A quick pH question

The pH for a 9 gallon tank is not the issue. It's having a pH thats suitable for the type of fish you have.

Ian

Which is 6-8.5 for just about any fish you can mention. The limiting factors are ammonia and filter bacteria function, not the fish themselves.
 
Which is 6-8.5 for just about any fish you can mention. The limiting factors are ammonia and filter bacteria function, not the fish themselves.

You are correct that most fish can survive a wide range of pH, 6-8 (maybe 8.5) for most of the common ones, and controlling the Ammonia level is MUCH more important than pH.

But Clown Loaches, Discus and Ram Ciclids will not be very happy with a pH over 8. Likewise African Lake Cichlids will not be very happy at pH 6.

It becomes even more important if you expect the fish to breed, and then you may need to take some notice of the pH.

But the original question was about White Clouds and pH of 7.8, and thats perfectly OK, they will be happy, probably even breed.

The 9gal tank isn't an issue, it's big enough for White Clouds, and has nothing to do with the pH.

Ian
 
pH is far less important than the TDS of the water. What Rams and Discus and so on require is low TDS water. That will nearly always be acid, which is why people think it's the pH which matters, but if you did have high pH low TDS water, they would do fine. Ditto the African Cichlids; it's just that hard water tends to be high in carbonates and therefore is alkaline, but it's the high TDS which matters.

pH may have a bearing on reproductive success inasmuch as it may influence egg development. But the fish themselves seem largely unaware of the pH of the water.
 
You are correct that most fish can survive a wide range of pH, 6-8 (maybe 8.5) for most of the common ones, and controlling the Ammonia level is MUCH more important than pH.

But Clown Loaches, Discus and Ram Ciclids will not be very happy with a pH over 8. Likewise African Lake Cichlids will not be very happy at pH 6.

It becomes even more important if you expect the fish to breed, and then you may need to take some notice of the pH.

But the original question was about White Clouds and pH of 7.8, and thats perfectly OK, they will be happy, probably even breed.

The 9gal tank isn't an issue, it's big enough for White Clouds, and has nothing to do with the pH.

Ian

My previous blue rams would beg to differ.
 
Heh. I once lived in an area with a GH of >600ppm.

As the pH approaches somewhere around 8.5, it will not (in a stable manner) rise further purely pecause of the KH; other alkalis have to be present. Conversely, as KH is lowered you won't get a big drop in pH until you pass the bicarbonate pH equilibrium.

There is a pH obsession, probably because it's easy to measure. I even get people giving me the pH when I ask for the hardness. This is a shame, because pH is of marginal importance, whereas the water hardness can be critical. Because there's a strong correlation between high pH and high hardness, the conception that pH is the important factor carries on (e.g. keep mollies in pH 6 and they probably will die, because the pH 6 water is almost certainly very soft) but where the relationship doesn't hold is where the problem starts.
 
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