Long story short, I was originally keeping a betta in a 1 gallon bowl and doing 1 25% and 1 full water changes a week for a couple of months with no issues. I bought a 2.5 gal but was lazy about cycling it but I didn't want to place the betta in a uncycled tank. But being only 1 fish in the tank I didn't think it would be that big of an issue plus I can begin the cycle with the betta.
Since my betta has been living in the 2.5 gallon tank (the last few months) it started to develop finrot. I've searched for solutions on the forum and since the finrot was not bad I decided to not mess around with medicines and just do water changes.
I change 1 gallon of water from the tank every 2 days but sometimes 3 if I get lazy. The fins of my betta is still rotting away slowly. Despite the frequent water changes, do I really have to result to medicine? And if so what kind?
The tank used to be 77 degrees but I raised it to 79 degrees to help with the healing. The tank is also filtered with a red sea nano filter rated for a 3-5 gallon tank I believe. I clean the filter media in old fish water once a month. No plants yet and the substrate is a mixture of onyx black sand and black sand eco-complete. I'm not too sure on the parameters of the water. But I do so many frequent water changes, I didn't think there would be any massive build up of ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, etc.
Since my betta has been living in the 2.5 gallon tank (the last few months) it started to develop finrot. I've searched for solutions on the forum and since the finrot was not bad I decided to not mess around with medicines and just do water changes.
I change 1 gallon of water from the tank every 2 days but sometimes 3 if I get lazy. The fins of my betta is still rotting away slowly. Despite the frequent water changes, do I really have to result to medicine? And if so what kind?
The tank used to be 77 degrees but I raised it to 79 degrees to help with the healing. The tank is also filtered with a red sea nano filter rated for a 3-5 gallon tank I believe. I clean the filter media in old fish water once a month. No plants yet and the substrate is a mixture of onyx black sand and black sand eco-complete. I'm not too sure on the parameters of the water. But I do so many frequent water changes, I didn't think there would be any massive build up of ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, etc.