Fishy_Fish74
Fish Fanatic
My favorite fish amber,a platy is rolling around my tank on her side and sometimes on her back! Will she die? She tries to turn around but she can't so she ends up twurling...But she is not that fat!
Well sorry but this is BS. If you put in new filter medium you will lose vital nitrifying bacteria. Stirring up the gravel to remove debris will help stop nitrate levels from rising, altho it's better to use a gravel cleaner rather than stirring it up and letting the filter remove it.Kissifish said:Try. Check your water parameters and maybe someone can give you more info. I would put in a clean filter and let the water settle down. If the ammonia levels are still high, siphon of some (25%) of the water, but don't stir up the gravel.
Kissifish - filters don't physically remove the "chemicals" (by which I assume you mean ammonia and nitrite), they remove particulates and they also house nitrifying bacteria that convert ammonia to nitrite and nitrite to nitrate. A filter can be completely icky and still do that - it might not remove particulates very effectively, but the bacteria will continue doing their stuff.Kissifish said:In changing the filter, I meant that it may be overloaded and not removing chemicals anymore, therefore........lordmoose, not removing NH3 and H2S. This is if you have a carbon filter, not just filter floss. And.........if you don't stir up the gravel this time........you're not messing with the good bacteria in the gravel. The idea is to get the tank back in balance first. Hence the reason you never change a carbon filter at the same time you vacuum the gravel. Sorry, you don't agree, but have you ever had this happen? I have. 8)