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I cycled with floss from my established tank. I added new biomax in with it. I keep extra floss in my established tanks to put in new tanks. I think I dosed prime into the tank yesterday early instead of checking parameters. And then yesterday evening I tested the water and poured more Prime in. The tank was real bubbly near the filter flow after prime.
I’m wondering if when I vacuumed substrate and some of my arm dipped in I might have had soap or something on my skin? Like dried on after cleaning dishes or even shower gel? My tank is a 36 bow front so even on a stool my arm goes in when I’m siphoning substrate. Because thinking about it the bubbles looked almost soap like. Hmmm
It would take a lot of Prime to actually harm the fish, in my opinion.
It would take a lot of Prime to actually harm the fish, in my opinion.
https://www.seachem.com/support/forums/forum/general-discussion/2314-prime-overdoseOverdosing Prime isn't any concern. It won't poison your fish. It is a reducing agent, so what can cause an issue when over-dosed is that if there aren't enough other things in the water to react with, like nitrogenous waste or chlorine, it will react with and reduce oxygen. This can suffocate the inhabitants of your tank.
Doubtful that it is from the prime, however what about the pH. Is your tank pH different than your tap water pH? A large swing in pH will kill fish pretty quickly.
Also guppies and rasboras are top dwelling fish. So them being near the top isn’t unusual.
The fish were poisoned by the new water or something in the bucket that held the water. They were not poisoned by Prime or ammonia, nitrite, etc.
Make sure you use a fish only bucket and never use any container that has had cleaning products in.
If possible fill the bucket with water, add dechlorinator and aerate for 30 minutes before using it.
Rinse hands and arms down with clean water before working on the tank.
Make sure you don't have any moisturising cream, oil, grease, cleaning products or anything else on your hands. Anti-bacterial soaps can leave a residue behind that needs to be washed off before working in the tank.