Hi - I'm new to the site, which was recommended by my brother-in-law. I have a curious problem with my wife's marine tank. It's a 23 gallon flat-back hex with twin-plate undergravels pumped by Hagen powerheads. I also run a Fluval with Bio ChemZorb, Ex-Silicate, and PhosZorb. Bottom section runs Fluval "Bio Macs" and top holds the sponge.
The substrate is Phillipine crushed coral and I keep the salinity at 1.018. There is no ammonia, no nitrites, and low nitrates. All seems fine from that perspective.
A while back I decided to do a thorough gravel cleaning with a siphon gravel vac, and it wiped out the tank - everything. I let the tank run for two weeks with no critters and then introduced a "test molly". All went well and I started adding more fish. Recently I added a yellow head jawfish (one of my wife's favorites) and it did great for a couple of days. It wasn't until she dug herself a burrow under a head of blue coral that things went south. She started breathing very heavily and within a day was dead.
I know from the past that dead spots often occur under "decorations". However, the gravel vacuuming seemed to kick up the same problem. Is it possible that there isn't enough flow through the gravel and this is causing anerobic activity and thus problems with gas buildup? Should I increase the flow through the power heads? Do you think this is what caused the jawfish to die?
Any help, hints, and suggestions will be greatly appreciated!
The substrate is Phillipine crushed coral and I keep the salinity at 1.018. There is no ammonia, no nitrites, and low nitrates. All seems fine from that perspective.
A while back I decided to do a thorough gravel cleaning with a siphon gravel vac, and it wiped out the tank - everything. I let the tank run for two weeks with no critters and then introduced a "test molly". All went well and I started adding more fish. Recently I added a yellow head jawfish (one of my wife's favorites) and it did great for a couple of days. It wasn't until she dug herself a burrow under a head of blue coral that things went south. She started breathing very heavily and within a day was dead.
I know from the past that dead spots often occur under "decorations". However, the gravel vacuuming seemed to kick up the same problem. Is it possible that there isn't enough flow through the gravel and this is causing anerobic activity and thus problems with gas buildup? Should I increase the flow through the power heads? Do you think this is what caused the jawfish to die?
Any help, hints, and suggestions will be greatly appreciated!