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In a fish tank?

2006-11-05 10:58:07 · 5 answers · asked by TokioHotelLuver 2 in Pets Fish

well i am asking these questions because i am doing a test for my friend and she allowed me to go on here so...

2006-11-05 12:48:55 · update #1

5 answers

Yes generally this is a sign of over feeding, over stocking, stocking to fast or/and under filtering. In a normal tank food into the tank is converted into ammonia (eaten,or not eaten doesn't matter). The bacteria convert ammonia rapidity to nitrite, than bacteria nitrites rapidly to nitrates. The nitrates simply build up in the tank, and need to be remove by removing water from the tank. Nitrates are only toxic in large amounts.

If you rapidly add fish it will take a while to build up enough bacteria to convert the ammonia in the tank. Then you'll build up nitrites as bacteria that convert them build up. Ideally a tank should have no reading for nitrites, and ammonia the are very toxic.

Consider:

1)Number of fish 1 inch of fish per gallon. Double this for lare bodied fish like gold fish.

2)Fish should be fed once a day what they can eat in a minute or 2.

3)Don't add more than 1 fish per 5 gallon per week.

At this point you should be doing a 20-30% water change via a gravel vacuum every day until the ammonia, and nitrite levels stop rising.

2006-11-05 13:48:22 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 1

Your ok. Your tank with cycle a little, and the water might turn cloudy from a bacterial bloom for a few days. What you can do is keep the lights off except for feeding for a few days. Cut back to feeding only one time a day til the cloudiness disappears. When you clean your filter, swish it in the water from cleaning your gravel just to remove debri. Change your filter catridge once a month.If you have several cartridges, then change them out in stages and not all at once.Cleaning your gravel is part of keeping the tank clean, but dont clean it 100%, you will remove the debris needed for the bacteria to feed on. If your stiring the gravel up and it is releasing alot of debris in the water then your doing it wrong. You want to gently lift the end enough that the gravel drops back to the tank, then slowly push it into another spot and slowly lift it til the gravel drops. You can clean fake plants and ornaments in the dishwasher no soap added.But so far your doing a wonderful job

2016-05-22 02:08:03 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well, fish waste, water PH, and decaying fish food can all contribute. I am not sure what kind of fish you have. I had obsessed with getting the PH of the water correct and I could never find a good balanced. I bought a test kit etc....I eventually stopped making the tank a chem experiment and I had better results.

2006-11-05 11:11:41 · answer #3 · answered by CK1 3 · 0 2

You need to be sure you are making 25% partial water changes at least weekly to remove these chemicals. I also added Aquarium Salt to the new water & an ammonia remover. To get this under control, I had to do 25% partial water changes daily for a week.

2006-11-05 12:29:20 · answer #4 · answered by Daiquiri Dream 6 · 1 2

Yes because the tank hasn't cycled or you've disrupted the biological filter and killed off the good bacteria (like if you cleaned the tank too thoroughly).

2006-11-05 15:21:07 · answer #5 · answered by Carson 5 · 3 0

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