J
thanks and would it help if i hard a bare bottom:cry: sorry for your loss. hope some survive. cheers jk :thumbup:
i am not trying to be rude or make out that your wrong but if everything that you have said is wrong then why did the parents lay there eggs in the first placegravel is a much better substrate than a glass bottom as far as fry survival goes..... theres plenty of reasons why, but i dont have the time to go through them all now!.....
fry dying so quick is an indication the water is at a toxic level for them... whether it be nitrates,nitrites,ammonia,copper,heavy metals or some of the chemicals added to your tap water before it gets to you....
if i was a betting man i'd go ammonia......
just be carefull whatever it is - it doesnt get worse and kill ya parents too :dk:
fry are much more delicate than adults, the water needs to be near to perfect for a good survival rate, the fact that your fry died so soon means that something is wrong with the water.i am not trying to be rude or make out that your wrong but if everything that you have said is wrong then why did the parents lay there eggs in the first place
i think i better start cleaning the bottom tank p.s both my tanks have sand in them i thought it looked good but now it is a pain in the bck sidefry are much more delicate than adults, the water needs to be near to perfect for a good survival rate, the fact that your fry died so soon means that something is wrong with the water.
The matter can worsen quickly, lots of dead fry will add more toxins to the water.
up the water change regime to make sure its as clean as you can keep it
Having fish breed is no indication that the water is good, it just means that you have a pair of mature fish and that the set up is ok for them
When doing a water change do you stir your sand up? What filtration is on the tank? When was last water change and what % was changed?i think i better start cleaning the bottom tank p.s both my tanks have sand in them i thought it looked good but now it is a pain in the bck side
the tank the fry is in is a sponge filter and no i do nnnotWhen doing a water change do you stir your sand up? What filtration is on the tank? When was last water change and what % was changed?
Sounds like you have found your culprit. Sand will hold toxins and if not stirred will mess your water up. And sponge filter is not going to do nothing to help that. The fry never really had a chance mate. Few large water changes and stir the sand as you go. Then stir it every waterchange before you take water out. Put it down to experiance.the tank the fry is in is a sponge filter and no i do nnnot
once a week but tank was not used for few week but i think i will change it all out and i have done a new thread so can u take a lookSounds like you have found your culprit. Sand will hold toxins and if not stirred will mess your water up. And sponge filter is not going to do nothing to help that. The fry never really had a chance mate. Few large water changes and stir the sand as you go. Then stir it every waterchange before you take water out. Put it down to experiance.
How often are water changes on the tank and what percentage do you change.
Was the tank completely empty?once a week but tank was not used for few week
sponge filteroh dear, maybe the sand is too deep, how deep is it?
i agree best chance for now is a large water change with water at same temp as tank.
also make sure the water is well oxygenated.
please tell us more, such as tank size, temp, how hard/soft the water is, ph etc
no the adluts were in about 8 days or so thts where they liad the eggsso the tank with the fry in was left running empty for a few weeks before the fry went in?
I dont get why you move fish around all the time.. What you say doesnt really make sense can you run down where the fish were at first then why you moved them then why you moved the fry and back again ? I cant work out your fishkeeping.no the adluts were in about 8 days or so thts where they liad the eggs