W
waynephinney
Guest
I have the standard water filter that came with my tank and it's got two speeds, hi and low. I keep it on high to not only filter as much as it can, but to help keep the level of oxygen up for the tank. I don't want any of my poor fishies to drown.
Well, I woke up this morning and two of my fish were stuck to it. They are little silvery colored tetras with a little red mark over their eyes. Anyhow, one was literally wrapped halfway around the intake tube, so clearly he got stuck somehow. Well, the other one was pressed against it vertically. I shook them loose hoping one of them might still be alive, but nothing. One floated to the top, and the other sank. My guess is that one got stuck and the other tried to find a way to help free it. If they weren't of the same species, I wouldn't have even thought of this.
But I guess here's my problem. I don't want any more fish dying that way. It's one thing if I screw something up and they die, but they shouldn't get stuck to the filter intake. I don't know if it's just that species or what. My red tail sharks play around it all the time and even lay up against it and eat stuff off of it, then they swim away like it's nothing.
I guess my question is, can I keep the filter on low, or will the tank get too dirty too quick? Will it not get enough oxygen? Should I just put it back on high? Was it really the fault of the fish that got stuck? Was this a fluke thing that's unlikely to happen?
I just don't want to wake up and see any more fish pinned against that. I felt really bad.
Well, I woke up this morning and two of my fish were stuck to it. They are little silvery colored tetras with a little red mark over their eyes. Anyhow, one was literally wrapped halfway around the intake tube, so clearly he got stuck somehow. Well, the other one was pressed against it vertically. I shook them loose hoping one of them might still be alive, but nothing. One floated to the top, and the other sank. My guess is that one got stuck and the other tried to find a way to help free it. If they weren't of the same species, I wouldn't have even thought of this.
But I guess here's my problem. I don't want any more fish dying that way. It's one thing if I screw something up and they die, but they shouldn't get stuck to the filter intake. I don't know if it's just that species or what. My red tail sharks play around it all the time and even lay up against it and eat stuff off of it, then they swim away like it's nothing.
I guess my question is, can I keep the filter on low, or will the tank get too dirty too quick? Will it not get enough oxygen? Should I just put it back on high? Was it really the fault of the fish that got stuck? Was this a fluke thing that's unlikely to happen?
I just don't want to wake up and see any more fish pinned against that. I felt really bad.