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Recent content by Ichthyologist
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I am looking for suggestions on a particular issue I am having with my Fluval 405 canister filter. I have a (now) lightly stocked planted 75 gallon freshwater tank. Over time, the canister seems to develop air pockets in it. As a result, the gph seems to be affected. If I rock the canister...
Five days does absolutely nothing for cycling a tank, especially a 55 gallon. Aside from that, the symptoms described point to poisoning. With what is anyone's guess.
So long as my water change is not exceeding 30%, I never use a dechlorinator. The water system here does use chloramine, too. There is nothing wrong with a low dose of chlorine or chloramine -- in fact, I promote its use to clear up some bacterial diseases in fish like gill disease.
The loach appears fine to me. My clown loaches always have stomachs like that after some good eatin'. I take it this is not the case here?
For further help, if you were using the stickies I assume you would have seen this one:
http://www.aquariumadvice.com/viewtopic.php?t=33947
May I recommend Kuhli loaches. They stay small, are unusual, fun to watch, and will eat leftover food as well as smaller snails. Keep more than one for maximum viewing pleasure. :) For a 10 gallon planted tank I would do about three of them.
Am I supposed to know what is going on? Are you cycling, or this an established tank? Do you have fish in it? Plants? Have you tested the water that comes out of the faucet itself before you put it in the tank?
Yes yes, there is always someone who shows up with the exception to the rule with an "I do fine" response.
I do a 15% water change once per month and my fish thrive. So... ?
If you suspect some sort of infection or parasite, do not quarantine. Treat the entire tank. Even if some fish look healthy they could be harboring something.
Keep us posted.
Just how high was your nitrate before the water change? I'll look through some of your older posts to see if I can catch up with your tank.
Edit: I reviewed your posts back to May and could not find anything regarding high nitrates. However, I did find a lot of posts describing all kinds of...
Do nothing. That is what I am trying to emphasize. Let your tank stabilize (again) for a couple of weeks. Actually, your bio-load is low enough now that I would wait a month.
If you are truly thinking your nitrate levels are the problem, (as indicated in your reason for doing the 80% water...
Correct -- even 50% is far too much. Anything more than 20% should be reserved for cases of poisoning either by contamination, ammonia, or in some situations nitrite.
Around here, I see recommendations for voluminous water changes often for high nitrates. That is bad advice. It is more...