mangoed
New Member
Hi,
Yesterday, I noticed that one of my threadfin rainbowfish had red, inflamed gills. It was at the surface of the water trying to extract oxygen from the air. I performed a 20% water change and had intended to seek advice from the LFS today but, unfortunately, the fish died during the night.
The chemical properties of the water in the tank before the water change were:
pH: 8
ammonia: 0
nitrite: 0
nitrate: 5-10
kH: 110
gH: 220
temp: 26.8C (80.25F)
The size of the tank is 100L (26.5 US gallons). The current inhabitants are 2 x Corydoras reticulatus, 4 x "lambchop" rasbora, 2 x red/rummy-nosed tetra (difficult to determine exact species), 2 x threadfine rainbowfish, 3 x Ottocinclus, 2 x marbled hatchetfish. These are very small fish - currently no more than 50cm total length in the tank.
When I tested, the pH was much higher than I would like, the water change took it down to 7.7 and I had intended to keep changing until it returned to that of my tap water (about 7). However, in the hours since the water change, the pH has begun rising back towards 8 again!
I guess that I have two questions:
1) Any idea what was wrong with the fish, especially so that I can try to prevent it happening to any of the others?
2) What would cause the pH to rise to this level and what can I do about it?
Thanks.
-dan
Yesterday, I noticed that one of my threadfin rainbowfish had red, inflamed gills. It was at the surface of the water trying to extract oxygen from the air. I performed a 20% water change and had intended to seek advice from the LFS today but, unfortunately, the fish died during the night.
The chemical properties of the water in the tank before the water change were:
pH: 8
ammonia: 0
nitrite: 0
nitrate: 5-10
kH: 110
gH: 220
temp: 26.8C (80.25F)
The size of the tank is 100L (26.5 US gallons). The current inhabitants are 2 x Corydoras reticulatus, 4 x "lambchop" rasbora, 2 x red/rummy-nosed tetra (difficult to determine exact species), 2 x threadfine rainbowfish, 3 x Ottocinclus, 2 x marbled hatchetfish. These are very small fish - currently no more than 50cm total length in the tank.
When I tested, the pH was much higher than I would like, the water change took it down to 7.7 and I had intended to keep changing until it returned to that of my tap water (about 7). However, in the hours since the water change, the pH has begun rising back towards 8 again!
I guess that I have two questions:
1) Any idea what was wrong with the fish, especially so that I can try to prevent it happening to any of the others?
2) What would cause the pH to rise to this level and what can I do about it?
Thanks.
-dan