I had some anubius left from when my 270g was African cichlids, the roots were about 1/2" diameter or a bit larger. I made a 15 gallon plant tank with CO2 injection and keep the ph around 7 instead of the 8 it was in the african tank so I put some of the anubius in there as well as amazon swords, java moss and some "mystery" plants. There are 4 corys in there, 3 gold ancistrus, 6 ancistrus fry (1/2-3/4") and 50 pea sized apple snails which are headed to a new home friday.
Anyway I check my water parameters almost daily and I came down monday morning and noticed one of the gold ancistrus had a red color in his gills. I checked the water right away and it had super high nitrites! Almost in the deadly range according to the color chart!! I freaked out and hit it with a 50% water change and a light gravel vac. I came back 6 hours later and it was back to nearly the same! WTF??? I did some more gravel vacuuming and moved some plants to make it easier to vac, then it happened... I felt the root on the anubius and it was total mush. I took the plant out and it STUNK big time. It was obvious then where the NO2 spike came from, I checked all the anubius and 3 of them were rotting (but only the large roots) so out they went. A 50% water change and it was almost 0 in 6 more hours. That spike happened in a 2 days stretch, possibly the corys or snails dug around in the roots and released the rotting mess. :huh:
Just a friendly reminder that you can't always see what is causing a NO2 spike. If I wasn't so diligent in my testing and didn't watch my fish for a while each day the whole tank could have died. :thud:
Anyway I check my water parameters almost daily and I came down monday morning and noticed one of the gold ancistrus had a red color in his gills. I checked the water right away and it had super high nitrites! Almost in the deadly range according to the color chart!! I freaked out and hit it with a 50% water change and a light gravel vac. I came back 6 hours later and it was back to nearly the same! WTF??? I did some more gravel vacuuming and moved some plants to make it easier to vac, then it happened... I felt the root on the anubius and it was total mush. I took the plant out and it STUNK big time. It was obvious then where the NO2 spike came from, I checked all the anubius and 3 of them were rotting (but only the large roots) so out they went. A 50% water change and it was almost 0 in 6 more hours. That spike happened in a 2 days stretch, possibly the corys or snails dug around in the roots and released the rotting mess. :huh:
Just a friendly reminder that you can't always see what is causing a NO2 spike. If I wasn't so diligent in my testing and didn't watch my fish for a while each day the whole tank could have died. :thud: