.
The first was a puzzlement. (where did it go??) The second was a tragedy. I liked the Algae Eater, he was like a vacuum and my tank was never cleaner when he was around.
The others used to chase them a bit, but no more than they do each other and I never saw any overt nipping.
The water quality is good except for a high PH which I haven't tried to control. (It reads up in the 8.8 range on my chart which is as high as my chart goes.)
However, when I introduce new fish, I always drip acclimate them for a couple hours. And the fact that they don't die outright feels like it's not my water that's doing them in.
The tank sits in a room that gets sunlight - thus the extra algae - so could the algae eater have had *too* much to eat? Maybe he over ate and died of a bloated stomach ache?
Could I be feeding my others too little? They go through the food I give them very quickly, nothing to spare and nothing floating to the bottom. (which is what I read means too much) Are they so hungry that any new fish looks good to them?
I'd like to get another Algae Eater but I'd like to try to figure out what killed the first one, and I want to make sure I'm not simply dropping in new fish food for the others.
Any thoughts?