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Ninjoma

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Posts posted by Ninjoma

  1. On 4/11/2023 at 8:20 AM, martinmin said:

    How do I know whether my tank lacks nutrients? I bought the 'api water test kit', which can test ph, ammonia, nitrites and nitrates.  But this test kit doesn't test nutrients, right? Any other tests I can buy to test nutrients? 

    Nitrates are the primary nutrient you test for. If you are dosing easy green and your nitrates are 20+ppm, you generally have enough nutrients. The other way to tell if your tank lacks nutrients is when you notice your plants are showing signs of nutrient deficiency. This article has a helpful breakdown of the different nutrient deficiency symptoms https://www.aquariumcoop.com/blogs/aquarium/plant-nutrient-deficiencies

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  2. I have a pair of bolivian rams with my roseline sharks, SAEs, pearl gourami and a rainbow shark. They seem to more or less ignore all the other fish, but will occasionally chase eachother. I also saw one fight with one of my dwarf crayfish.

    I also have a pair of german blue rams with an angelfish, honey gourami and platies. They like to chase eachother and the platys. 

    Rams seems pretty anti social in my experience.

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  3. I would just keep them. They'll help clean the tank and their population will control itself once the tank achieves balance. I find it way more stressful to try removing every pest snail, then just having extra snails in the tank.

    If you do want to remove them, loaches have a reputation for being good snail hunters, so I would consider dwarf chain loaches. I haven't had the opportunity to keep yet, but I have tried assassin snails and they were too slow for my taste. 

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  4. On 4/3/2023 at 4:30 PM, TheMilkman said:

    My brother just got a 20 gallon high. 16" High. He wants a school of fish and a bigger centerpiece fish. Having trouble thinking of a centerpiece bigger than dwarf cichlids that would fit in the tank. Any suggestions?

    Maybe a pearl gourami or kribensis? An angelfish might work too, but it might get too big long-term. 

  5. I've run into algae that looks like this a few times. I think it's staghorn algae. Lowering light intensity and/or duration would help. You can also try using easy carbon, ideally applying it directly to the algae using a pipette. Adding some animals to eat it would also help. For your tank size, more amano shrimp would probably be the best bet. 

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  6. Is the tank or the substrate relatively new? If so it could be brown diatom algae. You can either wait it out and it will go away on its own or you can add something like otos that will eat it. 

    Edit: also are the rhizomes above the substrate? 

  7. On 4/2/2023 at 1:16 PM, HardWaterFish said:

    get a good bunch of the Kuhli Loaches so they're comfortable. I was thinking 10 since everything I've seen says the more the merrier,

    I think you could do a lot more than 10 in 75g if the only other animals in the tank are neos and guppies. I would get at least 20 personally. 

  8. I think changing some water is a good idea regardless of what your nitrates test at because your tank is likely creating excess of something that you aren't testing for or is becoming deficient in something you aren't testing for. I will sometimes test my water before I do water changes to try to hit my target  nitrate level. More often I just change 25%-50% depending on what I feel up to.

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  9. On 3/31/2023 at 9:43 PM, martinmin said:

    @Ninjoma Please take a look at the picture above. On the tank it doesn't show how many gallon it has. I guess it's about 1.5 gallon? I don't have a good sense of the volume. So probably I should add 3 drops per week? If it doesn't hurt the new plant, I would like to add. 

    If it's 1.5g, yes 3 drops per week will help your plants. Personally I would test for nitrates every day. If they are below 20ppm I would add 2 drop per gallon every day. Once your nitrates are above 20ppm, I would go with the normal dose of 2 drops per gallon per week. 

  10. On 3/31/2023 at 8:44 PM, martinmin said:

    For my new little tank like above, should I add x3 Easy Green All-in-One Fertilizer, which I just purchased from aquariumcoop? I want to put about 5 about one-inch fishes into it. Or the new substrate is sufficient enough for the newly planted plants to grow, so I don't have to add additional fertilizer into it. I don't plan to add CO2.

    I would add some easy green. How many gallons is the tank? ACO recommends 1 pump per 10g or two drops per 1g. I would add one or two doses and then test your nitrates a few hours later. You want to get to about 20-50ppm nitrates from dosing easy green.

  11. On 3/31/2023 at 9:48 AM, martinmin said:

    My tank is pretty small. I have installed a light. Do heater, filter for this new tank are essential for both plants and fish in my tank?

    If the temperature of your water is 72-78 degrees without a heater, then a heater isn't a must for most fish and plants. If the temperature of your water is 71 degrees or lower without a heater, it's probably a good idea to have a heater for most fish. Different fish and plants require different temperature ranges, so you may need to look at the care requirements for the particular animals and plants you want to include in order to tell if a heater is a must for you or not.

    On 3/31/2023 at 9:48 AM, martinmin said:

    I heard that filter is essential for any fish tank. Is that true?  

    That's not technically true, but it's good advice for most people. The advice I've heard from ACO is having an air stone in your tank can prevent a lot of potential problems and if you are using an airstone, you might as well connect the airpump to a sponge filter.

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