Refining My African Cichlid Tank

tim_s

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Hi Everyone,

Tank Size: 90 US Gallons
Current PH: 7.5

Talking to other African cichlid keepers I am hearing 2 things.

1. Salts
2. Buffering with coral / other etc.

So here are my questions.

1. Should I be adding salts regularly? (If yes - I assume I will have to remove the bristle nose pleco's)
2. Buffering strategies? Any recommendations? Strategies from bringing the PH up safely.

I Appreciate the future responses.
 
I keep Lake Tanganyika Cichlids.

I don't use salts.

I use coral gravel as substrate.

Most LFS that I use acclimatize their stock in local water before sale to lessen shock so a 7.5 would be ok.

Remember, water stability is far more important than super high ph induced by buffering.

Others may disagree but I stand by my own experiences. Most of my stock is several years old :D
 
I have been thinking of adding crushed coral substrate over a period of time.

The person I bought the fish from puts a table spoon of salt per 10 gallons.
 
No I agree - this is the conclusion I have come to from the start a stable enviroment is much more important versuses correct perimeters. Cichlids are great at adapting.
 
Everything I have read seems to agree with my original findings that it is better for fish to get use to your tap water versuses trying to buffer.
 
Question is: salt - will it be beneficial.
 
Question is: salt - will it be beneficial.


An extract I found you might be interested in........


The Controversy. Do African cichlids need the various additives that promise better colors and increased breeding activity. May we have the envelope please. The answer is a resounding “Yes” and “No.”

NO to Additives. Fish adapt themselves to their environments or die. Obviously cichlids raised for generations in water quality close to ours can live and breed in it just fine. Watch them swim and eat like little piggies -- very much alive. They also breed just fine. Adding Rift Lake salts would accomplish nothing concrete, would add to the cost of water changes, and destroy the plants in their tanks.

YES to Additives. We sell mostly young African cichlids. They look and act only a little bit like their parents. Rift Lake salts increase the color of the juvies somewhat, but really help color up the adults. When you see the dramatic difference in the adults -- especially the Haps and the Peacocks, you instantly see the need for the salts.

NO to Additives. Additives increase spawning behavior (another word for fights). We really don’t need to give African cichlids something that makes them meaner.

YES to Additives. Most people that keep African cichlids keep them in larger tanks and want them to breed. Additives not only increase spawning activity, they increase success rates and spawn size (in numbers). Your breeders spawn more often and have larger spawns.

NO to Additives. Adding Rift Lake salts dramatically increases the pH level of your aquarium. All traces of ammonia become deadly at pH levels 8.0 and higher. “New tank syndrome” could kill most newly set up African cichlid tanks.

YES to Additives. Forget adding the salts to brand new tanks. Let them cycle two months then add the salts. Or you can always jump start your filter’s nitrogen cycle with dirty water from an established cichlid tank. Why wait forever? Let’s get into the 20th or whatever century.

NO to Additives. Rift Lake additives contain chemicals that will kill most plants. Plants make the tank look better, remove some of the fishes’ waste products, and provide a valuable food source for the cichlids.

YES to Additives. African cichlids sport raspy lips that kill plants anyway. No way can you keep plants with adult African cichlids. Their filters process their waste products 24/7 unlike plants that take the night off. Adult African cichlids need a full-time filter system. Add plastic plants. They look better (no chew marks), and they never die.

NO to Additives. We can’t add Rift Lake salts to our Aqualand tanks. Most customers put them in regular Des Moines water -- not Rift Lake water. Additives would cause an extra stress -- first when we added them, and second when they went into regular water.

YES to Additives. Educate our customers. Let them know the advantages and disadvantages of adding the Rift Lake salts or not. Let them make their own decisions.
 
Hi,

The more I look into it the more I understand that the requirement for buffer is not a requirement at all. That people as a preference throw in 1 tbsp per 10 gallons but what effect if any is measure is unknown to me.
 

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