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- From: tli@caldera.usc.edu (Tony Li)
- Newsgroups: alt.aquaria,rec.aquaria,sci.aquaria
- Subject: FAQ: Water quality
- Date: 1 Jan 1993 01:05:16 -0800
- Organization: University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA
- Lines: 227
- Expires: 31 Jan 1993 09:05:01 GMT
- Message-ID: <1i11gcINN9td@caldera.usc.edu>
- Reply-To: tli@cisco.com,patti@hosehead.hf.intel.com
- NNTP-Posting-Host: caldera.usc.edu
-
- Water Quality
-
- Rev 1.7 8/21/92
-
- Prologue:
- ---------
- This monthly series is intended to address some of the frequently
- asked questions (FAQ) on the rec. and alt.aquaria newsgroups. Because
- the answers may not be complete, please feel free to ask questions.
- This is only intended to address first level concerns, and not to
- dampen discussions. Please see the file FAQ.README for pointers to other
- topics.
-
- Please review and send any corrections or inputs to the FAQ maintainers
- with "(FAQ)" in the subject line. You are absolutely welcomed to tackle
- (i.e. WRITE) sections that have not been written yet.
-
- I've received recommendations to put email address "pointers" in
- the FAQ to vector questions to specific experts on particular
- subjects. If you would like to offer yourself as such an expert,
- please send me your email address and the specific topics you want
- to host. Please include an email path that is generally accessible
- to the greatest number of people.
-
-
- WATER QUALITY, NITROGEN CYCLE AND FISH DISEASE PREVENTION:
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- Water quality is important to the health of your piscine
- guests. In fact, most diseases and parasitic infections are due to
- lowered immunal defenses because of poor nutrition and bad water
- quality. So, if your fish are diseased, the first suspect is
- usually your water.
- In the wild, most fish live in large bodies of water that
- minimizes the changes in water quality. (i.e. the ocean remains
- very constant in salinity, temperature, etc. because it is so
- large. Therefore, marine aquaria require constant vigilant
- care). So depending on the fish, the constancy of the water
- quality is also important.
-
- WATER QUALITY
- Besides the nitrogen cycle and the disposal of organic waste,
- there are other factors that influence water quality. Air pumps
- can draw contaminated air (read smoker exhalations) into the water.
- Other pollutants include paint, insecticides etc. Therefore air
- should be filtered before being pumped into the water. (See
- FILTERS). Another major form of contaminants are our hands. If we
- do not wash our hands, we carry Lord-knows-what into the water (do
- you know where your hands have been?). If we wash them, we bring
- minute traces of soap which is very bad for the mucous on the fish.
- The best thing is to rinse our hands in very hot water.
-
- NITROGEN CYCLE
- Ecosystems absorb and make use of the biological/metabolic
- waste. The waste (pee and poo) from animals breaks down into
- ammonia and other nitrogen compounds which are used by other
- organisms (such as plants) in the ecosystem.
- Ammonia (NH3) and ammonium (NH4+) exist in equilibrium with
- the exact ratios depending on pH (higher pH allows for more
- ammonia). Ammonia is poisonous to fish in just about any
- concentration (ammonium is relatively harmless). It is converted
- by bacteria of Nitrosomonas species (among others) to nitrite,
- which is also toxic (but less so). Nitrite, in turn, is converted
- to relatively harmless nitrate by the bacteria of Nitrobacter
- species (among others). This is where things usually stop in an
- aquarium.
- Despite the mistaken notion promoted by all too many aquarium
- books, nitrates are not readily taken up by the plants and actually
- stop the plants' growth in high concentrations. There are two ways
- to get rid of the nitrates (which become stressful for fish above
- 60 ppm concentrations): partial water changes and denitrification.
- The former is the easiest and least expensive method. The latter
- can be done by using bacteria of Pseudomonas species living in
- nearly anaerobic conditions in very slow flow and long-path filters
- or by ion-exchange (see Chemical Filtration). Both are not at all
- cheap or very easy to tune. So stick to partial water changes.
- Plants are somewhat useful in the nitrogen cycle. It is now
- believed that they absorb ammonium and in doing so, they shunt the
- nitrogen cycle by shifting the ammonia/ammonium balance. This in
- turn causes more ammonia to be converted to ammonium to maintain
- the balance at a specific pH. But because a large number of plants
- are needed (most fish concentrations in the wild are much lower
- than that found in aquaria), one should stick with water changes.
-
- [The preceding is a generalization. The real bio-chemistry of the
- nitrogen cycle and all its aspects is very complex. And, of
- course, all of this is irrelevant to well-tuned salt-water reef
- tanks].
-
- HARDNESS
- The hardness of the water refers to the amount of dissolved
- "hard" metallic ions such as calcium and magnesium. This is
- measured in dH. and GH. ????
-
- dH - degree of hardness. Usually denotes general hardness. It is
- equivalent to 10 mg oxide of calcium or magnesium in 1 liter
- of water or 1dH = 17.9 ppm.
- KH - carbonate (and bicarbonate) hardness.
- GH - total (general) hardness. This is not always equal to the sum
- of the carbonate and non-carbonate hardness because of the
- differences in the way all of these things are measured.
-
- In general, what you need to know about hardness is the following:
- 0-4 dH -- very soft
- 4-8 dH -- soft
- 8-12 dH -- medium hard
- 12-20 dH -- hard
- above 20 -- liquid rock (Lake Malawi and Los Angeles, Ca.)
-
- Your local waterworks company will give water measurements in ppm.
-
- Carbonate hardness is important for plants' growth and fish
- spawning (plants like it above 4 KH, most rain forest tropical fish
- like it to be near 0).
-
- General hardness in important for determining the buffering
- capacity of your water.
-
-
- FISH DISEASE PREVENTION
- Nutrition, water quality, and sanitary practices should
- prevent most diseases. Healthy fish have a way of fending off
- attacks.
- Good sanitary practices include: not pouring pet store water
- into an established tank, not buying diseased fish , not using the
- same net between aquaria without first rinsing, and storing the
- net in a clean, non-dusty place.
- Many times, live food are the most nutritious (for fish that
- are meat eaters), but carry with them a danger of parasites and
- disease. Most notable are live tubifex worms (collected from
- sewers and other nasty habitats; buy the freeze-dried variety),
- goldfish (these are often sick by the time they are in the store),
- pond collected daphnia etc. One should always inspect the food
- before offering it to the fish.
-
- WHEN FISH ARE SICK
- When your fish are sick, you can post for diagnoses
- (Consultation of a fish book is probably preferred). Please
- include as much information as you can gather.
-
- 1. Describe the condition of the fish with any externally visible
- growths, symptoms, behavioral modifications etc. Also, post
- the length of time this has been going on.
- 2. Describe the aquarium setup. How big is the aquarium, how
- many fish, what kinds and how large? How frequent are water
- changes performed? Lighting and lack of?
- 3. Test the water and post pH, temperature and possible
- fluctuations, colour, smell. (taste? :-)
- 4. If you have the kits, test and post the ammonium, nitrite,
- nitrate and hardness levels.
- 5. Describe medication already used, and the after effects.
-
- Some medication companies (such as Mardel) print a diagnoses
- chart and include this with the medicine. Of course they recommend
- their own brands as a cure for everything. Find out the disease
- and consult the net for recommendations.
- Many people recommend a hospital tank for isolating sick fish.
- The smaller hospital setup has the added benefit of minimizing the
- amount of medicine used. If hospital tanks are not left constantly
- running, and are stored away, starting up one of these will be the
- equivalent of starting a new aquarium. A biological filtration
- will need to be started, or seeded from the old filters. (Some
- types of treatment makes this irrelevant since the medicine will
- kill all the beneficial bacteria).
-
- PLANTS:
- -------
- Tips on helping plants survive:
-
- 0) Buy a good book or send email to Vinny Kutty. (See books).
- 1) Get rid of the bulb that came with the hood...get rid of the
- hood. Use two strip lights or get a shop light if your tank is
- 4 feet long. Under-illumination is the main reason for wilting
- plants.
- 2) Change some of that ancient water...and keep changing a little
- bit every week. (Some plants react badly to dramatic changes)
- 3) Get rid of big, plant-eating and other herbivorous creatures.
- 4) Change bulbs at least once a year. Vitalite, Chroma 75,
- Colortone 75,Triton, Grolux, Agrolite are all good lights. The
- last two are plant lights and they are pinkish in color, so
- mix them with other bulbs. Stay away from Cool white and other
- cheapies. Also do not change all tubes at the same time.
- 5) Plant densely. Don't try to save a couple of bucks here. Good
- beginning plants are Water sprite (can be floating or rooted),
- Hygrophila polysperma (sold as Hygro), Elodea (needs bright
- light), Vallisneria, Hornwort (floating stemmed plant), Java
- Moss (hardy as hell), Amazon swords (occasionally picky, but
- always recommended). Buy as many as you can and plant each
- species in groups. Be careful not to bury the crown (the
- junction of the roots and leaves) of plants like Amazon swords
- and Vallisneria.
- 6) Algae will appear if there is enough light for the plants and
- the water contains phosphates and nitrates. Remedy: increase
- water changes, reduce feeding, reduce number of fish and add
- algae-eating fish like Otocinclus and bush-nose/bristle-nose
- pleco.
- 7) You need at least 3" of gravel. 4-5 inches is better. Of
- course, a 10 gallon tank with 5" of gravel will look odd, so
- you decide how much you need.
- 8) STAY AWAY FROM ALL FERTILIZERS!!! Unless you want an algae
- garden. Just do those water changes and if you want to get
- real fancy, you can add trace elements (Ferroplant etc.).
- Remember that most land based fertilizers are toxic for fish.
-
- Pat White has kindly offered to write an FAQ on lights. If you have
- inputs, please contact him, else stay tuned.
-
-
- Disclaimer:
- -----------
- Some answers listed above may reflect personal biases of the author
- and the FAQ's contributors. In cases where the answers name
- specific products and their respective manufacturers, these are not
- to be taken as endorsements, nor commercials for the manufacturer.
- Where cost information is stated (magazine subscription rates),
- this is based on "street" information, and are in no way binding on
- the publisher. The answers contained in this series pertain to
- discussions on the rec. and alt.aquaria newsgroups, and are by no means
- exhaustive. This series is not intended to take the place of good
- aquarium books on the subject matter.
-
- Copyright:
- ----------
- The FAQ owes its existence to the contributors of the net, and as
- such it belongs to the readers of rec.aquaria and alt.aquaria.
- Copies can be made freely, as long as it is distributed at no
- charge, and the disclaimers and the copyright notice are included.
-
-