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Bubbles are back, doing a water change right now, going to try and do 50% like you all say.
Thanks for all the replies so far, much appreciated.
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I hope you can save the fish. regular large water changes are essential at this point. and you really need that API liquid test kit otherwise you will never know what your ammonia and nitrites are reading
good luck
30 g FW planted:corys, female ABNP, blue angel, harleys, zebra danios, rummies,
15 g FW planted:2 male guppies, neons, pygmy corys, clown pleco, 4 types of shrimp, assassin snails
90 Gal Journal: http://bit.ly/1vC7gVX
fishless cycling: http://bit.ly/1DARf3T
fish in cycling: http://bit.ly/1ILvcfp
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I have to head to my last class here soon (ironically biology) and then I'm gonna swing by Petsmart to pick up that test kit. I was using strips but they don't seem as accurate.
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Fishmommie is leading you in the direction you need to go here, but I also wonder about what LadyHobbs posted as well.
What are the actual numbers of fish that you have in this tank? How many barbs and which kind?
~Manna
120 gallon FW bowfront in progress
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5 rosy barbs, 3 female, 2 male
2 Opaline Gourami, one male, one female (they get along great)
3 neon tetra, small school but stick together well, had them for ~3 months, doing well.
1 albino cat
upside down cat died this morning, they were my 2 bottom feeders.
And one African Dwarf frog, makes it's appearances once every so often, I have thought it had died several times because it disappears frequently. Had it for over a year.
Other misc info:
~10 live plants
a few artificial just to flesh out the vegetation, hopefully will replace soon with more live.
I use an LED light rather than the tube
temp ~78*- 82* depending on room temp
1 large air stone beneath substrate
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I can post a picture if that would help too :]
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Pictures of your aquarium are always good!
Knowledge is fun(damental)
A 75 gal with eight Discus, fake plants, and a lot of wood also with sand substrate. Clean up crew is down to just two Sterba's Corys. Filters: continuous new water flow; canister w/UV, in-tank algae scrubber!! Finally, junked the nitrate removal unit from hell.
For Fishless cycling:http://www.aquaticcommunity.com/aqua...ead.php?t=5640
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Just to be absolutely certain, are you treating the tap water prior to adding it to the tank? If not then all this advice about cycling and filter maintenance is irrelevant.
Fiiiiiiiiiiissssshhhhhh!
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 Originally Posted by CrazedMichael
Just to be absolutely certain, are you treating the tap water prior to adding it to the tank? If not then all this advice about cycling and filter maintenance is irrelevant.
I went back through all the post and crazed mike might be on to something. Treating the water has not been mentioned and definately should be addressed before proceeding with more theories.
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 Originally Posted by CrazedMichael
Just to be absolutely certain, are you treating the tap water prior to adding it to the tank? If not then all this advice about cycling and filter maintenance is irrelevant.
I use a de-chlorination product and follow the instructions on the bottle for the amount treated. I also use Melafix, a teetree oil extract which is said to calm the fish and help with bacterial build up, I add only about 1/4 of what is recommended on the bottle for this. But here's an update for you guys:
I did the large water change, fish looking healthier and happier, got the API test kit the following day, only last night got chance to run a test (about 4 days since water change) and so, because it was late at night (I'm a full time student w/ 2 part time jobs, time doesn't come easy to me :]) I only tested the Nitrates. They were red, like bright red, so I'm doing a water change today as soon as I get back from class here in about 2 hours.
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