Byron Amazonas
AC Members
I've read through this entire thread and nothing stands out. It may take some back and forth questioning to sort this out. I have not read the linked book, but the author was a former editor of TFK magazine and from the articles he wrote there, I wouldn't expect his advice to be bad.
Can you confirm the water conditioner? "Seachem" is a brand, so am I correct in assuming you are using Prime? And do the instructions say one drop per gallon?
Some aquarists will say that some frozen foods can be contaminated, but I would not look to this for the cause. Don't let them thaw and re-freeze though. You can stay with good quality flake/pellet foods for these fish with no problems.
Something may have come in with the new fish. If nothing else was changed and these fish all died within a week, this seems likely. I assume you did not quarantine them? You acclimation method is fine, I use it; I do two mixes rather than just one. And net the fish out of the bag into the tank, do not dump the bag water into the tank. Until this is sorted out, do not add new fish. And I would avoid any pleco for the present, for reasons I won't go into now.
Do you know the GH, KH and pH of your tap water? You can ascertain this from the municipal water supply people, likely on their website. Once you know the GH (general hardness) and KH (carbonate hardness, sometimes called Alkalinity) you may not need to test this in the tank. The pH is a good test though, along with nitrates, long-term, as a change in either of these can pinpoint problems.
Are any other substances apart from the water conditioner going in this tank?
Byron.
Can you confirm the water conditioner? "Seachem" is a brand, so am I correct in assuming you are using Prime? And do the instructions say one drop per gallon?
Some aquarists will say that some frozen foods can be contaminated, but I would not look to this for the cause. Don't let them thaw and re-freeze though. You can stay with good quality flake/pellet foods for these fish with no problems.
Something may have come in with the new fish. If nothing else was changed and these fish all died within a week, this seems likely. I assume you did not quarantine them? You acclimation method is fine, I use it; I do two mixes rather than just one. And net the fish out of the bag into the tank, do not dump the bag water into the tank. Until this is sorted out, do not add new fish. And I would avoid any pleco for the present, for reasons I won't go into now.
Do you know the GH, KH and pH of your tap water? You can ascertain this from the municipal water supply people, likely on their website. Once you know the GH (general hardness) and KH (carbonate hardness, sometimes called Alkalinity) you may not need to test this in the tank. The pH is a good test though, along with nitrates, long-term, as a change in either of these can pinpoint problems.
Are any other substances apart from the water conditioner going in this tank?
Byron.