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AJanzen

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Everything posted by AJanzen

  1. Yeah, I have slightly increased the dosage for ammonia spikes. I also have the big Al's water conditioner I could use but it doesn't mention anything about eliminating the ammonia. Should I not worry too much about ammonia with the shrimp? Or is leaving it out overnight sufficient to get rid of the ammonia? Also, down another 2 shrimp today without any changes to the water parameters or CO2 added... May not have to worry about the shrimp after the long weekend if this keeps up
  2. I've been monitoring the PH levels all week and they are steady at about 6.7 I haven't added anymore CO2 since the first post however I have had about 4 more shrimp deaths. GH/KH levels are standard for Edmonton water. Nitrite levels are 0ppm and Nitrate's are between 0 and 20ppm. I do water changes about once a week using tap water left overnight (temp is the same the next day) and treated with Prime to remove any ammonia. The initial deaths were about 5 days after the last water change.
  3. So, not too sure what's going on with my tank but today I picked out 4 dead RCS and yesterday I had picked out 2. All other shrimp in the tank seem happy and healthy, but among the dead ones today was a heavily pregnant female. This is a 5.5G Fluval Chi planted set up with live plants, the goofy mini CO2 system that comes with, and a fluval nan filter etc... I checked all my water parameters and everything looks good so not sure what the problem is. Temperature is 25C. Background on the tank. Set up with just plants 2.5 months ago, waited a week then cycled with neon tetras for a month. All fish have been removed and the only other inhabitant of the tank now is one zebra nerite snail. After the 6 dead shrimp I'd say there is about 20 cherries left. Any help here would be appreciated, in the past any Cherry Shrimp tanks I've had required little to no maintenance and the little guys flourished/bred like crazy. My only thought here is that I may be putting too much CO2 into the tank as this is my first experiment with CO2. It's just the little Fluval CO2 20 that I'm using and I only fill the chamber in the morning each day (none on weekends as this is a work tank).
  4. Looks like Hydra to me. A couple spixi snails will get rid of them.
  5. So I did a major no no and set up a 5.5G with a male and female multi. They have now matured and are breeding like champs so obviously the 5.5 isn't going to cut it much longer. Some of the fry are already about 1/3 full grown. So my question is how do I move the little dudes? I'd like to move everyone as a group so there's no issues in a larger tank but don't want to hurt the fry and some of them are still pretty small. If I just move the adults and wait for the fry to mature is this going to cause aggression issues when I finally introduce them to the larger tank? Thanks for any advice as I'm kicking myself as I did know better and still put them in a too small tank to grow as a family.
  6. Always loved the Mantis Shrimp. That's a great little breakdown though.
  7. Siamese Algae eater's are the answer. Had the same problem setting up a 75G. This is not a long term fish for a community set up though so be prepared to part with them. 3 or 4 juvi's should take care of the problem in about a month.
  8. I have a tank set up specifically for this reason, right now it's just some a small BN pleco grow up tank as I figured they wouldn't harass the babies. I have an egg tumbler as well, the reason I want to strip her is that I have yet to have my cichlids hold full term (pretty sure the reason is none of them are big/mature enough). I've had a couple fluke survivors in my tank who were obviously spit out, somehow managed to hatch still, and survived long enough for me to fish them out and separate them but so far I would say I've gotten 1 baby for every time I see a female holding. If I do hold her is the slime coat an issue? Or are cichlids hardy enough not to worry about?
  9. So my female strawberry peacock is holding, looks like a lot of eggs. I want to strip her in the next couple of days before she spits them out, any tips? I've seen videos of guys holding the fish and opening their mouth with a small tongue depressor so they'll spit the eggs into a bucket. My concern with this is messing with her slime coat, injuring her, etc... This will be my first time so I don't want to lose a fish due to inexperience. Also, if you do hold the fish I'd have to treat her after to help her slime coat... correct? I have a cycled fry tank set up with an egg tumbler. On another note, every where I've read says people strip their cichlids after two weeks. I'm not too sure how long she's been holding but it looks like she's ready to burst. Is there any harm in stripping before the two week marker? Thanks in advance!
  10. Just letting everyone know, buy one get one free at Nature's Corner Store. I was just in there on Monday and they had some good stuff in, a fair selection of corys etc... (looking at you SuperGuppyGirl). I'm gonna go check it out this afternoon and hopefully not be in too much trouble when I bring new fish home.
  11. Yeah those cherries are crazy, in about a 6 month period I went from 30 to probably 1000 in a 10G planted. Remove all predators and the sky's the limit with these guys.
  12. As jvision said cherry shrimp are probably the easiest to do. First step would be to decide what type of shrimp you want and then go from there. When you start looking at the high grade CRS and CBS they can be a fair bit more finicky.
  13. Sounds like spixis are my answer here, no plants in the tank yet anyways, just hidey holes and driftwood. Still baffled where they came from though. Never saw one when the tank was teeming with RCS and they show up now? Is it possible the shrimp were keeping them under control while the hydras were still small? I've just always heard that the hydras can eat juvie shrimp, not the other way around.
  14. So... picked up 5 BN's from Harold today and when I got home put them in a 10 gallon I had previously used for my RCS. The tanks been sitting empty for a while (stripped of all plants and shrimp) and just been sitting with the substrate and some random snails in it. I had done a water change out, put in a sponge filter and added some (brand new) malaysian driftwood. After I got the plecos acclimated and turned the light on, lo and behold hydra on the glass. My question is what's the potential problem here? Don't think they're going to be able to hurt the BN's but I'd still like to get rid of them. I've heard spixi snails do a good clean up on the little buggers, but will the BN's just take care of them on their own? I'd eventually like to breed my BN's once they get a little bigger and definitely don't want to be battling hydras at the same time. On a side not, the 10G won't be their permanent home. Just a place to chill out for the next few weeks until I set up my empty 55G for them. Was kinda hoping to use the ten for fry eventually though.
  15. Haha, if my family ever leaves me I might have a chance of doing this in my basement.
  16. This is a typical male fish, the females will look somewhat different. :rofl:
  17. Haha, no problem looks happy in there! The way that stuff grows you`ll be begging people to take chunks of it off your hands in a couple months!
  18. Don't remember off hand, I know my API quick dip strips always register the pH as straight up neutral but for the cichlids I use a high range pH test kit that checks for between 7.6 and 8.8 I believe. Will have to check when I get home tonight. Never really bothered checking the straight up tap water with the high range kit as the quick dips always brought it out at 7.0. Just for fun I`ll check my tap water tonight with the high range specific kit. If it doesn`t register at 7.6 even maybe I have magic pipes! haha Kinda doubt it though
  19. I'm in Millwoods close to the Rec Center, I don't test it religiously but whenever I have it's between 7.0 and 7.5, usually closer to 7.0. That's the reason I bought the pH buffer sand for the cichlids in the first place. Unless my pH test kit is bunk :eh: If this is the case then my sand buffer shouldn't have affected the pleco all that much though? Correct? I was just looking at the Epcor website and they do say that the water is around 7.8. It's been sitting at 8.0 since the beginning of February. This just raises more questions for me, damn. Probably should invest in a new pH testing kit as well.
  20. Wow, good to know. Thanks Jayba, kinda feel like a murdiddlyerderer now. Should probably change my whole water change out routine with the main African cichlid tank too then hey? I've always just put in straight up tap water and let the sand buffer it, although I haven't seen any ill effects in the cichlids, just crazy mating dances in the 24hrs following water change outs.
  21. Small piece of driftwood cuz I know plecos love their driftwood, however I use sand in my tank that keeps the pH at a consistent 8.2pH for the malawi cichlids. That's my main thought, it may have been too high for the little guy. Not gonna try it again until I'm sure. I have (hopefully) 5 WC BN's from Harold that I want too breed so... none of them are available to test the theory basically. I'm not one to throw fish into an iffy situation and if things start to look hairy I will pull them immediately it just seemed like there was no warning with this guy. Happily cleaning tank in the morning, dead in the afternoon. Edit: also weird, my pH levels usually test pretty close to the 7.0 range... different areas of the city?
  22. Hi everyone, 2 months ago I put a LFS BN pleco in our malawi cichlid fry tank. Everything seemed to be going well for a while (pretty much the whole two months). Tank levels were normal i.e. ammonia 0, nitrates 0, nitrites 0. He/She was doing a great job of keeping the tank clean than all off a sudden dead. I believe I noticed him/her dead very shortly as no tank levels had spiked. Pleco seemed happy and was supplemented with some NLS wafers a couple times a week. The only thing I can think of is that the pH levels were too much for it as I keep it at 8.2 for the cichlids. I've read various articles stating that this was fine for the plecos and also not fine for them. Seeing it was doing so well I never thought much of it. Anyone else had much experience with plecos in high pH levels. I have a common pleco in my 90G cichlid tank that is at a consistent 8.2pH with no problems for almost a year now, it is over 9 inches. Does the size make a difference or should I be looking for some outside circumstance. Thanks for the response
  23. Wow, never seen these guys before, had to google it to see what they were. Awesome looking fish, best of luck!
  24. Frogs were perfectly healthy and happy. Had 5 of them, slowly went missing ,one by one. Finally only one left. Witnessed the mystery snail get a hold of its back leg and the frog was unable to get away as the snail slowly engulfed it, poof no frog.
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