Seamaiden
Well-Known Member
Um.. I think you burned the fish and the plants with ammonia, without knowing anything else.
It's difficult to say that there is a "perfect for aquarium fish" pH range that is that narrow, because there are a lot of fish that do fine or even prefer certain conditions. The discus we were talking about above like soft, acidic water--perfect for Mary. African cichlids want it hard and base, pH of 8 or greater, depending on the lake. Goldfish will take whatever you throw at them, as long as there's not too much ammonia and plenty of oxygen, and not too great a shift in pH.
The info the pet store person gave you isn't quite right. You can't get a nitrogen cycle established without a food source (most often, fish). It's better to build up, and keep stocking levels low. One way to get the cycle started is to feed the tank before there are any fish. It's too late for that now, so just let things stabilize, and when you do add fish (depending on how big that tank is and how it's filtered), add them SLOWLY, no more than one or two at a time, assuming you're tank's 50 gallons and under.
It's difficult to say that there is a "perfect for aquarium fish" pH range that is that narrow, because there are a lot of fish that do fine or even prefer certain conditions. The discus we were talking about above like soft, acidic water--perfect for Mary. African cichlids want it hard and base, pH of 8 or greater, depending on the lake. Goldfish will take whatever you throw at them, as long as there's not too much ammonia and plenty of oxygen, and not too great a shift in pH.
The info the pet store person gave you isn't quite right. You can't get a nitrogen cycle established without a food source (most often, fish). It's better to build up, and keep stocking levels low. One way to get the cycle started is to feed the tank before there are any fish. It's too late for that now, so just let things stabilize, and when you do add fish (depending on how big that tank is and how it's filtered), add them SLOWLY, no more than one or two at a time, assuming you're tank's 50 gallons and under.