MPaulley said:Actually since you so kindly like to flame and jump to conclusions the fish were dumped on me by someone who was going to flush them, you would have known that had you read any of my other posts. So I erally had no choice in the fish the tank was already cycled before even got the fish I did a water change and it seemed to have cycled the tank again.
graphicdesign_r said:Don't care about your other posts. You have my suggestion.
If you don't have room to separate the fish correctly, return some of the fish to the store for credit.
Your tank isn't cycling again unless you did something to alter the bioload. Like removing/cleaning filter media, or added something to the tank that destroyed bacteria.
nursie said:What are your ammonia/nitrite levels now? I would say that's why you are loosing the fish. I will also state that you are over crowded. Kudos for the rescue, but you can't keep things as they are. Red tailed sharks get 6'+. Goldfish, as stated, are coldwater fish, messy and require a bigger tank than what you have. Not sure what size your loaches are...if small can be ok for a while in a 65. The dragon goby needs brackish water..which is different reuirements yet. You need to decide what fish you can best keep, and either donate to a lfs...see if you can get store credit, or give to someone. You can't keep on with all those fish with different requirements together.
You need to keep up with the water changes..even 2x daily until ammonia and nitrites are 0 if you want to quit loosing fish. Ditch the ph stabilizer. The only additive you need is the ammoquel.
What about temp? is the water you add the same temp as the tank water? or close? How are you adding the declorinator? WHat kind of dose are you adding and when?
Are you using a bucket to add the water? maybe one that's been used for cleaning other things? Have you checked your water parameters on water just out of the tap??
MPaulley said:Thought you quit or your leaving? Please don't waste your time or my time with your random garbage
BioSpira should definitely help reduce both ammonia and nitrite levels. However, the bacteria in it will convert both the toxic compounds into nitrate. So test for nitrates and do water changes to keep them belo 20ppm, below 12 ppm is even better.MPaulley said:At this point would it help to get that biospira? or would that just add to the problem?