divadro102
Aquarium Advice Newbie
- Joined
- Nov 23, 2011
- Messages
- 6
Hi guys. Have a couple questions. But a little info first (sorry if it's long, i like to state exactly what i need to) :::
My dad and I have a 90g tank that used to be FW and housed a huge pleco. Sadly he died and my dad wanted SW fish, so we started that cycle and went out to sea and had us a few caught wild ones. That was over 6 years ago and the tank lasted a year until my dad got tired of cleaning it up. No fish ever died. The tank stood empty for the past 5 years until 6 months ago. We decided to set it up again. We let the tank sit, cycle, and get it's bacteria and had proper levels before placing new SW fish.
We're kinda poor so we have the canister filter from when it used to be FW. Also, the water we use is straight from the tap without RO. Risky but no fish has ever died and it's obviously dechlorinated, etc...
Ok, so the new tank has been good. This tank is new for us in the sense that we actually bought the fish and live rock. All levels have been great.
Now my questions:
We had to cycle our tank after it was set with damselfish. Our LFS asked us to return them after the tank finished its cycle but we fell in love with them and kept them. After three months, we decided to buy new fish. So we got compatible ones and they died after biting on the live rock. We bought new ones again and they died after chewing on the rock. After a fourth buy we noticed that the new fish, except the damsels, chew on the rock and die within two days with swollen mouths. What could that be? Each single fish that dies, has chewed the rock and died from the exact same thing. A swollen-open mouth, tries to eat but can't close the lips, and then sinks to the bottom.
And just last week, my dad bought water for the first time from the LFS to change out 20 gallons. The water cleared up and looked nice the first two days. Then our 19 fish became 7 in a matter of days. We think the culprit may be the new water from the LFS but the only ones to die are the striped and spotted damsels. The yellowfins haven't been plucked out of the water yet.
EDIT: Also, i'm aware that the canister is pretty much freshwater technology. But the SW fish from 6 years back were fine for a year and these new ones have done great so far. The tank used to house 80 tetras, two bettas, and two plecos. One died, the other grew really big.
My dad and I have a 90g tank that used to be FW and housed a huge pleco. Sadly he died and my dad wanted SW fish, so we started that cycle and went out to sea and had us a few caught wild ones. That was over 6 years ago and the tank lasted a year until my dad got tired of cleaning it up. No fish ever died. The tank stood empty for the past 5 years until 6 months ago. We decided to set it up again. We let the tank sit, cycle, and get it's bacteria and had proper levels before placing new SW fish.
We're kinda poor so we have the canister filter from when it used to be FW. Also, the water we use is straight from the tap without RO. Risky but no fish has ever died and it's obviously dechlorinated, etc...
Ok, so the new tank has been good. This tank is new for us in the sense that we actually bought the fish and live rock. All levels have been great.
Now my questions:
We had to cycle our tank after it was set with damselfish. Our LFS asked us to return them after the tank finished its cycle but we fell in love with them and kept them. After three months, we decided to buy new fish. So we got compatible ones and they died after biting on the live rock. We bought new ones again and they died after chewing on the rock. After a fourth buy we noticed that the new fish, except the damsels, chew on the rock and die within two days with swollen mouths. What could that be? Each single fish that dies, has chewed the rock and died from the exact same thing. A swollen-open mouth, tries to eat but can't close the lips, and then sinks to the bottom.
And just last week, my dad bought water for the first time from the LFS to change out 20 gallons. The water cleared up and looked nice the first two days. Then our 19 fish became 7 in a matter of days. We think the culprit may be the new water from the LFS but the only ones to die are the striped and spotted damsels. The yellowfins haven't been plucked out of the water yet.
EDIT: Also, i'm aware that the canister is pretty much freshwater technology. But the SW fish from 6 years back were fine for a year and these new ones have done great so far. The tank used to house 80 tetras, two bettas, and two plecos. One died, the other grew really big.