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Yeah this is what I have read so have been looking into it. My only concern would be, during water changes I would be adding water that was of a lower PH again into it, this would cause fluctuations surely?Probably the easiest method I've found is to buy some rocks like limestone that contain calcium. This by itself will raise the ph until it reaches an equilibrium. You can also buy stuff like crushed coral or cuttlebone that also contain calcium.
This was also my thoughts. At the moment there's some neons, dwarf gourami and a singular guppy. Reason for the singular guppy is the rest of the group died, rapidly, which made me retest waterErrr - nobody has asked what fish you keep!
So what fish do you keep? I have 3 tanks with a pH of 6 or lower, but I keep fish that need soft acidic water. So no problem. If you are starting out or thinking of a new setup its far easier to go with fish and plants that will thrive in the water you can provide them out of the tap than trying to mess with the chemistry, which can be expensive, time consuming and error prone.
Just my 2 cents.
Agreed as to the tank population being important. With a PH of 6.0, and possibly lower, live bearers are just not going to do well at all. For instance the proper PH for a guppy is over 7.0. Without extreme methods a PH is not going to be brought up to that range. Even if it can be brought up to a 7.0+ level it will be more work to maintain than what it is worth.Errr - nobody has asked what fish you keep!
So what fish do you keep? I have 3 tanks with a pH of 6 or lower, but I keep fish that need soft acidic water. So no problem. If you are starting out or thinking of a new setup its far easier to go with fish and plants that will thrive in the water you can provide them out of the tap than trying to mess with the chemistry, which can be expensive, time consuming and error prone.
Just my 2 cents.
Hello I have done further tests and replied with thempH is not actually that important to fish health as long as its stable. GH (general hardness) is far more important. Fish that come from hard water naturally get rid of excess minerals from their systems. Put them into soft water and they eventually get sick or die from lack of minerals. Fish from soft water hang on to the minerals they get and will eventually die from organ failure if kept in hard water (think limescale in their organs).
Low pH is usually an indicator of soft water and high pH is usually an indicator of hard water. I emphasise usually because it is not a reliable indicator. In your case it may well be true. Guppies are hard water fish and the neons and DG are soft water fish, so it seems likely that your water does not agree with the guppies. But ideal water for guppies would not be good for the others. It would be useful to know the GH and KH readings of your tank.
FWIW most people do not recommend store bought dwarf gouramis. They are farmed in Asia and a very high percentage of them have an incurable viral disease. Other gouramis are ok.
A good site for checking the water requirements of specific fish that you are interested in is seriouslyfish.com. The most important parameters are GH and temperature - but also look at things like group size and aggression.
OK - so you have soft water. That's no problem. While others have suggested what you can do to raise pH there is no need as you have said you will look at your stocking. The KH acts as a pH buffer and you have none so raising pH is tricky because it will tend to come back down again. My own tanks have a KH of zero and GH between 0 and 6 depending on the tank. The pH is stable (but low) and I keep it this way with regular water changes. Unfortunately I do not have soft water like yours (I'm actually quite envious), which also means I know the effort and expense involved in changing your natural water parameters.Hello I have done further tests and replied with them
dKH - didn't even go blue, was faintly yellow (practically clear) from the first drop
dGH - 6
Kind of matches the fish that have survived in my tank and the ones that have died... mollies, guppies never last which after testing I can see why. Although one singular guppy remains a year on.OK - so you have soft water. That's no problem. While others have suggested what you can do to raise pH there is no need as you have said you will look at your stocking. The KH acts as a pH buffer and you have none so raising pH is tricky because it will tend to come back down again. My own tanks have a KH of zero and GH between 0 and 6 depending on the tank. The pH is stable (but low) and I keep it this way with regular water changes. Unfortunately I do not have soft water like yours (I'm actually quite envious), which also means I know the effort and expense involved in changing your natural water parameters.
If your water came out of my tap I would simply put my fish in it after getting rid of the chlorine. Fish that will thrive in your water include:
Most South American / Amazonian tropical fish - including tetras, corys, plecs. pencilfish etc
Many Asian tropical fish - including rasboras, loach, danios etc
Don't even think about livebearers, such as guppies, platies and mollies, and definitely no African cichlids.
Malaysian trumpet snails are fine (mixed views on keeping them) but most decorative snails would not survive too long.
Soft water shrimp are also fine.