perfect_prefect;3052722; said:i keep alot of dif. kinds of fish too. fire eel, aro, rtc, rtc x tsn, tsn, pbass, bichirs, bgk, frontosa, oscars, pacu, giraffe cat, florida gar, ck, red devils, jags, quite a few others, but i was just pointing out that the majority of fish can adapt to a higher ph. IN MY OPINION you are better off to leave it constant than to try to adjust it and have it fluxuate. i believe that a wrong but stable enviroment is better than an ever changing environment, they can adapt and live just fine so long as it is stable. (and you keep your ammonia taken care of.)
loganh83;3052633; said:Hey brother, where are you in Texas? I began raising my first silver aro in Dallas which had almost nuetral PH. Then, when he was around 12 inches I moved to College Station which has a tap water PH of about 8.5. I dumped container after container of pond water buffer solution to no avail. I finally decided there was nothing I could do except pray to God my fish would survive and add drift wood. In short they all lived and the aro thrived. My point being, I was never able to substantially lower the PH, but that was ok. I think that keeping nutrients (amonia, nitrite and nitrate) low and providing varied, nutritious food is the most important thing.
Good luck!
AttackFish;3052590; said:This.
Get a HUGE piece of driftwood for the centerpiece.
Almond leaves work well too.