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18 answers

Well, just letting the tank run for a day will not cycle it.

In the wild, and in established tanks, there are nitrifying bacteria that break down toxic ammonia from fish waste and excess food into less toxic nitrates. In a brand new tank, these bacteria don't exist, so any fish in the tank will produce ammonia, which, not being broken down by bacteria, will kill or weaken the fish. So it doesn't change anything if you just let the water run.
There are a few methods. Do you have access to an established tank? These bacteria live in the gravel and in the filter cartridge, so if you can get some from another tank, you can put the bacteria right into your tank (don't let the gravel or filter cartridge dry out). If you do this, in a day or two, your tank will be A OK.
Another way is to get Bio-Spira. It is the actual live bacteria in a little pouch, and your tank will instantly be ready for fish.http://fishstoretn.com/bio_spira.html

You can also put a source of ammonia into the tank, such as fish food every few days, or a piece of shrimp. Right now, your fish is a source of ammonia, but I don't recommend this - it borders on animal cruelty. Without bio-spira or bacteria from another tank, the bacteria will eventually develop, but it will take at least 2 weeks.

You should invest in an ammonia, nitrite and nitrate testing kit so you can keep an eye on your levels. It's worth the 30$, and you can observe the ammonia, nitrite and finally the nitrate spikes, and then you will know your tank is ready.

If you can't get a hold of bio-spira to instantly cycle the tank, be sure to do daily water changes of 10% every day or every other day to keep ammonia levels down over the next two weeks.

After that ,do weekly changes of 30%.

Guppies are hardy fish, they should be okay :)

2006-12-27 07:27:29 · answer #1 · answered by Zoe 6 · 3 0

A bit late to ask if OK when you have already done it. If you want to experiment with fish tank, then Guppies are a good choice, cheep to purchase and quite hardy, they may just survive but do not overfeed them, a little food only for the first week or so, then if all seems OK and fish not stressed, then feed with a little more for an other week, if still OK the filters should by now have bacteria and be working so if fish still ok then would seem you got away with it and can add a few more fish, but do not overstock

2006-12-27 07:33:59 · answer #2 · answered by BobC 4 · 3 0

You were a little too soon to put fish in your tank it should have been left 3 days empty of fish.

You could benefit from this and nothing adverse will happen to the fish. Ideally you should let the tank settle and the temperature stabilise before putting any fish into a new set up.

2006-12-27 07:31:13 · answer #3 · answered by tunisianboy46 5 · 1 0

you might get lucky guppies are strong fish, just don't feed them for at least a week...they can go alot longer than that without eating...and let the tank cycle some more and build up some healthy bacteria...food will just increase the ammonia levels which is basically poison. if you want to speed up the process get some gravel or a filter being used on another tank to sped up the process or you can cheat and buy the healthy bacteria in a bag (Bio-Spira), that stuff works really good and your tank will be good to go in a day or so

2006-12-27 07:49:43 · answer #4 · answered by Brian N 1 · 0 1

ideally your tank should be left for min 3 weeks. This gives the tank pently off time to cycle. Making sure you use the water treatments for you area, once your cycle has completed remember to do a 10% water change each week. If you do this the tank will basically look after itself. With only little maintance each month.

2006-12-29 01:06:54 · answer #5 · answered by leeb8647 1 · 0 0

Guppies are livebearing fish meaning they provide delivery to stay youthful. they're going to breed consistently. the conventional gestation for a guppy is 28-35 days. they provide drops of roughly 20-40 fry each and every month. some have even been standard to drop over 2 hundred fry. lady guppies can keep as much as 5 batches of sperm that they use to re-fertilized themselves. whilst taking good care of guppy fry you would be wanting yet another tank to advance them in. The tank could be a minimum of five gallons. whilst a girl is approximately to supply delivery you have some suggestions; positioned her in a breeder capture, positioned her in a breeder internet, or positioned her the the fry tank making confident that this is heavily planted. you would be attentive to whilst the female is going to supply as quickly as she squares off. Her abdomen will grow to be greater sq. formed and he or she'll refuse foodstuff and a threat cover from different fish. as quickly as she supplies delivery the fry will would desire to be moved to their own tank. Feed them approximately an hour as quickly as they have been born. you may feed them crushed up flake foodstuff, toddler brime shrimp, or egg yolk. sparkling out any uneaten foodstuff. Feeding 2-4 instances an afternoon will help the fry strengthen. yet another massive section in helping fry boost is water differences. whilst cleansing my fry tanks I do 2 water differences a week. The temperature additionally performs a great functionality in taking good care of your fry. Have a heater set to seventy 8-eighty tiers. Guppies mature very quickly. they'd start to reproduce at one month previous. you may sell or flow the fry right into someone tank as quickly as they attain 2 months. when you consider that guppies can strengthen at diverse expenses you may would desire to attend longer. a itemizing of what you would be wanting on your fry tank is listed below. a million. 5+ gallon tank 2. Heater 3. Sponge filter out 4. Hood and lightweight

2016-12-11 17:04:46 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

NO!! you should not add any fish to a tank until you have let the water mature for a week or two and tested the water parameters.The chlorine and chloramine in the water will kill them. The information is freely available on the internet so why didn't you do any research?
Join the forum I posted below. I'm on it and there is much good info on there which will help save your future fish once these 2 have died.

2006-12-28 00:08:17 · answer #7 · answered by fenlandfowl 5 · 0 2

no, 1 week min.

your filter won't be able to process their waste as there will be no bacteria living in it yet so every time they pass some waste they are just poisining their water more and more, they will be dead by the end of the week.

in a larger tank you could get away with it as such small fish would not be able to pollute the water before the filter started working properly.

2006-12-27 07:26:59 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Yeah, i think they´ll be just fine! If you make sure that the sand or stones and plants are clean and right for that type of fish, the water must be the right temperature and they must have an air pump. If all of that is in order. then they´ll be fine- Guppies are strong!! Good luck!

2006-12-27 07:33:23 · answer #9 · answered by Annlie V 1 · 0 1

Depends if you have treated the water - the water should be left for about a week before putting any kind of tropical fish into it- it removes all the alkaline etc...... u might just be lucky though and have them survive

2006-12-27 07:29:45 · answer #10 · answered by Carrot Cruncher 5 · 1 0

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