Lost some fish last night.. /:

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
It's Not possable. Hell I get a little nitrate reading out of tap water.
I would do a very large water change.
And get new testing supply's.
And put stronger lights on tank on a timer 14 hours. Plants with that stock for sure. You will have alge blooms when nitrate jumps so its a good indicator, and helps by eating nitrate.
Wow. Maybe that's why I have a stupid algae problem...


Will you please retest all of the levels (ammonia, nitrite, nitrate ect) and post them so we can know 100% whet you suit right now. And please post pics of all the readings like you did with the nitrate. Then we can tell you what you ned to do for sure! You are obviously trying to learn do don't be discouraged by mean comments!
Testing right now


I had a Raphael live inside a big conch seashell for 2 days once with a few drops of water after I closed a tank and didn't know he was there. In some regards, they are extremely hardy.

Gars, Raphaels, Plecos and Shovelnose can live with almost no oxygen in the water, Channels need a bit more as do Pictus....

I'm not an expert, but if you were to turn off your filter... that is about the order they would die from lack of oxygen. Could that tie in?

Did you do a major water change yet? You wasted all this time posting.
Been at school.. once I finish replying to all this, I'll fire up the spyhonnnnn

he's at school :(
Not anymore!

in your case i think it would be a better idea to point the output down into the water to make it splash.
Ugh what?

oh ****....
)))))))))):
 
i was suggesting that you point your fx5 splashing into the water so there will be more oxygen going into your tank instead of just pointing it upwards.
 
The nitrate is high and should be brought down but I'm not convinced it killed your fish. It seems like it could be the lack of oxygen. When you say there's surface agitation is the water just moving around or are there actual bubbles/splashing? I'd invest $20 in a small pump and airstone. It doesn't even have to be on all the time if you don't want the noise.
 
you need to do daily water changes until nitrates get below 20.this will help.as far as what is killing your fish ,this will probably fix the problem ,but not for sure.when your nitrates are under 20, observe the fish .they should act way less stressed,if this is the case you have your answer
 
and stupid high nitrate ): and dead fish ):

Yes but it could be way worse. Your stocking is the cause of your nitrate issues. What is your typical wc schedule?
 
2 pictus 3" (no longer)
3 channel cats 5-6" (no longer)
2 FL Gar 8"
1 RTC 8"
1 Albino Asian RTC 7"
1 pleco 4"
1 striped raph cat 1"
1 shovel nose 8"

110g 4ft tank

Did I get that correct? I don't think I missed anything. You're incredible overstocked which will attribute to the very high nitrates. With a stock like this you won't be able to keep the nitrates at a safe level in the tank, period. Plants or not, extra filtration, w/e. You need to seriously reduce your stock. Not to mention one of the two RTC will likely start to reduce your stock for you in the near future assuming they survive the situation you're currently experiencing in your tank.

The aerator being added to the tank, as a few have mentioned, will help add oxygen to the water. The agitation that is created by the bubbles popping at the surface of the water pulls oxygen down into the water. That can't hurt.

As far as some fish dying and some not, some were just able to withstand the poor conditions and some couldn't. Like others have already mentioned some fish are just hardier than others.

Not sure if that ammonia reading was before or after your wc, but if you are reading any trace of ammonia at all it's unhealthy for your fish. That also wouldn't surprise me in your scenario since you are so incredibly overstocked your filtration might not be able to handle the amount of waste in the water volume hens slight ammonia readings and high nitrate readings.

Currently your main issue is the nitrates. Only way to correct this is water changes. I'd keep up with them quite frequently with the stock you currently have in there and try to keep the nitrates below 20ppm and ideally around 10ppm since your fish might already be in poor shape from lack of oxygen and exposure to high levels of nitrates, and possible ammonia.

In summary, I'd keep up with the water changes to get your water conditions at a healthy level and keep them there, added aeration certainly can't hurt, and seriously reduce your stock to something much more reasonable for a 110g 4ft tank. Good luck with your tank.
 
2 pictus 3" (no longer)
3 channel cats 5-6" (no longer)
2 FL Gar 8"
1 RTC 8"
1 Albino Asian RTC 7"
1 pleco 4"
1 striped raph cat 1"
1 shovel nose 8"

110g 4ft tank

Did I get that correct? I don't think I missed anything. You're incredible overstocked which will attribute to the very high nitrates. With a stock like this you won't be able to keep the nitrates at a safe level in the tank, period. Plants or not, extra filtration, w/e. You need to seriously reduce your stock. Not to mention one of the two RTC will likely start to reduce your stock for you in the near future assuming they survive the situation you're currently experiencing in your tank.

The aerator being added to the tank, as a few have mentioned, will help add oxygen to the water. The agitation that is created by the bubbles popping at the surface of the water pulls oxygen down into the water. That can't hurt.

As far as some fish dying and some not, some were just able to withstand the poor conditions and some couldn't. Like others have already mentioned some fish are just hardier than others.

Not sure if that ammonia reading was before or after your wc, but if you are reading any trace of ammonia at all it's unhealthy for your fish. That also wouldn't surprise me in your scenario since you are so incredibly overstocked your filtration might not be able to handle the amount of waste in the water volume hens slight ammonia readings and high nitrate readings.

Currently your main issue is the nitrates. Only way to correct this is water changes. I'd keep up with them quite frequently with the stock you currently have in there and try to keep the nitrates below 20ppm and ideally around 10ppm since your fish might already be in poor shape from lack of oxygen and exposure to high levels of nitrates, and possible ammonia.

In summary, I'd keep up with the water changes to get your water conditions at a healthy level and keep them there, added aeration certainly can't hurt, and seriously reduce your stock to something much more reasonable for a 110g 4ft tank. Good luck with your tank.

what this guy said. hes 100%correct
 
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