I bought 5 tiny tiger barbs from the lfs a few days ago. 2 are albino.
Within 12 hours one was dead. Ill just chalk that up to the fact they were babies and i guess not everyone can handle a home switch. Now, its 3 days later, and another one is dying.
My tank started off with perfect specs- 0 ammonia, 0 nitrite, 40 nitrate, 7.6 ph. All the tests ran likewise for the next 2 days. Today, when i noticed another one dying, i checked again and had 0.25 ammonia, 0.25 nitrite, and the rest the same.
I have them in a little 2.5 gallon quarintine tank before moving them into the 55. So i began removing water from the quarintine tank, and adding water that came from the 55 gal (all specs fine there). Then i thought, well maybe i should be replacing it with fresh water? so then i did a 30% change with that. The fish who is dying has boyancy problems and a clamped left fin. Is there anything i can do? Im thinking of maybe going out and getting some bottled water since my home ph is alittle high like 7.7. Im also gonna test the nitrites every few hours and do partial water changes.
Is fish loss just a fact of life? Am i doing something wrong? missing something here? Ive NEVER had luck keeping new fish alive. seriously, they have a one-in-three chance of survival with me in the first two weeks, but im really trying here:help:
leave any suggestions you can think of!!!! thanks!
Within 12 hours one was dead. Ill just chalk that up to the fact they were babies and i guess not everyone can handle a home switch. Now, its 3 days later, and another one is dying.
My tank started off with perfect specs- 0 ammonia, 0 nitrite, 40 nitrate, 7.6 ph. All the tests ran likewise for the next 2 days. Today, when i noticed another one dying, i checked again and had 0.25 ammonia, 0.25 nitrite, and the rest the same.
I have them in a little 2.5 gallon quarintine tank before moving them into the 55. So i began removing water from the quarintine tank, and adding water that came from the 55 gal (all specs fine there). Then i thought, well maybe i should be replacing it with fresh water? so then i did a 30% change with that. The fish who is dying has boyancy problems and a clamped left fin. Is there anything i can do? Im thinking of maybe going out and getting some bottled water since my home ph is alittle high like 7.7. Im also gonna test the nitrites every few hours and do partial water changes.
Is fish loss just a fact of life? Am i doing something wrong? missing something here? Ive NEVER had luck keeping new fish alive. seriously, they have a one-in-three chance of survival with me in the first two weeks, but im really trying here:help:
leave any suggestions you can think of!!!! thanks!