I'm at my wits end. I started up a 30 gallon freshwater tank a few months ago. Took several weeks to cycle with live plants in it. Finally was testing at 0 ammonia, 0 nitrates, and 0-5 nitrites consistently. Added 6 fancy guppies, two weeks later 6 dwarf rainbow fish, and two weeks after that 6 yoyo loaches.
All was well for a few weeks, went to do a water change, water tested fine before hand, changed ten gallons (as per usual once a week), a day later over the course of a few hrs 5 rainbow fish and 3 guppies died. I quickly transferred the remaining fish to my 20 gallon tank and with the exception of the lone rainbow that died a couple hrs later, all original 3 guppies and 6 yoyos are doing fine.
I did some research, and found out about sand causing gas bubbles if not stirred. I have sand in both tanks, however the 20 gallon gas pretty much always had trumpet snails, so I didn't even know stirring the sand was a thing and I do remember seeing quite a few bubbles come up when I added the water and disturbed a section of sand. I took some trumpets and put them into the 30 gallon. Now here's where things get odd.
For the next month or so the plants all showed substantial growth, and the trumpets have absolutely thrived. I mean they have never gotten nearly as big in the 20 gallon despite breeding without issue. So once I was sure the snails were well established I tried adding in three guppies. Next morning two were dead so I put the alive one back with the others.
I will note that I bought 4 additional guppies the day before, but then realized I had miscalculated the male to female ratio which was part of the reason I put 3 males in the 30 gallon. The two that died were from the new ones, and a couple days later the other two died, the original ones are all still fine. Is it possible they were just not good stock? I did get them from a different store then I usually go to.
Did some more research and the only thing I found that I thought pertained was it said that if your light is too bright it can cause rapid ph swings. My light was set at a bright setting because the tank is tall, so I have since turned it down. But my question is if that was the cause, wouldn't the snails not be doing as well as they are? And yes, before you ask, I've been testing the water frequently and everything tests perfect.0/0/0-5 (ph 7.4-7.6)
All was well for a few weeks, went to do a water change, water tested fine before hand, changed ten gallons (as per usual once a week), a day later over the course of a few hrs 5 rainbow fish and 3 guppies died. I quickly transferred the remaining fish to my 20 gallon tank and with the exception of the lone rainbow that died a couple hrs later, all original 3 guppies and 6 yoyos are doing fine.
I did some research, and found out about sand causing gas bubbles if not stirred. I have sand in both tanks, however the 20 gallon gas pretty much always had trumpet snails, so I didn't even know stirring the sand was a thing and I do remember seeing quite a few bubbles come up when I added the water and disturbed a section of sand. I took some trumpets and put them into the 30 gallon. Now here's where things get odd.
For the next month or so the plants all showed substantial growth, and the trumpets have absolutely thrived. I mean they have never gotten nearly as big in the 20 gallon despite breeding without issue. So once I was sure the snails were well established I tried adding in three guppies. Next morning two were dead so I put the alive one back with the others.
I will note that I bought 4 additional guppies the day before, but then realized I had miscalculated the male to female ratio which was part of the reason I put 3 males in the 30 gallon. The two that died were from the new ones, and a couple days later the other two died, the original ones are all still fine. Is it possible they were just not good stock? I did get them from a different store then I usually go to.
Did some more research and the only thing I found that I thought pertained was it said that if your light is too bright it can cause rapid ph swings. My light was set at a bright setting because the tank is tall, so I have since turned it down. But my question is if that was the cause, wouldn't the snails not be doing as well as they are? And yes, before you ask, I've been testing the water frequently and everything tests perfect.0/0/0-5 (ph 7.4-7.6)