Hmmm are you sure?....This is the tank ......…..
Umbee with white bump and white stringy poop
What's going on here? I'm going to do a water change now and add prazi pro. Any other suggestions?www.monsterfishkeepers.com
Hmmm are you sure?....This is the tank ......…..
Umbee with white bump and white stringy poop
What's going on here? I'm going to do a water change now and add prazi pro. Any other suggestions?www.monsterfishkeepers.com
Hmmm are you sure?....
Why does it matter to you if an umbee died in the tank before? I've always had the smaller dovii eith the umbee but guess you couldn't guess that. I just came here for advice on a simple filter I don't need any other lectures.I'm not even sure who is an actual human here. lol But you just lost an umbee in a 125, where you also just had one of your HOB filters fail, that at the time had yet to be replaced - that fish is now dead - and now you have two dovii in a 125, where one of the HOB has failed. And now you started a thread asking about HOB to replace the one that failed. Hmmmmm.
Either way, personally I think that looking for ways to save money is the least of your worries. Like I said, good luck.
Hey man all good I know you a ton! You sure have helped me. Just being honest i hesitate to post on here because I feel like im going to get lectured on tank size or whatever. Not saying you in particular but generally speaking. I've been keeping fish long enough to know what's right and pure wrong. But just for transparency the 16" dovii is new and I bought him from someone who had him in a 37 gallon.I pointed out the tank, no lecture. In fact, I made sure to only post the PC version of what I really think.
Have a nice day!
I've been keeping fish long enough to know what's right and pure wrong. But just for transparency the 16" dovii is new and I bought him from someone who had him in a 37 gallon.
I personally would never recommend keeping an umbee, or dovii, in the confines of a 125 - no matter the filtration, and no matter the amount or frequency of water changes.
Thanks, but sometimes the "back story" helps assist as to what is really going on. If I wasn't trying to help, I wouldn't post at all.
Filters serve 3 main purposes. 1. - keep the tank clean of debris (mechanical), 2. - allow bio-bacteria to colonize in large enough numbers to support the bio load. (biological) and 3. - create surface agitation which in turn allows 02 levels to increase while carbon dioxide dissipates. In your last thread you stated that you had nitrate readings of 160 ppm, which is why I posted the following.
I have always obsessed over clean water, a healthy obsession I think in this hobby. Early on I used nitrates as a measuring stick for overall nastiness, higher nitrates in a fish tank generally means higher levels of dissolved organic compounds, higher levels of bacteria, and over time a reduction in minerals, often accompanied with the overall acidic build up, a potential lowering of pH.
Over filtration won't help with any of the above.
I personally would never recommend keeping an umbee, or dovii, in the confines of a 125 - no matter the filtration, and no matter the amount or frequency of water changes.
While I applaud your attempt at saving this fish, did you really save it? Or just prolong it's agony? Only you can answer that I guess. Not a lecture, but you just lost one fish due to poor husbandry practices, and almost immediately went out and bought another. Maybe you should ponder all that before worrying about being lectured.
Good luck
Also to clarify I did not go out and pursue the dovii. Or i didn't have the train of thought "oh damn I just lost an umbee time to get another monster fish!" The owner urgently had to get rid of it. So that's how I ended up with it.Thanks, but sometimes the "back story" helps assist as to what is really going on. If I wasn't trying to help, I wouldn't post at all.
Filters serve 3 main purposes. 1. - keep the tank clean of debris (mechanical), 2. - allow bio-bacteria to colonize in large enough numbers to support the bio load. (biological) and 3. - create surface agitation which in turn allows 02 levels to increase while carbon dioxide dissipates. In your last thread you stated that you had nitrate readings of 160 ppm, which is why I posted the following.
I have always obsessed over clean water, a healthy obsession I think in this hobby. Early on I used nitrates as a measuring stick for overall nastiness, higher nitrates in a fish tank generally means higher levels of dissolved organic compounds, higher levels of bacteria, and over time a reduction in minerals, often accompanied with the overall acidic build up, a potential lowering of pH.
Over filtration won't help with any of the above.
I personally would never recommend keeping an umbee, or dovii, in the confines of a 125 - no matter the filtration, and no matter the amount or frequency of water changes.
While I applaud your attempt at saving this fish, did you really save it? Or just prolong it's agony? Only you can answer that I guess. Not a lecture, but you just lost one fish due to poor husbandry practices, and almost immediately went out and bought another. Maybe you should ponder all that before worrying about being lectured.
Good luck