Approximately 3 weeks ago I set up a new 10 gallon tank. You can see the specs in the 'My Tanks' section of my signature.
When preparing the substrate, I decided to use Shultz (Profile) Aquatic Plant soil. Prior to putting down the substrate, I added a light dusting of Sphagnum Peat Moss. After everything was set up for about a day (pre-planting), I checked the water conditions to make sure everything was status quo. The pH reading was approximately 6.6! (tap water pH: 7.4). Assuming that the peat was causing the pH drop, I immediately attempted to vacuum the majority of the peat out of the substrate. Since this didn't seem to be working, I removed the water & substrate, and rinsed it thouroughly for about an hour. After I set it back up, water conditions stayed the same with the pH eventually giving me the lowest possible reading on my test kit (6.0). Similarly, KH has gone from 5 degrees (tap) to unmeasureable.
The tank is now planted... and doing rather well. However.. I'm leary with regards to fish. I purchased a pair of Blue Rams that are spending their manditory 2 weeks in quarantine and would like to add them to this tank (even if the pH stabilized at 6... they'd probably dig it). But the tank is extremely unstable due to a lack of KH buffer. A recent 10% water change instantly brought the pH up to 7.4, only to have it crash back to 6.4 within a day or two.
I could add lime to bring the pH up... but that doesn't solve my buffer issues.
I could add a commercial buffering product to keep the pH stable.. but this doesn't sound like a good long term solution.
I'm looking for suggestions regarding how to remove the effects of the peat and somehow get back to normal pH/KH levels.
When preparing the substrate, I decided to use Shultz (Profile) Aquatic Plant soil. Prior to putting down the substrate, I added a light dusting of Sphagnum Peat Moss. After everything was set up for about a day (pre-planting), I checked the water conditions to make sure everything was status quo. The pH reading was approximately 6.6! (tap water pH: 7.4). Assuming that the peat was causing the pH drop, I immediately attempted to vacuum the majority of the peat out of the substrate. Since this didn't seem to be working, I removed the water & substrate, and rinsed it thouroughly for about an hour. After I set it back up, water conditions stayed the same with the pH eventually giving me the lowest possible reading on my test kit (6.0). Similarly, KH has gone from 5 degrees (tap) to unmeasureable.
The tank is now planted... and doing rather well. However.. I'm leary with regards to fish. I purchased a pair of Blue Rams that are spending their manditory 2 weeks in quarantine and would like to add them to this tank (even if the pH stabilized at 6... they'd probably dig it). But the tank is extremely unstable due to a lack of KH buffer. A recent 10% water change instantly brought the pH up to 7.4, only to have it crash back to 6.4 within a day or two.
I could add lime to bring the pH up... but that doesn't solve my buffer issues.
I could add a commercial buffering product to keep the pH stable.. but this doesn't sound like a good long term solution.
I'm looking for suggestions regarding how to remove the effects of the peat and somehow get back to normal pH/KH levels.