Bacterial (or fungal) infections such as fin rot, are not caused by adding fresh water to a closed system. Designer fish such as FH are often genetically weak fish and can be more prone to health issues.
meaning it is just a coincidence?
Bacterial (or fungal) infections such as fin rot, are not caused by adding fresh water to a closed system. Designer fish such as FH are often genetically weak fish and can be more prone to health issues.
Does this bit of fluff have anything to do with the topic of this thread? I don't see a direct relationship but it is an example of how a person's source water can have issues.
G Galantspeedzkoltsixx
Gourami Swami N nzafi - does your water fit this pattern?
Some tap water contains high levels of dissolved CO2 gas. I believe this might explain some of the cases in which fishkeepers insist that large water changes cause harm. I've measured high CO2 levels in the water one county over so I know it's a real problem. And, recently someone posted numbers for water which I calculated must have had well over 125 ppm CO2 from the tap.
That water exited the tap reading pH 6.0 (possibly lower) and increased to 7.8 (the max on the api low-range pH test kit). The 7.8 pH reading was taken after the water had been sitting in a bucket for 24 hours. They didn't have a high-range pH kit so pH could have actually been higher.
Based on these two instances and knowing that many have water which exits the tap at a low pH and then increases to a higher pH (after aging in a bucket or even cup for 24 hours, not in the aquarium), high CO2 levels may very well explain many of these cases. The CO2 level depends on (1) the size of the pH move and (2) the KH of the water. See CO2/pH/KH table.
The easiest way to figure out your CO2 level is to plug your lower pH and KH values into a CO2/pH/KH table. If you don't have a KH test kit (API GH & KH test kit is only about $10) you can estimate your KH using your higher pH value (after 24 hours aging) but that requires some skill and a little guesswork.
In general, CO2 levels over 35 ppm are considered stressful to fish, but these CO2 levels begin decreasing immediately after being added to the aquarium and have normalized to ~2 ppm after 12-24 hours. I'm not sure how high is too high but e.g., if pH increases by 1 point after exiting the tap then the CO2 level can be 45, 90, or 180 ppm depending on whether KH is 2, 4, or 8º. It's difficult to tell how high the level may be without knowing KH but a minimum CO2 level can still be established.
CO2/pH/KH Table
https://barrreport.com/attachments/co2_graph_zps9c124ef0-gif.6317/
CO2 caculator based on pH, KH
http://aquariuminfo.org/co2calculator.html
Tell it to call my black Nasties to complain about it. I’m sure they have plenty of S to say about me hahahaView attachment 1282243
My EBA in my daughters 75 is tired of my S
Hello; Maybe like the canary in a coal mine type fish. More sensitive than others as had been already mentioned.only the flowerhorn is affected
not very sure on the CO2 levels but it only affects that 1 particular flowerhorn.