Tank Move

zoomster

Active Member
Joined
Jan 2, 2014
Location
Port Rowan, Ontario
+1 with Poseidon.
I have done tons of moves/tank changes and I always try to reuse at least 50% of the original water. I believe Bacteria will live longer in the water than on the rocks that are now out of the water.
Correct me if I am wrong please.
 

Mark092

New Member
Joined
Nov 11, 2015
Location
Sarnia
How did the move go? I will be moving my tank sometime in the next couple months, so any tips would be much appreciated! Have you noticed an ammonia spike?
 

jeffopentax

Super Active Member
Joined
Nov 11, 2013
Location
Brantford, Ontario
This might be the first of its kind on thefragtank, but what do you expect from the mind of a 6 year old?
177fb94cbb6ee4ca5938e1a7612f2858.jpg
1d65660e00cc0d4099fa024d5915bc8b.jpg


Fish ended up being in a pail for about 20 hours. All survived, all appear to be fine so far.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

AdInfinitum

Super Active Member
Joined
Jan 12, 2012
Location
Thorndale, Ontario
+1 with Poseidon.
I have done tons of moves/tank changes and I always try to reuse at least 50% of the original water. I believe Bacteria will live longer in the water than on the rocks that are now out of the water.
Correct me if I am wrong please.
Reusing some water is a good thing however it has nothing to do with bacterial populations which are negligible in the water column. and quickly replaced.
 

jeffopentax

Super Active Member
Joined
Nov 11, 2013
Location
Brantford, Ontario
And all the fish are dead. I checked on them about 3 hours ago, they all appeared fine and normal. As of 10 minutes ago, all dead. My first thought was ammonia, but seachem badge indicates none. Other possible causes? I don't have any tests on hand, so can't check parameters.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

unibob

Distinguished Member
Website Affiliate
Joined
Mar 15, 2012
Location
St Thomas
And all the fish are dead. I checked on them about 3 hours ago, they all appeared fine and normal. As of 10 minutes ago, all dead. My first thought was ammonia, but seachem badge indicates none. Other possible causes? I don't have any tests on hand, so can't check parameters.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Did you use prime or anything? Ammonia would be the only thing that would happen that quick.
 

jeffopentax

Super Active Member
Joined
Nov 11, 2013
Location
Brantford, Ontario
Whatever the problem is, it is bringing out all the bristleworms in the tank. Some flailing around, others completely still, presumably dead.
4592f92edb2d0180adf0580ec2a5cf06.jpg

I think i might know what happened. I had a nem, roughly golfball size. Now it is about the size of a grape. Is it possible it couldn't handle the move, died, and nuked the tank? I've had larger nems die with no ill effects, but those were in a larger tank.
2dcb3035373cbaee1695f04587362e0a.jpg



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

jeffopentax

Super Active Member
Joined
Nov 11, 2013
Location
Brantford, Ontario
Picked up a unicorn tang and singapore angel yesterday, both 2". Wondering what to feed them. I don't normally buy fish that small/young, so not sure what is best.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

jeffopentax

Super Active Member
Joined
Nov 11, 2013
Location
Brantford, Ontario
They all seemed to come out at once. Things have since returned to normal. Just left the tank running for a couple months (tonga snails are bulletproof!), then added a cinnamon clown 2-3 weeks ago, which has been doing great.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Top