TheMcs
New member
I was brought up in reefkeeping to believe that a slow acclimation period was best. I went from adding measurements of tank water over a given time frame to the slow drip method.
Then I learned what happened to the ammonia in the bag water when the bag was opening & the water exposed to oxygen. We know that a fish pollutes the water during shipping, and the longer the ship time the more foul the water. During this time the pH drops. The bag is opened, pH rises, and the ammonia content increases exponentially. (I don't have all the chemistry/biology down, so please forgive the generalizations).
Working at a fish store I experimented with "rotten" bags. Bags that you opened & immediately smelled the ammonia. Rather than drip acclimate with the other fish, I immediately removed the fish from the bag and placed it in the system water. This was after a temp acclimation. The results were impressive.
On delayed shipments we started the temp acclimate then dump method and mortalities plummeted. I brought this method home, regardless of travel time for the fish, and haven't had a loss since. Many other factors have changed, so I can't attribute it directly to the acclimation, or lack of. But it does make sense to me to spare the fish additional time in a toxic environment while it gradually becomes liveable. I believe that most fish can handle far greater changes in environment than we give them credit for.
Works for me anyways. I'm just amazed now when I hear about 2.5+ hour drip acclimation.
Thoughts?
Then I learned what happened to the ammonia in the bag water when the bag was opening & the water exposed to oxygen. We know that a fish pollutes the water during shipping, and the longer the ship time the more foul the water. During this time the pH drops. The bag is opened, pH rises, and the ammonia content increases exponentially. (I don't have all the chemistry/biology down, so please forgive the generalizations).
Working at a fish store I experimented with "rotten" bags. Bags that you opened & immediately smelled the ammonia. Rather than drip acclimate with the other fish, I immediately removed the fish from the bag and placed it in the system water. This was after a temp acclimation. The results were impressive.
On delayed shipments we started the temp acclimate then dump method and mortalities plummeted. I brought this method home, regardless of travel time for the fish, and haven't had a loss since. Many other factors have changed, so I can't attribute it directly to the acclimation, or lack of. But it does make sense to me to spare the fish additional time in a toxic environment while it gradually becomes liveable. I believe that most fish can handle far greater changes in environment than we give them credit for.
Works for me anyways. I'm just amazed now when I hear about 2.5+ hour drip acclimation.
Thoughts?