What am i doing wrong?

clownfish26

New member
I am new to the hobby and am having trouble with clownfish staying alive the longest so far is 4 days and never eating damsels are fine the tank is 8 weaks old all water levels are right on it seams that i am having trouble around the time of water changes I filter the water from my tap should i be adding a declorinator also I set the water sg and ph before i add it. I do not think it is the fish I watched it eat at the store. Would i be better to make the water and have it aged before adding it? This clown has not died yet but it does not look good for him.:confused:
 
Quick! If you have some Seachem Prime or something similar (dechlorinator) -- add that to the tank, pronto! Follow the directions on the bottle!

Yes, you need to dechlorinate the water before you can use it. Once you dechlorinate using Seachem Prime or something similar, you can then mix the salt in. Checking the pH and the SG before adding to the tank is a good practice. You also need to make sure the temp is similar -- I heat mine to about a degree less than the tank water. You are probably killing the fish off by introducing chlorinated water to the tank.

Jack
 
You can also let the water set out in the sunlight for a few days before use. This will get rid of the chlorine and help stabalize the pH. Just mix in the salt and let it set aerated with a powerhead for a few days before use.
 
Even better is to use RO or RO/DI water. There are lots of things besides chlorine that can be in tap water that are not good for your aquarium. You can usually buy RO/DI water at the lfs and RO water from the drinking water dispensing machines at discount, drug and grocery stores.
 
It is supposed to, but it exhausts very quickly and chlorine isnt filtered and is introduced. I had several customers years ago with the same difficulties.
 
I'm not familiar with it. You might also want to check if it removes nitrate & phosphate as tap water can be high in these chemicals. They will cause algae problems in your tank as they are basically fertilizer.
 
hold up and wait a couple weeks what are your parameters? damsels are very hardy they can withstand a lot don't add any more fish yet!!
 
dont know if this will help you at all but Wal-Mart has R/O water for 37 cents a gallon. The one where i live does anyways but i dont see them changing from store to store.. R/O is alot better for your tank and it doesnt have what your tap water has in it.
 
When having problems it's best to eliminate all known sources of difficulties.
1. water: too many to name, from anti-chloramine additives to chloramine, arsenic, etc. Ro/di is safest. Try that, if what you're doing isn't working. What goes into water that hurts fish isn't necessarily just the chloramine: it's polyviny-whatever-contaminants and arsenic and other things the government thinks is safe enough for us to drink in tap water---it will, however, prove lethal for some sensitive fish. The anti-chloramine products don't remove those things. Sometimes water comes in high in nitrates, from farm runoff (ours has gone up a factor of 12 in the past 10 years.) The water-adjuster doesn't touch that. Ro/di filtration does.
2. don't get any more fish until you have your own test kits and your system is stable.
3. mechanical filtration (cannisters/filter pads) are actually far trickier than the sump/rock/sandbed method. If overloaded with muck, it starts building up lethal levels of various things, and it has a way of delivering it all of a sudden, sending levels sky high and killing your most vulnerable (and usually favorite) fish. If you use that method instead of a sump be absolutely scrupulous about a cleaning schedule, and stick to it. Running a sump/topoff/skimmer has its schedule, too, and a rigorous one, or it will collapse---it's just a bit steadier, and because of the requisite testing, gives off more alarms. It's a case of pick your method and do it well.
Hope that helps.
 
Does anybody know where to look for RO water in Walmart? I tried it yesterday but couldn't get it. When i asked for RO water, the sales clerk just behaved as if i bombed a nuclear physics question at her. :lol:

They have Spring Water , but i am not sure if that is safe to use. :confused:
 
Mmm, this is a new one on me...I don't think it would be the spring water, because ro water is mechanically produced and 'spring water' implies something else. Some stores have a little kiosk where you can get bottles, but I don't know if that is ro, either. I'd suggest if you don't get a better answer than mine that you post this question as a separate thread like: Where is ro in Walmart? and see if you can get some people who do it to respond.
 
Most of the Wal-Mart stores I have seen have a Culligan unit and stand situated somewhere in the store. Otherwise, they will have distilled water somewhere. Just check its quality first, in any case.
 
Tap water is not always safe. . . it depends on where you live the amount of dissolved metals ect varies....thats what I have heard anyways, I just steer clear of it to be safe, dont wanna risk my fishies lives!
 
yeah, stay away from tap water if possible unless you have a RO or RO/DI unit. i think most supermarkets and Walmarts around california have RO water units for around $0.30/gallon to use, they're machines normally outside of the store, you bring your own containers.
 
In our Wal-Mart the RO water is located right near the soda section where you can also find all of the bottled water. If you have a Super Wal-Mart you may be able to see the empty bottles that you can purchase right on top of the RO machine. They look like Culligan bottles. Our soda section is located right near where they sell the milk. I don't know if every Wal-Mart is the same but they seem to be in our area. Our's is advertised as a self-serve drinking water, so if you see this, take a closer look to see if it says RO water.
 
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