SNAKEMANVET
PREMIUM MEMBER
Sorry to hear that 125mph,at least you are doing it right this time.
Most likely, the pH itself didn't do this, which is another point to mention. When pH changes, the toxic ammonia will rise/fall along with oxygen levels. pH is basically a quality stamp of a lot of other things, like Alkalinity, or KH.
So, this is a bit nitpicking, but the real reason may be that you increased the toxic ammonia while doing this, and total ammonia is hard to monitor, unless you go for the seachem instruments.
When this is said and done, the pH was the killer indirectly. Bakingsoda and ammonia alert is also a key ingredience in this equation to successfully drop the S.G.
I put ro-di water in with my old saltwater when I was dropping my salinity.I had no detectable ammonia and ph stayed steady.I was putting in 5 gallons of ro-di and wait about an hour and remove 5 gallons of saltwater.It took about a week to bring down to the required salinity.I did this in my dt with live sand and liverock.Because I was basically doing water changes to bring down the salinity I was removeing any ammonia from die off.When you do this too a small tank like 15 gallons,just doing a 0ne gallon ro-di with effect the ph.I don't think adding ro-di to old saltwater will cause enough ammonia to kill fish. jmo
It's possible that something else caused the fish to die, but judging from what I read - pH went from 8.2 to 7.5 in 24 hours with two water changes, that is the main cause. The first water change probably brought pH from 8.2 to perhaps 7.8, and the second from 7.8 to 7.5. That's a pretty big pH shock to me.
A cycled QT is going to need liverock/sand, and I'd highly suggest putting neither liverock or sand into a qt tank. They make dosing harder as they absorb and leech any medication you put into it.
You do not need sand or rock in a tank to have a cycled tank! The sand and rock allow for MORE areas for bacteria to cutivate but the bacteria can live on any surface in that water column. My QT is a 20g and it stays running 24/7 with bare bottom and just a plastic house in it for the fish to hide out in. I use a Fluval with just floss in it. I have dropped the salinity fast by pulling 10g's out and replacing with RO/DI while fish were in it and nothing happened to the fish. I would think that the combo of an unestablished tank with a high bioload for its size coupled with the ph swing would be the cause but not just the ph.
Actually it was a gradual drop in 24 hours (from 1.025 to 1.015). I removed about 3 gallons of saltwater at a time and added small amounts of water every 1-2 hours until it hit the top of the tank, then repeated the process. But overall the PH did drop fast in the 24 hrs period.
Yes there was MORE aerobic bacteria on the floss but I had a month of no Fluval and just a powerhead in the tank and still had my 1 fish that was a perm resident survive. That fish is still with me. The bacteria does not need media nor substrate to live. It can indeed live on any and all surfaces in the tank.I think it is the filter media (floss) that is culturing aerobic bacteria. A tank, without a lot of porous material (like filter media) cannot keep ammonia down without massive WCs. Glass and plastic are not suitable for establishing any kind of bio-filter. Substrate & LR is not a good idea, because they absorb meds; but a filter is great for a QT. This forum has a constant threads that involve ammonia build-up in bare QTs.
Wow! More than likely if you had just left the fish alone, they would have been just fine. This is EXACTLY why I advocate a wait and see approach to situations such as this. Time and again we see on this forum, well meaning reefers try and do the right thing only to have it go horribly bad for the fish.
Sorry for the loss. Next time just try and relax and give it a few days to a week or so and see what happens. Ich is not a fast killer, nor neccesarily a killer at all. Not everything you read here about ich and quarantine is gospel. Some people have success battling Ich without doing anything other than keeping fish stress free and water params pristine.
Well.. I knew the ich wasn't going to be a problem for the 6 fish in the tank. They were very healthy and eating well. A few were starting to get the white spots on the fins and I figured worse case maybe 1-2 would die and the rest would go immune. But, I didn't want the tank to be infested with ich and new additions would be faced with ich :mad2: ... However, all I read about hypo was that it was very safe.. Something went wrong and I thought it was PH but now I'm questioning that theory based on some recent posts.
Maybe it was aeration? It was a 15g tank with 6 fish, all of which were around 1.5 to 2.5". I was running a heater stable at 77.5' and a rio 800 powerhead (211 gph). That was all that was running on that tank.
Old saltwater at 1.025 was made, and I diluted it with RO water. Then over the next 24 hrs I removed 3 gallons, then slowly added RO (probably 1 liter at a time) and repeated. The end salinity at 24 hrs was 1.015 so it never even got to 1.009 before it was over.
Maybe it was aeration? It was a 15g tank with 6 fish, all of which were around 1.5 to 2.5".
If I had to guess, this was the problem more than pH.
You need to break the waters surface with a powerhead to exchange carbon dioxide and oxygen,with a qt tank that small a air stone would work.