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I have 13 baby guppies that are 9 days old in a breeder tank and was wondering if i change there water if it will harm any of the fishes? I have read on the internet about regular water changes but I have also heard that it is inportant that it stays a certain water type! thx

2007-02-03 11:13:46 · 7 answers · asked by guppylover 2 in Pets Fish

Is it ok just to take half or little of the water out of my five gallon breeding tank and add some tap water to it?

2007-02-03 12:14:54 · update #1

And will boiling the water than leaving it out over night be safe to put in with the babies?

2007-02-03 12:19:42 · update #2

7 answers

I have 13 baby guppies that are 9 days old in a breeder tank and was wondering if i change there water if it will harm any of the fishes? I have read on the internet about regular water changes but I have also heard that it is inportant that it stays a certain water type! thx

from my personal experience raising a 10-gal tank full of nearly 100 guppies for a few years...

- The water temperature of the water you are adding to the tank should be nearly the same temperatura of the water in your tank. If not, the fish will either go into 'shock' or die so be careful

2 hours ago
Is it ok just to take half or little of the water out of my five gallon breeding tank and add some tap water to it?

- Well, my rule of thumb is that if you take out 1/2 you should add some tap water that's been left out overnight (so the chlorine in the water dissipates) and mix it with some water straight from the faucet. If you do 1/4, you can just add water straight from the faucet.

2 hours ago
And will boiling the water than leaving it out over night be safe to put in with the babies?

- It should be.

2007-02-03 14:19:38 · answer #1 · answered by FishMan 1 · 0 0

You can and should change about 30% of the water once a week to keep the ammonia and nitrite levels as low as possible. The new water must be the same temperature as the old water so you don't shock the babies with a temperature change (babies are fragile) and you must also make sure there is no chlorine or chloramines often added by the water company to keep the tap water safe enough for human use, the chemicals will kill fish and other aquatics though so they need to be neutralized before you put into the fish tank. There are products like Prime that will neutralize the chlorine, chloramines and ammonia/nitrites, just add 6 drops per gallon (with Prime if you accidentally add more it doesn't matter and it stays safe; some other water conditioning products if you add too much will start to do bad things to your water and to the tank which will kill your fish).

2007-02-03 11:25:17 · answer #2 · answered by Inundated in SF 7 · 1 0

you could try siphoning the water intently now to not create unnecessary rigidity of the guppies. really, i will leave it for yet another week. with assistance from then, your infant guppies will advance large adequate to make replacing water an extra ordinary pastime. Oh, perchance, you ought to favor to visual reveal unit your feeding. Overfeeding the guppies ought to steer on on to cloudy water. Unconsumed fish nutrition will come to a decision the bottom of the tank, siphoning water from the proper would at maximum dilute the an infection. in case you actually favor to regulate your tank water. i will indicate dropping a lump of moss (do not favor to purchase intense priced ones) or 'umbrella tree' leaves (those fan-like leaves which will turn the tank water brown). those leaves are organic water conditioner and enables to provide foilage for the toddlers (adults besides). that would make your pastime of fixing water lots extra ordinary. nicely, I used to shop my guppies outside in a large flower pot. they provide beginning a week and that i have not change water in that pot for X type of guppy generations.

2016-11-02 06:05:08 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You need to be changing the water. Not only will changing the water not hurt them, it will help them significantly. That's probably the single most important thing you can do for the over all health of your aquarium. Short of feeding them I guess lol.

2007-02-03 11:24:29 · answer #4 · answered by magicman116 7 · 1 0

i think it would be very hard to change the water without losing some of the babies. i might try to put them in a small fish tank and put a air stone in there, they sell them at fish stores.

2007-02-03 11:24:18 · answer #5 · answered by donnalee m 1 · 0 1

change some of the water so the it does not 'shock' the babies

2007-02-03 12:07:26 · answer #6 · answered by el 2 · 0 0

no i have baby fish and i change water they dont do anything

2007-02-03 11:24:14 · answer #7 · answered by angela 1 · 0 0

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