OK. Tank is settling now. Ph is 5.6 but I expect that to drop some. Full story: I'll start by saying that because the panda tank has been so stable for so long, I moved my ph meter to my planted tank to better keep track of co2 levels. First mistake. Secondly, the tds of my ro water source (store bought) is typically 15-20 ppm which has been perfectly adequate to keep the tank stable, so I stopped checking it. Another mistake. The pandas have been acting funny today, and today was water change day so I moved the ph meter back to their tank mid water change just to check. Turns out the ph was far below the 5.0-5.2 that they have been stable at for the last 6 months. After ruling out nitric acid buildup, I check the tds of some ro water that had not yet been mixed with hydrochloric acid. Tds was 5. Much too low to balance out the HCL dose causing the ph drop. The first thing I did was dose enough seachem safe to cover 300 gallons. This should counteract any ammonia spike that would happen when I raised ph again. I then began slowly adding tap water to bring ph up again, about a gallon at a time. I took multiple ammonia readings,looking for the spike. Haven't seen it yet. Then added some ro, then tap, etc. Ammonia readings are still zero. The fish are very displeased with this entire event. Very dark grey. I'm not quite done filling the tank yet, but should be finished soon. I'm allowing about 30 minutes in between each water addition to make the process as slow as possible. A few interesting points:
1 my last water change was Monday. That has to be the water change that threw the tank off, but the fish didn't show any symptoms until this morning.
2 the plecos don't seem to give two you-know-whats about what is happening in the tank. The starlight pleco was out cleaning air tubing while the Phantom was cruising for scraps during the water change.
3 beneficial bacteria colonies are supposed to die off in low hardness, low ph environments due to Ammonia conversion to ammonium. The fact that I still have measurable nitrates, and no ammonia after raising ph well over 1 point says that I must have the ballsiest bacteria colony in all of fish keeping. Or conventional is incorrect, and the bacteria are much much more adaptable that I previously thought possible. This is perhaps the most interesting note to me. Curious what
Oddball
,
duanes
, or
RD.
have to say about it. I know you guys are way smarter than me on aquarium microbiology.
1 my last water change was Monday. That has to be the water change that threw the tank off, but the fish didn't show any symptoms until this morning.
2 the plecos don't seem to give two you-know-whats about what is happening in the tank. The starlight pleco was out cleaning air tubing while the Phantom was cruising for scraps during the water change.
3 beneficial bacteria colonies are supposed to die off in low hardness, low ph environments due to Ammonia conversion to ammonium. The fact that I still have measurable nitrates, and no ammonia after raising ph well over 1 point says that I must have the ballsiest bacteria colony in all of fish keeping. Or conventional is incorrect, and the bacteria are much much more adaptable that I previously thought possible. This is perhaps the most interesting note to me. Curious what


