Hello all, I'm new, both to this forum and aquaria in general. I'd appreciate some advice on where I may be going wrong with my tank.
Last spring I got a seven-gallon bow-front tank with filter and light, and a green cory cat. Over the summer, I added two cherry barbs, two dawn neon betas and a ghost shrimp. Mr. Cherry Barb I died after a few weeks -- he wouldn't eat, and his tummy went concave. About two weeks ago, my cory cat died - my fave fish 8^( - I believe because I stirred up the water the day before picking snails and rearranging plants.
Now Mr. Cherry Barb II isn't eating, and though one of the neon's mouth constantly agitates I can't seem to catch that fish eating either.
I also had a furcata rainbow fish, but she didn't last long. I've since been told they are delicate.
I have about ten pounds of gravel in the bottom of the tank, with about five assorted plants and a piece of bog-wood. And way too many rams-horn snails. I don't have a heater yet, but a floating thermometer show the temperature to be consistently 80, even at night.
I take tank water into my local aquarium shop every other week or so to be tested and usually am told that the water's okay, occasionally the PH is low. To be honest, I don't quite know what that means, and noone at the store responds to my questions of how to rectify this.
I feel like it's possible I don't do water changes frequently enough. The plants aren't exactly thriving; I had some mass crypt-melt once, and a sword-plant's leaves were skeletonized over a long weekend I was away, I can't tell if that was the snails or some bacteria in the water. Also, I saw a small pin-worm on a leaf a few weeks back - it was notable because when it took a turn while crawling, it would bend its body at a sharp right angle in the middle. I think it was a nematode, but am not certain.
If I'm doing anything grossly negligent here, I' like to know. I enjoy my tank, but it's tough when they die (my lil cory cat - he took half the day, and I knew he was going), and I find myself worrying over those non-eating fish!
It's silly, but maybe I'm not cut out to have fish? Any advice will be genuinely welcome!
Last spring I got a seven-gallon bow-front tank with filter and light, and a green cory cat. Over the summer, I added two cherry barbs, two dawn neon betas and a ghost shrimp. Mr. Cherry Barb I died after a few weeks -- he wouldn't eat, and his tummy went concave. About two weeks ago, my cory cat died - my fave fish 8^( - I believe because I stirred up the water the day before picking snails and rearranging plants.
Now Mr. Cherry Barb II isn't eating, and though one of the neon's mouth constantly agitates I can't seem to catch that fish eating either.
I also had a furcata rainbow fish, but she didn't last long. I've since been told they are delicate.
I have about ten pounds of gravel in the bottom of the tank, with about five assorted plants and a piece of bog-wood. And way too many rams-horn snails. I don't have a heater yet, but a floating thermometer show the temperature to be consistently 80, even at night.
I take tank water into my local aquarium shop every other week or so to be tested and usually am told that the water's okay, occasionally the PH is low. To be honest, I don't quite know what that means, and noone at the store responds to my questions of how to rectify this.
I feel like it's possible I don't do water changes frequently enough. The plants aren't exactly thriving; I had some mass crypt-melt once, and a sword-plant's leaves were skeletonized over a long weekend I was away, I can't tell if that was the snails or some bacteria in the water. Also, I saw a small pin-worm on a leaf a few weeks back - it was notable because when it took a turn while crawling, it would bend its body at a sharp right angle in the middle. I think it was a nematode, but am not certain.
If I'm doing anything grossly negligent here, I' like to know. I enjoy my tank, but it's tough when they die (my lil cory cat - he took half the day, and I knew he was going), and I find myself worrying over those non-eating fish!
It's silly, but maybe I'm not cut out to have fish? Any advice will be genuinely welcome!