After several bad starts I think I have a great tank. Fish are all happy and healthy (as far as I can tell) and the water tests have been good. Stable and with good readings.
I do a 50% water change every week, and the water is clear.
The light is on a timer and the light clicks on in the morning and clicks off at night. (it's on about 12 hours a day)
The tank is in a room that gets sunlight, but the windows are curtained and no direct daylight hits the tank.
Water readings are:
pH: 7.8
Ammonia: 0 ppm
Nitrite: 0 ppm
Nitrate? Ah here's where things are changing.
When I was restocking and gradually adding fish (the last new fish were added about 2 months ago) the Nitrates were at 0 ppm, two weeks ago they climbed to 5 ppm. This morning I tested again and they had climbed to 10 ppm. (I test about twice a week)
Is this normal? Is it getting too high? If so, what should I do to reduce it.
Although the water is clear, the glass is starting to get some green/brown stains on it. I clean it when I change the tank but they are coming back more and more. I have no live plants in the tank.
The last fish I added were two Marbled Mollies. (as I said, 2 months ago) When I first added them, they took a while to get used to feeding time and where and how to get to the food. (floating at the top of the tank, where the others - 5 danios and 3 serpae tetras - go at it in a frenzy) While the Mollies swam around oblivious of the flakes and blood worms I would drop in the tank, I noticed them nipping at the rocks and fake plants around the tank. I think they were eating the algae.
Since then, they've figured out how to get to the food with the rest, and I don't see them picking at the rocks any more.
Is the increas in Nitrates due to the appearance of the algea on the glass? (I'm assuming it's algae)
My tank is only 10 gals. I think I'm at my limit of adding new fish, so I'd be nervous adding anything that would be specific to eating algae. (a pleco or similar cat fish)
I haven't had too much luck with snails. The last Zebra I added only lasted a couple of weeks before it died. I tried to wait to see if it would perk up - smelling it daily to see if it was still alive, when I finally got the dead snail smell, I think it poluted the water. My pH and ammonia shot up, the fish were beset with fin-rot and it took several weeks and a dead serpae to get things back to what I felt was comfortable and stable. A couple months later I added the Mollies.
But that was then. Almost half a year ago. I think my tank was still cycling, and I added him along with the 5 Danios. That's probably too many fish to add at a single go, but I wanted them to school and calm the Serpaes that were nipping at each other. (a suggestion from the girl at the local fish store - which worked!) But it did mean a spike in ammonia and I had to change the water in the tank quite frequently. The snail was active at first, moving all over the tank, the walls rocks, etc. Then it just stopped, sat in the corner and didn't move again.
Anyway, Should I be worried about the increase in Nitrates? Should I add something to help get the green/brown algae off the glass. (and what?) Should I clean the glass and change the water more often?
Hope I didn't write a novel, I wanted to be thorough with my descriptions in case it would help with suggestions.
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks.
I do a 50% water change every week, and the water is clear.
The light is on a timer and the light clicks on in the morning and clicks off at night. (it's on about 12 hours a day)
The tank is in a room that gets sunlight, but the windows are curtained and no direct daylight hits the tank.
Water readings are:
pH: 7.8
Ammonia: 0 ppm
Nitrite: 0 ppm
Nitrate? Ah here's where things are changing.
When I was restocking and gradually adding fish (the last new fish were added about 2 months ago) the Nitrates were at 0 ppm, two weeks ago they climbed to 5 ppm. This morning I tested again and they had climbed to 10 ppm. (I test about twice a week)
Is this normal? Is it getting too high? If so, what should I do to reduce it.
Although the water is clear, the glass is starting to get some green/brown stains on it. I clean it when I change the tank but they are coming back more and more. I have no live plants in the tank.
The last fish I added were two Marbled Mollies. (as I said, 2 months ago) When I first added them, they took a while to get used to feeding time and where and how to get to the food. (floating at the top of the tank, where the others - 5 danios and 3 serpae tetras - go at it in a frenzy) While the Mollies swam around oblivious of the flakes and blood worms I would drop in the tank, I noticed them nipping at the rocks and fake plants around the tank. I think they were eating the algae.
Since then, they've figured out how to get to the food with the rest, and I don't see them picking at the rocks any more.
Is the increas in Nitrates due to the appearance of the algea on the glass? (I'm assuming it's algae)
My tank is only 10 gals. I think I'm at my limit of adding new fish, so I'd be nervous adding anything that would be specific to eating algae. (a pleco or similar cat fish)
I haven't had too much luck with snails. The last Zebra I added only lasted a couple of weeks before it died. I tried to wait to see if it would perk up - smelling it daily to see if it was still alive, when I finally got the dead snail smell, I think it poluted the water. My pH and ammonia shot up, the fish were beset with fin-rot and it took several weeks and a dead serpae to get things back to what I felt was comfortable and stable. A couple months later I added the Mollies.
But that was then. Almost half a year ago. I think my tank was still cycling, and I added him along with the 5 Danios. That's probably too many fish to add at a single go, but I wanted them to school and calm the Serpaes that were nipping at each other. (a suggestion from the girl at the local fish store - which worked!) But it did mean a spike in ammonia and I had to change the water in the tank quite frequently. The snail was active at first, moving all over the tank, the walls rocks, etc. Then it just stopped, sat in the corner and didn't move again.
Anyway, Should I be worried about the increase in Nitrates? Should I add something to help get the green/brown algae off the glass. (and what?) Should I clean the glass and change the water more often?
Hope I didn't write a novel, I wanted to be thorough with my descriptions in case it would help with suggestions.
Any help would be appreciated.
Thanks.