Why do fish die in my tap water?

Hi
Is the well relatively new?? Wasn't it tested by the state after startup.? I would suspect some sort of heavy metal or maybe sulphur??
. Call your water dept or state agency and have a complete test done if only for your own benefit. I'd be afraid to use water that kills fish that quickly gary

I second this. Keeping fish safe would be an afterthought for me. Even if I was able to get a tank that could support fish through one of the suggestions above, I would not leave it at that. I would have to know what in the water was killing them, and make sure it was safe for people.
 
I would contact your county or state water department and have them test it. There may be higher levels of all sorts of chemicals. Run off from areas around, if they/you used insectisides or anything else, over time it will seep into the water and then into the water you use.
You can try aging the water, if that still doesn't help, call and get a fresh sample to them. If there are contaminates it may also be dangerous to you. Sometimes you can change pipes or clean the well hole and it will help.
 
heavy metals and pesticides (assuming you drink the water and it doesn't taste really awful) are really slow acting in terms of wiping out everything in < 24 hours
 
To the OP, if you don't mind my asking...what state are you in? Knowing that may help to pinpoint the issue as each state has different things dissolved in the water supply. In Southern FL our water had lots of salts, phosphates and silicates in it, plus we had to use a water softener on the well water going into the house, so we never used it for our fish tanks. We purchased a really good RO/DI hi-S unit by Kent Marine and our water was great after that. We had fresh, salt and reef tanks with that super clean water. The unit is pricey, but worth it when you want to keep fish.

I'm with fishfanatic, I don't believe it has anything at all to do with an un-cycled tank or ammonia. Unless there are a bunch of dead fish inside the well causing ammonia? Where would the ammonia come from straight out of the tap? My city water doesn't even test for traces of ammonia or chlorine and you know all the chemicals they add to that. I have always added a few fish to a brand new tank once it's heated up to the proper temp, filter is running, airstone is running and I've added water conditioner and aquarium salt and tested the water parameters to make sure they are in line with the fish going into the tank. In our 18+ years of setting up tanks that's how we have always started up a tank. I've never yet lost a single fish due to cycling a tank.

Without a professional water test, I would probably give up on the well water and use either an RO/DI filter or buy spring water or distilled water to keep fish in and of course, use a good water conditioner with ANY water you use for fish. I also swear by adding aquarium salt per directions to new tanks since it helps add electrolytes for the health of your fish. Livebearers and goldfish do well with added aquarium salt. Your well water can have many other contaminates that city tap water does not. Here in Arkansas, many wells have sulphur and they stink really bad. Without a professional water sample being tested from your tap, it's tough to say what is killing off the fish. We have city water but I just filled our new 30 gallon with distilled water to give it a better start. Our city tap water has lots of phosphates and silicates in it and grows algae like crazy. And yes, I also know that the distilling process can leach copper into the water which is why my water conditioner neutralizes it and other heavy metals.

I'm not sure if any of this will help you out, but best of luck to you and your future fish! I hope you find a solution. :)
 
One thing we seldom think of is oxygen. One of the members of my fish club was having trouble with well water. What was happening to him was that he would do a water change and would lose fish. He finally figured out that the well water contained almost no oxygen. He now has a storage rtank that he runs an air stone on. When he wants to do a water change he uses that water and no longer has losses.
 
I was thinking last night, that maybe it is not your water, maybe your aquarium/pond had a toxin in it that has not been removed. Have you washed it out very carefully yet?
 
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