Let me first start of by saying that I'm in an Aquatic Science class and this is my senior year of high school. I was initally drawn to take this class because of the idea of raising a fish. I thought it would be fun and easy...and a blowoff class.
Well, at first we started off learning about fish basics(how to identify male from female, ammonia>nitrite>nitrate*later found out this is cycling*, aggressiveness in fish, fish anatomy, etc). This lasted all of 6 weeks. We spent the next 12 weeks of the semester learning about nothing but coastlines, tides, and other information that really is no use in raising a fish.
Well, we started the process of setting up our tanks(finally) this monday. Things were great and I was so excited to get my fish and to start cycling my tank(I didn't even know what cycling was at this point)...yes I know incredibly stupid of me to not have done any research on my own whatsoever.
On wednesday I happily put my fish into the tank along with my tankmate friend's fish. All in all we have 7 fish(five tetras and 2 corries) in our 20 gallon tank.
Over the process of the last 3 days, I've been doing my own research. I've learned that cycling with fish is cruel and hurts the fish. I've learned what cycling actually is. I've learned that even if you cycle with fish, 7 is NOT an okay number to start out with. Continuing on, I've learned that the reason all our fish are getting red fins all of a sudden is because of ridiculously high levels of ammonia. I've learned that the reason some fish are leaning down at such an odd angle and not moving that much is because of their bladders being messed up.
I have brought all of this up to a teacher(not my teacher...she's sick and on maternity leave. The sub is kind, but not much help), and although he's such a kind man, he's juggling having to instruct 2 classes of 20 kids on what to do all at once. I still don't know how to do a partial water change or how to know that I'm feeding my fish the appopriate amount.
...meanwhile I've also learned from a lot of my other friends who've taken the class in previous years that it's very normal for the "tester/cycling fish" to die and not a lot of people's fish even survive through cycling, which is just mind boggling to me...I mean really, pardon my language, but wtf? Why even use fish in the process?
I did(I say I did, but really the teacher did without showing me how) a partial water change because my ammonia levels were so ridiculously high during 1st period. During lunch I went in and checked on my ammonia levels, and they are the exact same still(is this normal?)
I also have a couple of empty tanks at home. I'm wondering if I should transfer some fish into a different tank so that there aren't so many in one tank.
My real question is, what should I do from here? How can I help my fish and my tankmate's fish through such ridiculous conditions?
There are a lot of people who haven't gotten their fish yet. I'm wondering if I should just tell people they can have some of our fish at this point.
thanks for reading this giant jumble of text and thank you so much, in advance for any and all help!
OH ALSO, I have some pictures of some of our fish's conditions. I can post those if that would help.
edit1 just found this on another topic:
Tank size: 20 gallon
pH: I don't know
ammonia: between 4 and 8
nitrite: I don't know
nitrate: I don't know
kH: don't even know what this is
gH: or this
tank temp: 82
Fish Symptoms (include full description including lesion, color, location, fish behavior): fish are turning red in the fins, tetras are leaning down at odd angles, a lot of the fish aren't moving that much, my corries are going up to the top for oxygen it looks like
Volume and Frequency of water changes: tank started on monday. I did one water change this morning
Chemical Additives or Media in your tank:
Tank inhabitants: 5 tetras and 2 corydoras catfish
Recent additions to your tank (living or decoration): everything in our tank is new. There's a couple of rocks and some fake plants
Well, at first we started off learning about fish basics(how to identify male from female, ammonia>nitrite>nitrate*later found out this is cycling*, aggressiveness in fish, fish anatomy, etc). This lasted all of 6 weeks. We spent the next 12 weeks of the semester learning about nothing but coastlines, tides, and other information that really is no use in raising a fish.
Well, we started the process of setting up our tanks(finally) this monday. Things were great and I was so excited to get my fish and to start cycling my tank(I didn't even know what cycling was at this point)...yes I know incredibly stupid of me to not have done any research on my own whatsoever.
On wednesday I happily put my fish into the tank along with my tankmate friend's fish. All in all we have 7 fish(five tetras and 2 corries) in our 20 gallon tank.
Over the process of the last 3 days, I've been doing my own research. I've learned that cycling with fish is cruel and hurts the fish. I've learned what cycling actually is. I've learned that even if you cycle with fish, 7 is NOT an okay number to start out with. Continuing on, I've learned that the reason all our fish are getting red fins all of a sudden is because of ridiculously high levels of ammonia. I've learned that the reason some fish are leaning down at such an odd angle and not moving that much is because of their bladders being messed up.
I have brought all of this up to a teacher(not my teacher...she's sick and on maternity leave. The sub is kind, but not much help), and although he's such a kind man, he's juggling having to instruct 2 classes of 20 kids on what to do all at once. I still don't know how to do a partial water change or how to know that I'm feeding my fish the appopriate amount.
...meanwhile I've also learned from a lot of my other friends who've taken the class in previous years that it's very normal for the "tester/cycling fish" to die and not a lot of people's fish even survive through cycling, which is just mind boggling to me...I mean really, pardon my language, but wtf? Why even use fish in the process?
I did(I say I did, but really the teacher did without showing me how) a partial water change because my ammonia levels were so ridiculously high during 1st period. During lunch I went in and checked on my ammonia levels, and they are the exact same still(is this normal?)
I also have a couple of empty tanks at home. I'm wondering if I should transfer some fish into a different tank so that there aren't so many in one tank.
My real question is, what should I do from here? How can I help my fish and my tankmate's fish through such ridiculous conditions?
There are a lot of people who haven't gotten their fish yet. I'm wondering if I should just tell people they can have some of our fish at this point.
thanks for reading this giant jumble of text and thank you so much, in advance for any and all help!
OH ALSO, I have some pictures of some of our fish's conditions. I can post those if that would help.
edit1 just found this on another topic:
Tank size: 20 gallon
pH: I don't know
ammonia: between 4 and 8
nitrite: I don't know
nitrate: I don't know
kH: don't even know what this is
gH: or this
tank temp: 82
Fish Symptoms (include full description including lesion, color, location, fish behavior): fish are turning red in the fins, tetras are leaning down at odd angles, a lot of the fish aren't moving that much, my corries are going up to the top for oxygen it looks like
Volume and Frequency of water changes: tank started on monday. I did one water change this morning
Chemical Additives or Media in your tank:
Tank inhabitants: 5 tetras and 2 corydoras catfish
Recent additions to your tank (living or decoration): everything in our tank is new. There's a couple of rocks and some fake plants