I have on occasion, heard aquarists poo poo the significance, and relevance of a waters pH.
A pH of 4, common in black water rivers of South America, such as the Rio Orinoco, Rio Negro or Atabapo, where cichlids such as Cichla (peacock bass), many newly discovered pike, or Geophagine cichlids, or even common Heros species (such severums) come waters that are 400 times more acidic, than a pH of 8, in the rift lakes of Africa, where Malawi, or Tanganyika cichlids, where mbuna, Tropheus, and Nimbochromis are found, or…… in high pH waters in Central America where species such as Parachromis, Amatitlania, and Vieja exist.
Each 10th,”lower” in the pH scale, it is 10 times more acidic than the previous tenth (example 7.6, is ten times more acidic than 7.5).
What this might mean to a cichlid keeper, is that if trying to keep Severums in the same tank with mbuna (depending of the aquarists water parameters) means one of the species, may be healthy, while the other may come down with Hole in the head disease (HITH).
The reason is because bacteria have evolved to live specific pH ranges, and are very sensitive to the pH in water, that higher animals like fish are normally less superficially sensitive to.
There are very different bacteria evolved to live in different pH water.
And fish have normal resistance to only certain bacteria in the waters where they have evolved, but not to bacteria where they have not evolved.
A pH of 4, common in black water rivers of South America, such as the Rio Orinoco, Rio Negro or Atabapo, where cichlids such as Cichla (peacock bass), many newly discovered pike, or Geophagine cichlids, or even common Heros species (such severums) come waters that are 400 times more acidic, than a pH of 8, in the rift lakes of Africa, where Malawi, or Tanganyika cichlids, where mbuna, Tropheus, and Nimbochromis are found, or…… in high pH waters in Central America where species such as Parachromis, Amatitlania, and Vieja exist.
Each 10th,”lower” in the pH scale, it is 10 times more acidic than the previous tenth (example 7.6, is ten times more acidic than 7.5).
What this might mean to a cichlid keeper, is that if trying to keep Severums in the same tank with mbuna (depending of the aquarists water parameters) means one of the species, may be healthy, while the other may come down with Hole in the head disease (HITH).
The reason is because bacteria have evolved to live specific pH ranges, and are very sensitive to the pH in water, that higher animals like fish are normally less superficially sensitive to.
There are very different bacteria evolved to live in different pH water.
And fish have normal resistance to only certain bacteria in the waters where they have evolved, but not to bacteria where they have not evolved.