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Old 08-20-02, 04:23 PM   #1
sophia
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Dang cloudy tank problems

Folks,
For four weeks in a row now I have been fighting this cloudy arrowana tank until I'm ready to scream. We don't over feed, he eats about 1 to 2 shrimp per day, I feed the cory cat once a week about 3 pellets (very small), the pleco eats the algae so I don't feel the need to feed him, there's no ammonia problem according to the tests, no Ph fluctuations, etc...

A few weeks ago I noticed the water was cloudy and I did a general cleaning including taking off the power filter and cleaning the inside and the uplift tubes and the impeller, while cleaning the impeller, I found that the magnet had captured a tiny piece of metal and it was rusting and in general outrage and shock, I set about cleaning the entire tank with a python hose and because it was so cloudy, I did a half water change. I was running pure synthetic filter media and I changed it out and washed out the relatively new media and placed it back inside the filter. This did not fix the problem and so after another water change and no luck with that, I tried adding a Tannin based poylmer clarifier called Insta-Clear which sometimes will turn the water yellow, but usually does the trick on the clouding. THIS DIDN'T WORK EITHER and I did yet another change and application of the product and again, changed filter media. I have done that yet again and it was another half tank water change this time, generally for regular cleaning purposes I only do a quarter change but the clouding is drastic and I can't see anything (parasitically speaking) floating in the water in the tank or in the test tubes!

I am at my wits end, but mind you, the fish are extremely healthy and eating well so I don't know what else to do!

Please, suggest something, I know that some of you are well versed, I think it was Shane whose posts I read several weeks back and I've even tried carbon to clean up the tank to no avail, I'm mad enough to throw the tank out the window and put the fish in the bathtub! *kidding* but I am frustrated.

Thanks in advance fo any advisement you can offer

Tay (who is going to clean the tank yet again):bugged:
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Old 08-20-02, 05:28 PM   #2
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Sounds like a bacteria bloom to me. Any other suggestions? Changing the filter media and doing such a drastic water change probably worsened the problem if it was bacterial. Usually, a normal water change fixes the problem. Or in new tanks waiting it out, but this tank doesn't sound new, so.....

Yeah. Other suggestions please!! ^^;
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Old 08-20-02, 07:23 PM   #3
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Yes, it defintely sounds like an algae bloom.

Changing the filter media is part of your problem. Simply rinse it in old aquarium water and put it back in. By removing the media, you are also removing the nitrifying bacteria which break down the amonia produced by the fish. The algae is using it instead!

However, doing a 50% water change is a good thing. Do them every five days until the problem goes away. It may take a few weeks. How big is the tank and how big is the arowana and the pleco?

Don't get discouraged, it WILL go away!
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Old 08-20-02, 07:39 PM   #4
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Thanks to both of you, for the advisement. The arrowana is probably about 7" and the pleco is tiny still, about 3" in a 29 gallon tank which is shared by a cory catfish and an amazon sword plant, I use a 330 Penguin filter. I replaced the filter media once since it all started and just rinsed out the media boxes and put them back in. I'll do another 50% water change tonight and see where that gets me, do you think I should treat the tank for bacteria? I've been putting that off because I don't like to medicate when it's not absolutely necessary, I have bio wheels and such in and I hate to lose that colony of good bacteria. The tank is over a year old and doesn't seem to be going through another new tank syndrome, it continually tests negative for ammonia and the Ph is balanced at neutral.

Oh well, going back to the changes! LOL

Again, thanks to both of you.

Perhaps a new algae eater, mine is lazy!

Tay
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Old 08-20-02, 11:25 PM   #5
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I remember seeing a picture somewhere here of your tank and i believe if memory serves me correctly yours is the one that is in a kitchen? lol, just a guess, hoping im right, sorry if im not. I agree with the above diagnoses of an algae bloom, or a bacterial bloom. I would keep doing the water changes personally. I had a freshwater tank that this happened to one time and it took me months to figure out that the combination of the coral sand in the tank and the other sand, i believe it was silica sand was the cause. The tank ran fine for the longest time and then boom, cloudy water. I figured out that the coral sand still had pieces of rotting shell inhabitants and it just took a real long time for them to break down. I know your frustration. Perhaps it could be in the substrate. Even gravel if it gets compacted enough can cause this, and even undergravel filters can sometimes clog and give you the same thing. Other than that, lets try and see why you would have a baterial bloom. Your feeding and water change habits seem correct, but the only thing that bothers my honestly is the fact that the p.h. in the tank is neutral. Neutral ph is very tricky. Not only to maintain, but also it seems to have a tendency to crash really easily. I think that this is really your problem. First off, make sure that this is suitable for your arrowanna species. There is several types as you know, and i couldnt thing of one that would be really suitable for this level off the top of my head. Are you using r.o. water to acheive this, or a chemical buffer. If is chemically done, turn off all equipment that churns the water. Ie filter, air pumps etc. Leave for a day and see if a thin film forms on the top of the water. If it does, this is your problem. If not, or if you dont chemically maintain the tank at all, bring the water in to the 6-7 degree range if possible, this is provided the water changes dont work. Now please, if you play with the ph, change very slowly over a couple of weeks. Either way, please let us know how it is going, or email us if you still have problems. If you cant reach me, Youkai, and Corr are more than knowledgable on the subject and can help easily. Shane.
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Old 08-20-02, 11:42 PM   #6
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Try this...

I agree that you are having a bacterial problem. you need to get a stronger culture of bacteria going in that tank. I'm sure some will disagree with me, but the biowheeles suck! You have a large ammount of bio load in that tank with that arowana. They're as bad as goldfish and that means they are messy no matter how little they eat. I have a 22 or so inch silver arowana. Your tank is essentially too clean. Give cleaning a reast for a while. I would recomend looking into a filter with a better surface for beneficial bacterial growth. The Aqua Clear filters have a great sponge that has a lot of surface area for bacteria to live, and it never srops...like the biowheles stop turning eventually. Plus you are able to put a decent ammount of charcoal in the filter and replace it without destroying your bacteria. Even a canister filter or something that has a bio surface INSIDE the filter would be great.

I would highly recomend looking for a bigger tank for the arowana. The tank is way too small. Get something over 100 gallons. No offence intended, but I cringed when I read what you're keeping the arowana in. It's already outgrown the tank in my oppinion. They are an active fish and need space.

Get your water tested for any levels on Nitrite and Nitrate. That'll let you know if your tank is re-cycling again. Refer to the Nitrogen Cycle when you get your results. Let me know what happens.

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Old 08-21-02, 04:48 AM   #7
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I agree, the bioload is high. And yes, there probably isn't enough surface area for the required (good) bacteria to grow. This makes for a very delicate situation. I second Lizzy's recomondation for an AquaClear. They have a large filter basket that is great for bacteria colonies. You'll need to get a larger tank anyway so why not increase the filtering in the mean time?

"Ph is balanced at neutral" means, to me, that it is at 7.0. That's perfect.
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Old 08-21-02, 08:38 AM   #8
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lol corr. I was hoping someone would challenge me on that. I didnt wright my response really well, so ill clarify it here. And you guys are right about the bio wheel, i hate them too. I use aquaclears for small tanks, but the time you get a proper tank large enough to house the arowanna, and they grow big fast....even the aquaclear 500 wont be big enough.

k, here now that ive slept and am more clear headed was what i was trying to say about the ph. i wont get into a whole lesson but ill just give some breif points. I was really worried about the ability to sustain the proper buffer at 7.0 and yes that is perfectly neutral water and yes, the majority of fish are perfect in 6.5 to 7.0 water but........

k, basic lesson on water. A ph of 7 is as corr stated neutral. If there is a measurement below 7. the water is said to be acidic (most amazon water fits into this category). If the ph is above 7 it is alkaline. Now the difference between one degree of ph is actually massive....well ten times, ie 6.0 is 10 times more acidic than 7.0.

So, why would shane be alarmed at a perfect 7.0 ph. Well this has to do what is call the buffering capacity....which is one of the most important and most over looked problems in a tank. Buffering capacity is basically the ability to keep the ph stable as acids or mineral bases are added. Thing of it like a sponge, it basically holds the changing of compouds in it, and as they change it soaks up. The problem is, that alot of people never establish a proper buffer. So what happens, is the buffer in the tank gets used up. And this cause a very rapid change in the ph as acids are added. Now very hard water has a strong natural buffer...until the composition of the water is changed by chemically treating it....or r.o. water, distilled water etc. I use hard water as an example because this is what the majority of homes have.

So, imagine tap water perfectly neutral....probably doubtful, but yes in some areas very possible. That would be definatly excellent water to host a large majority of different fish with no problem. And being directly from the local water table the natural buffer would obviously sustain perfectly...unless tampered with. Now unless you have an extremely expensive test kit, you will not be able to see the difference in .3 change in the ph. Or the water may read 7.0 but actually be something like 6.7. and a change of more than .3 in less than a weeks time can kill some fish.

So, lets say we chemically bring the water to a perfect 7.0. And thats what our test kit reads (or is able to read) As we have forced a rapid change in the p.h. of the water, there is only a very weak buffer. So when this buffer is used up, and it will probably change very rapidly the ph of the water. But since we are perfectly at 7.0, we are at greater risk as the water could go either way, and without a proper buffer, it could go there extremely fast....deadly fast infact.

So, how is the buffer measured. It is the kh scale in your test kit. Basically the higher the number....the most resistant to ph changes.

So what the heck does this have to do with a bacterial bloom Shane?.......Basically this. If you have a rapid change in the p.h. fish will either do one of three things. Become really stressed....or suddenly develop a disease...or eventually die! So what about those microscopic organisms in the water!!! Well same thing...or the opposite...now their conditions are just perfect...they have always been there....dormant somewhere in the tank, and you have just happened to have a slight change in the water chemistry. The fish aren't bothered, because it is such a small increase/decrease....but your bacteria, they get triggered, and boom....cloudy water...

I hope this make sense, lol, let me know if you have questions, or arguments, ive tried to make this as basic as possible, Shane.
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Old 08-21-02, 10:06 AM   #9
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Thanks Shane, for all the wonderful advisement. I see now that I should have followed my first intuition after having read your posts, and just pm'ed you. Very, very good advice and very well received. I see 'why' you're a moderator.

As to the PH, this is one of those rare occasions; and I realize how lucky we are, that the PH just comes out of the tap at 7.0 - and I have tested via 3 forms of test.

The tank went for nearly a year without a cloud problem. The fish has about 5 more inches to put on before I will be moving him to 75 gallon bowfront. I usually start all my baby fish out in smaller, less stressful environments. Just this cloudy water thing... blew my mind; and yes, that IS the tank you saw 'in the kitchen'. {G} I like to have something nice to watch while I 'have' to cook!

Again, I thought it was you I had read previously. Good advice without all the negative B.S. involved.

Thank you,

Tay
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Old 08-21-02, 04:47 PM   #10
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Okay, I'm glad you cleared that up, Shane. LOL, I almost lost faith in you .

Yes, Kh is critical, especially in a high bioload tank and relatively low Ph. Keep up the water changes!!! Adding a small bag of argonite to the filter is a good way to bring the Kh up... try to bring it to at least 5 degrees.



I wish I had the patience to type as much as Shane, maybe I could be of more help around here...
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Old 08-21-02, 06:23 PM   #11
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He really does put a great deal of work into it doesn't he. It's good that he takes the time, most folks won't, but I do appreciate the help Corr. I had thought it was Shane's posts that I had read previously, but in all honesty, I didn't feel like reading them all again to be sure!

Tay
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Old 08-21-02, 07:18 PM   #12
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You would expect there would be some commercial type ionizer for this type problem but not being a tank person (least with that much water lol) I wouldn't have a clue.
 
Old 08-21-02, 11:51 PM   #13
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Thanks for the kind words. I do put a fair amount of time into the site for several reasons. One is due to my close affiliation with the webmaster, who forced me to join in the beginning, lol, now im stuck! And of course for him, i want nothing more than to see the site successful. The second reason is that i know all too well how frustrating it can be to get info from time to time. Even some of the largest sites are often trying to be so diverse that they don't focus on one subject long, or hard enough to make sense...to answer the questions you really want to know. I have a pretty diverse, and long list of stuff ive kept over the years, and if i can pass up some help i do. If not, there is always another member who may know the answer. I just feel sometimes that too many people try and then fail and completely give up the entire hobby due to lack of education...or knowing where to obtain it, so out of frustration they call it quits. Id like everyone here to succeed in what ever they keep, and i think so far, everyone is. As far as being helpful, i think that the fellow members on our site all deserve credit. Corr for one, you should not say you wish you were more helpful....you have been extremely helpful. Every response ive ever seen you give has been right on the money and you expertise and experience shows very well with the pics ive seen of your tanks. So, before this turns into a love fest, cheer to you, and everyone else that takes the time to pop in and visit the little thread on the big site, Shane.
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Old 08-22-02, 10:23 AM   #14
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. "So, before this turns into a love fest, cheer to you, and everyone else that takes the time to pop in and visit the little thread on the big site, Shane." _quoting Shane


I don't think you have ' a love fest' to concern yourself with. I give credit where credit is due, it's that simple. I appreciate those who can 'discuss', 'debate' without debasing the person to whom they're speaking. It never ceases to amaze me how many people will seek to advise on the 'assumption' that the person to whom they are speaking must be a 'novice' or a 'know nothing' and thus they take upon themselves an air of 'surperiority' and respond in such a 'sanctomonius' manner as to make the original poster never want to post again because of sheer irritation and nothing else.

We own and moderate an e-list where I always try to show civility and respect no matter how much I disagree with the poster. This is not a sign of weakness IMHO, but a sign of maturity, for this reason I praised your ability to respond in this manner, mature adults are not abundant on the net whether you've noticed or not. So, before I finish this post, it was not the 'quantity of the advice' that I was praising, but the 'balanced response' that was given and nothing more because I am so tired of the god games people try to play on the net, megalomaniacal bunch of freaks that they are.

Tay
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Old 08-22-02, 02:52 PM   #15
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Thanks guys but I was looking for any praise. I'll do my part the best I can and hope someone benefits from it.

Tay, what did you mean by "god games"? Playing God? Holier than thou attitude? Just curious, I've never heard that term before.
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