I'm new to this, I thought I had it licked, but here comes my first BIG cycle.
I started with 29 gallon, live rock (probably 20 lbs) and live sand (20 lb bag)
I had a Marineland Bio Wheel 100 filter running.
I have a Coralife 2x65 PC light fixture.
I have a cleaner and peppermint shrimp, a valentini puffer, 2 damsels, a turbo snail, 3 tiny snails, 10 small blue hermits, a scooter blenny, and a 6 line wrasse.
Before today I also had a lavender tang.
A few days ago I got a deal on a Magnum 350 Canister Filter, and jumped on it. I was tired of the Biowheel filter splashing salt on my light fixture, so I thought, ok I'll just use the canister for filtering.
I also added about 20 more lbs of live rock, one piece being very big with lots of purple on it...
Today my tang was floating around looking all sickly. She seemed to have ick. I got some ick medication from the pet store and dipped her in it for a while , but she was too far gone.
She died, and shortly after I noticed my Valentini puffer stuck to the side of my powerhead. He is swimming around all slow and running into things, and one of my damsels also looked sickly.
So I decided to run some tests. My salinity came to 1.023, well within limits.
My ph seems to be around 8.0
My nitrite is dark Purple on the test, indicating 1ppm or more... which is very bad from what Ive seen.
Nitrates were also about .5ppm, which is bad too.
My ammonia also registered somewhere between .25ppm and .5ppm
So after my tang died, I upped my temperature from 78degrees, to 80 degrees to make it harder for the parasites to survive. It wasnt long after this when I noticed my fish gasping for air at the top of the tank. I have since put 2 air stones in either corner (I guess the bio wheel splashing agitated the surface and put oxygen in the water)
I also put the bio-wheel back on (it has a carbon filter in it, and I kept the bio-wheel in a bag of salt water, so hopefully the good bacteria I had on it is still alive)
My damsel is already more active, but I put the puffer in a different tank.
Before this, my tank was set up for about a month, and I would get small ammonia spikes that were quickly back to 0. Are these new rocks dying off? Or by not agitating the top of the water, did I kill off a lot of things on it. My turbo snail is also changing to a darker color. I'm guessing the lack of oxygen is at fault.
If I did kill off a lot of rock, how long will it take to replenish? I don't have a protein skimmer yet, but am desperately trying to get one (see other post).
Any advice is appreciated. Thanks!
I started with 29 gallon, live rock (probably 20 lbs) and live sand (20 lb bag)
I had a Marineland Bio Wheel 100 filter running.
I have a Coralife 2x65 PC light fixture.
I have a cleaner and peppermint shrimp, a valentini puffer, 2 damsels, a turbo snail, 3 tiny snails, 10 small blue hermits, a scooter blenny, and a 6 line wrasse.
Before today I also had a lavender tang.
A few days ago I got a deal on a Magnum 350 Canister Filter, and jumped on it. I was tired of the Biowheel filter splashing salt on my light fixture, so I thought, ok I'll just use the canister for filtering.
I also added about 20 more lbs of live rock, one piece being very big with lots of purple on it...
Today my tang was floating around looking all sickly. She seemed to have ick. I got some ick medication from the pet store and dipped her in it for a while , but she was too far gone.
She died, and shortly after I noticed my Valentini puffer stuck to the side of my powerhead. He is swimming around all slow and running into things, and one of my damsels also looked sickly.
So I decided to run some tests. My salinity came to 1.023, well within limits.
My ph seems to be around 8.0
My nitrite is dark Purple on the test, indicating 1ppm or more... which is very bad from what Ive seen.
Nitrates were also about .5ppm, which is bad too.
My ammonia also registered somewhere between .25ppm and .5ppm
So after my tang died, I upped my temperature from 78degrees, to 80 degrees to make it harder for the parasites to survive. It wasnt long after this when I noticed my fish gasping for air at the top of the tank. I have since put 2 air stones in either corner (I guess the bio wheel splashing agitated the surface and put oxygen in the water)
I also put the bio-wheel back on (it has a carbon filter in it, and I kept the bio-wheel in a bag of salt water, so hopefully the good bacteria I had on it is still alive)
My damsel is already more active, but I put the puffer in a different tank.
Before this, my tank was set up for about a month, and I would get small ammonia spikes that were quickly back to 0. Are these new rocks dying off? Or by not agitating the top of the water, did I kill off a lot of things on it. My turbo snail is also changing to a darker color. I'm guessing the lack of oxygen is at fault.
If I did kill off a lot of rock, how long will it take to replenish? I don't have a protein skimmer yet, but am desperately trying to get one (see other post).
Any advice is appreciated. Thanks!