dogofwar
CCA Members
Does the tap have chloramines? That could be what's showing up...
Matt
Matt
The pH drop should not kill your bacteria, because it's not that big of a drop.
I would suspect that your test kit is picking up ammonia bound to your dechlorinator, as the fish are still alive.
Assuming you aren't wildly overfeeding, overstocking or some such, I would suspect that you've had a huge bacterial die off. Get an inoculation of fresh bacteria, stat!![]()
Frank, I just filled two 5-gallon buckets with water from the tap and dechlorinated one of them while filling, like usual. I will admit I usually do double the water conditioner needed just to cover anything I missed. It just feels weird to put less than half a ml of dechlor in a 5-gallon bucketAnyway, I added the amount of dechlor to the bucket that I add when doing water changes. I let it sit and then tested pH and Ammonia. Ammonia is 0 in both buckets and pH is slightly lower in the dechlorinated bucket.
Thinking back, the ammonia spikes in these tanks could be that I thoroughly cleaned the sponge filters last week. With tank water yes, but nonetheless I really squeezed these until they came clean. This obviously contributes to the loss of a portion of bacteria, but enough that the ammonia levels are so terrible?
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Thinking back, the ammonia spikes in these tanks could be that I thoroughly cleaned the sponge filters last week. With tank water yes, but nonetheless I really squeezed these until they came clean. This obviously contributes to the loss of a portion of bacteria, but enough that the ammonia levels are so terrible?
Cleaning the sponge filter may cause some loss of bacteria but the flow rate through the filter increases and since there is bacteria on all other surfaces of the tank (glass, gravel, decorations, plants, plastic parts) there would still be enough bacteria to remove the ammonia.
I am still of the opinion that your ammonia reading is wrong, for whatever reason.
What happens when you add dechlor to a bucket full of water that the test showed contained 2 or more ppm of ammonia.
Another thought is you do not raelly have 2 to 8 ppm of ammonia, but have the decimal point in the wrong place. Could the readings really be 0.2 to 0.8 (even this level is lethal) or it should they be 0.02 to 0.08 (which might be OK). Such an error could come from a dilution factor. And zero reading would sill be zero reading, but the high readings would be false.
BTW what test are you using? Describe it please.
If your able to, i would check the Gh and Kh. This is the exact same issue I ran into. My tap water isn't hard enough to hold the ph which reads 7.8 out of the tap, and in a day or 2 after a water change my ph wouldn't even show up on the scale because it was so low This caused me to lose bacteria and go through a minicycle, which caused an ammonia spike. I ended up doing 80% water changes everyday for a week and adding crushed coral to the filters to up the hardness. Between the water changes and prime it kept the ammonia in check/detoxified until everything stabled out. That was about 6 months ago and haven't had an issue at all since then.