JenNewbie,
Yes, I agree the danios are very active. I had some too and ended up giving them to my sister in law for her tank. Even for the 55 I had them in, they were to busy for me.
I do not think your fish had Septicemia. Signs of Septicemia are reddening of bases of fins, hemorrhages around the eyes, specimen not eating, listlessness.
I still think it is your water conditions through this cycle. It sounds like you have just past up the ammonia spike..And about the ammonia,
any amount period is not safe. And high normal for nitrite? Ammonia and nitrites are toxins that are very toxic in a fish tank.
During cycling a tank, you can expect this: A cycle can take from 4-6 weeks to complete.
Around day 3-4 of the cycle, your ammonias will be very high and your fish may show stress signs, like jetting around the tank and gasping for air. At this time when ammonia levels move up you need to do a water change, start with 10% then just do them daily to help bring the ammonias down. But no gravel vac or changing the filter/media. It can disturb what bacteria has started. Around day 8-9 your ammonias will start to fall and the nitrites start to go up, During this first week or so you want the bacteria to start converting those ammonias to nitr
ites. Your fish may start acting stressed again and then you know it is time for another water change to start lessening thoses nitr
ites. You Ammonias still should be coming down.
by the time you are into this cycle 2 weeks your nitr
ites can get very high and then again, water changes. Just do small ones. You do not want to disturb the "good" bacteria that is starting to grow. And by now your ammonias should be close to zero. And your nitr
ites should start to fall.Just keep monitoring the water quality, because that is the key and answers to a cycled tank...Test kits are a must for cycling. The only real way to know if your tank has cycled will be to watch the levels rise and fall.
By now it should be a month into the cycle and the bacteria begin to process nitrites as quickly as they are produced. The bacteria should be starting to turn nitr
ites into nitr
ates.Nitr
ates should now show also.
You will know your tank is finished cycling when your ammonias and nitrites are 0... Your tank will also go through a cloudy look, this is a good thing(most of the time) it is a bacterial bloom. So don't fret if this happens, it will go away.
I hope this helps in giving you a better understanding of what the cycle is all about. I know I had a heck of a time, screwed my cycle up and had to start all over. I thought the bacterial bloom was bad, so I dumped 75% of a 30
gal and cleaned out my filter and thought it was fixed... 8O Little did know, I had to do it all over again.
Good luck and I hope your fish pull through the cycle.
