FAQs on Freshwater Livestock Acclimation
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Neale Monks, Freshwater Livestock
Selection by Bob Fenner, Fishes, Amphibians, Turtles,
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Freshwater Fish Acclimation, commercial... TDS element in
incidental mortality? 4/16/10
Attention- Bob Fenner
Bob-
<Ray>
I am a retail tropical fish store owner in California that has been in
the trade for over thirty-five years. In that time I've endeavored
to help other stores along the way through pet trade organization
publications and seminars dealing primarily with tropical fish
husbandry at the retail level.
<I salute your efforts>
In the last two years I have been working on better understanding and
perhaps developing a strategy to improve tropical fish acclimation at
both the retail and consumer levels.
I strongly believe that much of the fish loss suffered by retailers and
hobbyists is avoidable through the use of better acclimation, and after
reading many of your posts on this forum see that you agree.
<This is so>
Many importer/wholesalers of marine fish do a good job acclimating and
I have visited several in southern California to see first hand how
they go to great lengths to "double acclimate" (flush ammonia
first with pH adjusted water) to prevent the exposure of unionized
ammonia as the pH raises to that approaching their holding tanks. As
you know virtually no retailers acclimate their fish properly.
<Unfortunately>
Bags arriving at retail fish stores are simply floated to adjust
temperature and then cut open and the fish are released. Some of the
elite retailers follow the proven methods of many importers, but these
stores are very rare. I think more conscientious hobbyists are apt to
acclimate before retailers do.?
At first I set out to measure bag chemistry from numerous suppliers and
varying durations of time spent in the bags. Not surprising, the pH
levels measured anywhere from 6.5 to 7.3 in the bags for marine.
However, for freshwater it was a shock to see pH values dipping to a
shocking 5.7!?
<Yes>
I understand that these low pH values are in many cases keeping the
fish alive by preventing the accumulated ammonia from containing a
higher percentage of the toxic unionized form.
<Yes>
Being our store is in central California, our freshwater supply of
water comes mostly from aquifers, which pick up high levels of calcium
carbonate, magnesium, etc., resulting in a high pH (from 8.2-8.8) as
well as a high KH and GH. This is quite a distance for the fish to
adjust to in virtually no time! Double acclimation reduces this problem
greatly. In addition we mitigate the problem by diluting the tap water
with a reservoir of RO water above each system to lower the pH and KH
to tailor the chemistry closer to the species requirements.
Recently my attention has been directed to another potential source of
shock for freshwater fish and the potential cause for much of the loss
we now encounter -- I have measured a sharp difference in the
importers' TDS (total dissolved solids) in their system water and
that of our systems.
Our retail store has three main freshwater systems --
Temperate freshwater fish
(primarily goldfish) pH 7.5, KH 3.5, TDS 700 ppm
<Wow. Liquid rock... like we have as source water here in San
Diego>
Low pH, soft water species
(tetras, SA cichlids, etc.) pH 6.8, KH 1.0, TDS 185 ppm
Higher pH and hardness fish
(African cichlids, live bearers, gouramis, etc.) pH 7.8, KH 6.5 TDS 500
ppm?
<Sometimes even a bit higher>
The importer has many systems as well, but the bulk of the freshwater
species are kept in the following water -
pH 6.3
KH 1.0 or less
TDS 1600 ppm or 1.6 ppt ( I believe this is so high because they are
adding sodium chloride)
<May well be... this practice is very long established... though of
dubious utility>
In addition the pH can go as low as 5.7 within the shipping bags due to
carbonic acid accumulation.
<Yes, mostly>
My question to you is thus... how significant is the TDS disparity from
the suppliers 1600 ppm to our low of 185 ppm?? Is this enough to cause
osmotic shock??
<I do not know, but would not be overly surprised if this were to
degrees a factor in overall stress>
Could this be the real smoking gun behind fish loss due to improper
acclimation??
<Easy enough to test this hypothesis. I suspect the ammonia
ionization at lower to raised pH is more important though>
It is well documented that a change in osmotic pressure due to a
lowering of the concentration of the water can cause osmotic loading
(water rapidly entering the cells in large amounts, causing them to
swell and burst).
Going from low TDS to high TDS will?
<Even just hemolysis alone could be important here>
not result in such a stress, but the other direction -- look out!? How
many retail store owners or hobbyists own a TDS meter and know about
this potentially fatal problem? ?
<I suspect very few indeed>
There have been a few references to this problem addressed at various
Internet sites, but little in the trade is mentioned about fish going
from high TDS levels to low TDS levels (Charles Nunziata and Mike
Jacobs, Killie
fish breeders most notably have written about this). I am particularly
worried about many retail stores (such as PetSmart and Petco using salt
in their main systems and not advising the hobbyist about this sudden
pressure
change, as they take their fish home and put them in water
presumably
unsalted.
<Yes and hopefully so>
Also, many Koi importers add salt to their stock of fish upon arrival
(up to 5.0 ppt) and a unsuspecting hobbyist may put the new Koi in the
pond directly without proper acclimation.
<This is so as well>
Is there any data out there that you have come across as to tolerances
to TDS changes??
<None that I'm aware of>
I have heard that anything beyond twice the TDS level is dangerous --
do you have any numbers?
<I do not>
Thanks for your life-long efforts to improve this trade. I appreciate
and value your input on this subject.
Ray Meyers
Owner, Pet Fun
Monterey, CA
<Ray, I am going to post this on WWM... and hope others will chime
in, add to this discussion. Cheers, Bob Fenner>
Follow-up Acclimation Project -- 7/14/10
Bob-
<Ray>
I wanted to keep you in the loop of my efforts to improve acclimation
at the retail aquarium level with a follow up to my letter to you a
couple of months back.
<Please do>
The following is a exert of my letter to old friend George Blasiola,
author and speaker in the aquarium trade for years, who I 'm sure
you have met.
<Yes... and have seen some writing from him recently. Thank
goodness, thought we'd lost him forever to the body-building
addiction>
I have cut out the personal parts of the letter.
After reading, please give me your thoughts. By the way, were there any
comments from your group when you posted my last letter to you on
acclimation? I do not know where on your web site to look back.
Thanks,
Ray Meyers
<Should be here: http://wetwebmedia.com/mardisindex.htm
the first tray>
George-
<I have been hoping some time now to get your thoughts on a very
exciting project I have been working on that may potentially help
the
retail aquarium trade. For the last two years I have been studying the
effects of acclimation on a fresh and saltwater fish and invertebrates.
Having a retail tropical fish store is the perfect testing grounds for
a number of methods and devices. Without going into too great a detail
(I could talk all day on the subject), here is a summary of what's
going on:
Pet store tropical fish loss has always been tragically high, and my
theory is that it is in a large part due to poor acclimation. Pet stores
notoriously do not properly acclimate their new arrivals. They
typically float a fish bag for 15-20 minutes for temperature adjustment
and then pour the contents of the bag through a net and release the
fish in their aquarium. I believe the shock from the chemistry changes
to be the cause for, at minimum, a reduction of the fish immune system,
resulting in higher susceptibility to a myriad of disease causing
agents; and at worst osmotic loading, causing the cells to swell and
either burst or undergo apoptosis --high TDS levels in the bags going
to low TDS levels in the aquariums.
I started by measuring samples of freshwater from pet store aquarium
system water from all over northern California and a few from the LA
area, as well as numerous fish suppliers. I found that the disparity
was shocking! For example, one supplier maintains a freshwater fish
system with pH 5.9, GH 4ppm, KH <1ppm, and TDS 1800 ppm (the high
TDS I confirmed was the result of salt addition). The average pet store
(over 30 samples) was pH 7.8, GH 7ppm, KH 6, TDS 500. When tests are
done of the bagged water the pH can be as low as 5.3 due to the
accumulation of carbonic acid. Some stores have pH levels in their
systems in the mid 8's, and some bags from suppliers have TDS
levels over 2000 ppm and stores as low as 185 ppm. Big differences.
I started acclimation for the two obviously extreme disparities, pH and
TDS, knowing that significant levels of accumulated ammonia in the fish
bags was almost all ionized at the low pH and the raise in pH would
represent more of a threat as the ammonia changed to the toxic
unionized form. I set as my limit (Spotte tables) to prevent exposure
greater than .1 percent unionized ammonia during the acclimation
process. For this I needed to dilute the ammonia first before raising
the pH beyond 7.1. This called for a double acclimation of one hour
each cycle. The ratio of new tank water to bag water was3 to 1.
The initial results on a number of sensitive freshwater species
(cardinal tetra, Rummynose , etc.) in our store system is very
intriguing. I'm now setting out to try to demonstrate acclimation
makes a measurable difference by conducting a small experiment. I set
up three 20 gallon tanks, one that I change the water chemistry to
match the bag chemistry of the new fish (control), and the other two
tanks with chemistry matching the average pet store system water. After
they all get temperature acclimation, the control group goes straight
in, the second group of fish (same quantity and all from the same
supplier and species) receive various acclimation times, and the last
goes straight in without any acclimation. Hypothesis: non-acclimation
losses will be higher than acclimation fish and the control group.
The cardinal tetras in the non-acclimation tank developed ich and all
perished within 5 days! They went suddenly form a pH of 5.3 to a pH of
7.5. The other two tank's occupants had losses amounting to less
than 10 percent during this time. This was very interesting, but five
days later the remaining two tanks developed ich too and all died the
following week. Did the cardinals in the last two tanks get
contaminated by the first group, or did the cardinals all get exposed
to ich much earlier before we received them? If so, did the acclimation
process delay the symptoms and subsequent death in the second and third
tanks? Very provocative results in the first run of this experiment. I
can't wait to start the tests on marine fish as well. Koi are
another concern, as they frequently go from high TDS (salted water) to
low TDS and low pH to high pH all the time from suppliers to hobbyists
without any acclimation.
In the next test we will choose Rummynose tetras and the supplier has
agreed to give a sample of the water from the initial bags from the
trans-shipper before he adds them to his system so we can see what
shock they are receiving before we get them. He will also hold 100
Rummynose for one week to 'weed out' the most stressed fish
before they get to us.
Ray Meyers
Owner, Pet Fun
1780 North Main Street
Salinas, CA 93906
<Much to speculate on Ray... and definitely worthwhile developing
and adhering to a useful acclimation protocol, for all aquatic life.
Bob Fenner>
Acclimation Protocol Commercial 7/20/10
Bob-
<Ray>
Just a quick follow up this week on my acclimation project...
I read all the post on your web site regarding commercial acclimation
and two struck me as worth going over with you.
1) The use of an airstone in the acclimation process seems on the
surface to be counterintuitive. I would also think the removal of CO2
and the reduction of carbonic acid to raise the pH preternaturally, and
thus elevate the percentage of unionized ammonia in the water. I see
that you addressed this in one of the points, stating that it did not
make a significant difference and to try it yourself.
<Yes>
Have you, and what kind of raises do you get, say from pH of 6.0 after
thirty minutes or so?
<... depends on "extant water quality"... pH can be/is
"stabilized" ("buffered") by a few compounds, at
any given "point">
I'm going to try to get some hard numbers this week with an
airstone added to
the acclimation of a large group of feeder goldfish (pH is usually down
to 6.0 or so, and the total ammonia can be well over 3.0 ppm. If the
airstone does not jump the pH to over 7.0 the percentage of unionized
ammonia should be within the range they (feeders) can handle, and the
increase of O2 and removal of CO2 (causing hypercapnia) will be a great
immediate benefit.
<Yes... and w/o [O2] near saturation, all will die in short order
anyway...>
2) You made reference in a couple of posts regarding the need to
"double flush" the fish to first remove the ammonia from the
water AND from the fish themselves. Like you also said, this is
standard operating procedure for good importers such as Quality Marine
in Los Angeles, but I was not aware
the first flush (pH matched to the bagged water) was also to allow the
ammonia in the fish to escape.
<It is>
I did some reading in Spotte's "Captive Seawater Fishes"
and found a reference to how environmental ammonia might enter across
the gills of freshwater fish.
<It does>
He states that the "...ammonia movement across the gill is
proportional to the NH3 diffusion gradient, and only diffusion of NH3
occurs during periods of low environmental ammonia concentrations. When
ammonia concentrations in the water are low and adequate Na+ is
available, NH3 diffuses from the blood across the serosal surface and
is lost ultimately by diffusion across the apical surface to the
environment... when ammonia concentrations in the water are high, NH3
diffuses into the fish across the apical surface and enters the blood
through the serosal surface." Is this the rationale you were
referring to when you mentioned first flushing out the ammonia in the
fish and in the water?
<Yes>
This is a very significant (and unknown and unreported to the general
fish hobbyist) additional reason to double acclimate!
<Indeed>
I'll check out the pH raise when the airstone is added to the
goldfish feeder acclimation tests today and give you some hard numbers
later. I hope the increase in aeration will not elevate the pH enough
to increase significantly the percentage of NH3 in the water, defeating
the acclimation process.
<Again... this all depends on how much of the low pH is due to
simple carbonic acid concentration...>
Thanks again for the interest in my acclimation protocol project.
Ray Meyers
Owner, Pet Fun
<Thank you for sharing. BobF>
Re Freshwater Commercial Acclimation
8/14/10
Bob-
<Ray>
Follow-up on my commercial acclimation project:
Regarding the airstone usage we last discussed in the acclimation
process - After checking the chemistry in a few incoming bags from our
northern California supplier, I have
found it may not be wise to add an airstone to the process of
acclimation, at least in my applications. Most of the fish bagged water
had been buffered to a pH
greater than 7.2. A sample of the water in the bags before aeration
came out at pH 6.2, dKH 2.0 ppm (a calculated CO2 of 37ppm),
but after aeration it shot up to pH 7.4 (CO2 approx. 2.5 ppm). Since
these bags had total ammonia greater than 5 ppm, I did not want to
expose the fish to a higher percentage
of unionized ammonia than necessary.
<Good>
At pH 6.2 the concentration of unionized ammonia is about .1 percent
(25 degrees C), and at a pH of 7.4 the unionized
ammonia would be 1.4 percent (fourteen times higher).
<Mmm, yes... am showing/using a fave nomograph showing this
relationship (and temperature) for one of my talks at a fish health
conference am on my way to this AM in Maine>
In general, I think the airstone may be safer to use in acclimation if
the initial water is not buffered at a
point beyond 7.0, where the percentage of unionized ammonia is far
greater. And, since we are headed for a pH of 7.5 or so in our holding
tanks, I would like to see the ammonia greatly
reduced before we start the pH climb.
<Best through slow, initially pH-matched drip/acclimation... slowly
(tens of minutes) diluting the ammonia laden water, then slowly raising
pH>
Maybe the best rule of thumb for a retailer or hobbyist trying to
acclimate fish that have been hours in the bags is to first aerate a
sample of
the bag water and see where the pH ends up before using an airstone in
the process.
<Mmm, if you can get folks to adopt/adapt this practice, you're
a far better pet-fish man than I>
If it heads above 7.0 or so, best to flush out the ammonia with a lower
pH water source.
I do agree that it would be an advantage to get the high CO2 out of the
water fast, but not at the expense of exposure to high unionized
ammonia. What are your thoughts?
<As stated... I would not be, am not concerned with the high
carbonic acid content, its effects, but just the relative pH and
ammonia concentration. No need to drive off the CO2, nor really add
oxygen in any way other than the addition of the new/mixed acclimation
water of pH matched new water... Wakarimasu?>
I completed the sampling of a broad range of retail operation's
system water in California and now have my efforts directed on the
wholesale /importer
chain of distribution. I'm not sure I fully understand the role of
both the bagged water and new tank water's buffer has on the
acclimation process. If the process involves
multiple flushes it should ultimately come out to the new tank water,
but if the acclimation is merely the addition of new tank water to the
bagged water, then
the two waters have simple mixed and predicting the final chemistry may
be more difficult.
<Again... I strongly encourage folks to measure the pH of some
sample bags of incoming livestock water... MATCH the pH (with organic,
inorganic (careful) acids (most folks use dilute HCl), or CO2... and
use this pH matched mix water to slowly dilute out measurable ammonia
in the mix/ed water... NOT incidental existing tank water... BEST done
outside of tanks... on receiving (can be the same as shipping)
tables/area... where all mixed water is vented to waste... Comprende
vous?>
In cooperation with a northern California wholesale tropical fish
supplier (they supplied me with some bagged water from a sample of
swordtails they received
directly from Singapore (over 48 hours in bags?).
<May be>
The Singapore water chemistry was a bit baffling and not what I
expected after supposedly being in transit for so long.
The water to the sight was appalling -- it had a yellow cast and when
aerated would produce foam, an indication of high DOC (dissolved
organic carbons). I expected the pH to be in the 5's
and the CO2 off the charts. The tested pH was 7.7-- seriously! I
calibrated the meter again, as I could not believe it. The dKH was 2
and the TDS was a whopping
4680 ppm! Since the dGH was only 5, this super high TDS must be a
result of salt additions. I have heard of some countries adding salt to
their stock before shipment, that was
not the surprise - the low calculated CO2 and high pH were not
expected. Why did the pH not drop with a high volume of fish in a bag
for so long?
<Do come out with us next May to Aquarama... I'd like to state a
good deal more than I feel comfortable stating here, and having all see
on the Net... re ambient water quality, practices in Sing..>
The calculated CO2
with those numbers is only 5 ppm! I read some where the CO2 calculation
formulas are not valid if phosphate buffer solutions are used. Could
this by why?
<Yes>
If they are buffering at such a high pH, isn't that
counterproductive to expose the fish to unionized ammonia?
<Compromise/s>
Most of the bagged fish samples I see are in the low 6's.
heading
to mid 7's after acclimation. Do you simply think the wholesale
supplier allowed the CO2 to de-gas before he sent me the sample?
<Perhaps the fishes were rebagged... w/ or w/o water change. This is
a pretty standard practice in the transshipping biz. You'd do well
to call/write Steve Limbaugh at Dolphin Intl. (their LA office);
you're welcome to mention my name, our association>
That makes more sense. I'm not aware of
any buffer preventing the accumulation of CO2 leading to carbonic
acid.. Can some buffers prevent carbonic acid from lowering pH?
<Yes>
Anyway, as to the protocol of freshwater acclimation, I'm leaning
towards trying to find out first what experiences (acclimation or lack
of acclimation and the extreme differences) the
fish were exposed to prior to the arrival at our retail operation. For
example, proper acclimation at the retail level to those swordtails
from
Singapore that were already seriously shocked from rapidly descending
from 4680 TDS level to the supplier's 500 TDS level (not to mention
the exposure to extraordinarily high levels of
unionized ammonia) without acclimation at that point might be a bit
like putting a band-aid on a terminal cancer patient.
<I too am interested in whatever results AND discussion you produce.
It has been my long-standing position that TDS directly (though
definitely not indirectly) is of little importance in
shipping/acclimation issues>
I suppose what it may boil down to is, if that information is
unknown(able), it wouldn't hurt to at least acclimate the species
that the retail store is having repeated trouble keeping.
<Again, for emphasis, I STRONGLY recommend a S.O.P. acclimation
procedure for ALL inbound be strictly adhered to... to reduce overall
stress, resultant mortality>
In fact, that
is where we stand at our store today. We acclimate all the livebearers,
wild-caught and trans-shipped fish (fish in bags for long periods of a
time). And, I very happy to report losses have
dramatically improved.
<Ah, yes... IF only you and I could have (had) pervasive effect in
distributing such info./techniques... There is a huge negative effect
on the industry and retention of our client base (aquarist consumers)
from the ill effects of less-than ideal (and simple) acclimation
procedures>
My goal is to produce a methodology for acclimation (with your input
and others) that is practical for both the retailer and the hobbyist.
Perhaps a simple flow chart
a user can reference that will relate how long and what method to use
to best acclimate, based on a few tests (pH, dKH, dGH, TDS and NH3+NH4)
of the bagged water and the new tank water.
With the exception of TDS meters, most test kits are common at every
pet store.
Your thoughts?
<To beat the proverbial dead horse, am looking forward to what
data/support there is for TDS as a factor... and dissemination of this
information, its popularization in the trade>
Kind regards,
Ray Meyers
Monterey, CA
<Bob Fenner, Lindbergh Airport>
Acclimation Experiments- Follow up
9/3/10
Bob-
<Ray>
Latest update to my freshwater commercial acclimation project:
After three experiments to determine pH sensitivity I am going to move
in a new direction and look specifically at TDS (total dissolved
solids). There were some interesting results from the pH tests and I
will share the data, video and my thoughts of the pH acclimation
experiments later.
In the meantime, I have set up a new experiment that will attempt to
suggest any possible patterns related to the sensitivity of rapid
changes to TDS, without changes to pH being a factor during the
acclimation process. I am using the same 20 gallon tanks I used in the
pH experiments, all factored to eliminate as many variables as
reasonably possible (same systems, conditioning, fish from same
supplier, etc.). I find this area (TDS) to most interesting, as I have
found so few individuals have any input on it.
In theory the physical damage from osmotic shock resulting from going
from a high TDS to a low TDS rapidly should be a factor adding to the
stress that leads to way too many losses of fish. Of course it may turn
out to be insignificant by itself and only another cumulative factor in
a long line of stress factors, but who knows at this point? I have
queried many in the fields of aqua culture and tropical fish husbandry,
and with the exception of Dr. Gratzek in the seventies, nobody may have
looked at this area, at least nobody that I am aware of yet.
I understand you are skeptical of the TDS issue, and so am I -- This is
why I'm doing the experiments. Something that troubles me on this
issue -- freshwater dips are frequently suggested to remove parasites
from marine fish, which is an enormously rapid downward TDS shift.
Maybe the fact that the fish are exposed for such a short period of
time is why they are able to tolerate this change (although I have seen
many marine fish drop to their sides as soon as they hit the freshwater
ph balanced water -- that can not be good.) Having parasites, stressing
fish -- lesser of two evils?
<Yes... a judgment call in each case>
Here's how the TDS test will go: Swordtails that have been
acclimated (one week) to a high TDS 4.5 ppt (such as I have measured
from a direct shipment from Singapore) will be put in tanks with all
the same chemistry except TDS, which will be much lower at .5 ppt. Half
of the fish will be non-acclimated (floated for temperature only and
bag water poured through a net and the fish placed directly in the new
tank) and half will be slowly acclimated (two flushes over a two hour
period to match the new low TDS level of .5 ppt, which is typical of
many retail stores system water). I will then monitor the two groups
for two weeks to see if any significant difference in the condition of
the fish is demonstrated. And, like the pH experiments, I will repeat
the tests with different species at least three times.
As to the retail acclimation protocol we have been discussing, I
believe you are spot on with the pH adjusted first flush followed by
the flush of the store system water. I have been aware of this method
for years after visiting several commercial importer operations in
southern California. However, there may be an exception where two
flushes from the store system water may be alright without the pH
balanced step. If the target water (store system water) is low in pH,
such as a system for South American fish 6.4 -6.7 pH, and if the fish
have been in the bags a very short time from a supplier and the ammonia
is very low. Most of the ammonia is ionized at this low pH and the
degree of toxic unionized ammonia in the shipping bags will be in the
acceptable range (less than.1 percent).
I'm still a bit fuzzy on the benefits and effectiveness of products
that claim to tie up the ammonia and render it non toxic, such as
Amquel in the acclimation process. I suppose it can not hurt to add it,
but I would not use theses products in lieu of the proven pH balanced
flush method to significantly dilute or remove the ammonia.
One potential problem with these products is their interference with
organics from the reagents in Nessler method ammonia test kits, such as
the popular Tetra kit. Nessler method kits will incorrectly register
extremely high pH readings after adding products such as Amquel,
confusing the test results. Dr. Rofan <Rofen> from Novalek
(Kordon brand, distributors of Amquel) suggests using salicylate method
ammonia kits (many such as Aquarium Pharm use this method) when Amquel
is used.
When flushing ammonia at high levels, it is my experience that it may
take more than the addition of pH matched water (such as tripling the
shipping bag water) as this will only dilute the ammonia level. After
diluting it, you may also need to remove the water back to the original
level in the acclimation container(typically one quart on most retail
shipment bags) and add again the pH matched water. This second step
will significantly dilute the ammonia levels to acceptable ranges
(again, depending on the target pH of the retailers tanks). Think of it
like topping off a tank vs. doing a water change --Big difference.
How many additional flushes to raise the pH to the store target water
will depend on the buffers between the two waters.
<Mmm, no>
But the best method is to continue adding target water and removing it
back to the original quart level until the difference of the desired pH
is within .1 to .2 units.
I understand (wakarimasu) that the ideal method for acclimation would
involve trays set to overflow to a floor drain, but this is unlikely to
be practical to the average retail aquarium/pet store. The overflow
method is precisely how importers get around this issue, as they
have
large pH matched storage tanks that flow slowly into low profile trays
for the new arrivals, until the ammonia is diluted to next to nothing,
and then a new line of tank system water is flushed through to bring
the pH up. I do not see too many retailers who would be set up for this
effort (although it would be nice if a new store could design an area
of the back room for this process). While dreaming, they would also
benefit from the longer and proven quarantine method, but that's
asking way too much'¦...
I'll keep you posted with the new TDS experiment.
<Real good>
By the way, I would be interested in that trip to the Singapore
Aquarama in May. Are you planning to go?
<I am. Rob Bray/House of Fins and some other friend/s may well be
going... doing a bit of diving... ahead, maybe in PNG or the
Maldives.>
Kind regards,
Ray Meyers
Monterey, CA
<BobF, down in FL at MACNA>
Acclimation, FW 7/9/09
Hello Crew, Hope all is doing well. Please tell me if when adding new
fish to the tank if it is necessary to keep the lights off for several
hours as well as not feed them the first night. Thank you, James
<Certainly a lot of people like to do this. I tend to adjust my
methods depending on the fish. If it's something gregarious, like
Neons, then leaving the lights on in a shady, well planted tank
doesn't do any harm, and the light allows each Neon to find the
other, and so settle down into a group quickly, which is what they want
above all else. Solitary or nocturnal fish, such as Plecs and cichlids,
are more bothered by being transported and removed from their
territories, so leaving the lights off while they find a safe crevice
perhaps works better for them. So use your common sense, really, and do
what seems best. Cheers, Neale.>
re: Acclimation
Thanks Neale.
<You're welcome! Cheers, Neale.>
FW lvstk. acclim., BioSpira status, Allusions to
Incredible Archaeogastropod flix 8/19/08 Hi Have a few really
quick questions <You do?> 1. I have a tank that should be
finished cycling in about two weeks. Same water source and everything
from established tank sitting two feet from new tank. When I move the
fish to new tank do I need to float them? I know usually you have to or
is it ALWAYS have too even for reason I stated? <Don't float
them in the tank. Get a bucket, and half-fill with water from the
aquarium. Float the bag in that. After 5 minutes or so, open the bag
and sluice in a little of the aquarium water. Repeat across 15 minutes
or so until the water in the bag is fully mixed with the aquarium water
in the bucket. Then use your net to lift the fish into the bucket. Why
do it this way? Because this minimises chances of diseases (such as
Whitespot) getting between the fish shop and your existing
aquarium.> 2. I read that Bio Spira is no longer manufactured.
Anybody know the reason why? <No idea. It didn't always work
that well, so perhaps that's why.> 3. Is it possible to train a
fish to wear glasses and talk like the great Don Knotts? If so, I need
to get me one of those. (sorry had to throw that in) <I have no idea
who Don Knotts is. Is he like a trained Killer Whale or something at
SeaWorld? I've seen that, and Shamu certain did wear stuff like
hats and whatnot, and if I recall sang happy birthday to some kid in
the audience.> Thank you <Cheers, Neale.> <<Thrummmm!
RMF>>
Acclimating New Fish Hello, At the pet shop I work at we are
having a problem with the freshwater angel fish we bring in. Commonly
experience loss of about 50% or more of the first few days. Having
tried various things, I wonder if there is some point in your guerilla
acclimating procedure I could mimic and get more headway. First how we
do it. Fish arrive as shipments from a company called Coast. The old
box with Styrofoam surrounding it. Fish in bags of bluish water, which
I take is Methylene blue. < Maybe Start Right by Jungle that is a
combination of Meth. blue and salt.> We float the bags for 20 - 30
minutes. Cut off top of bag with scissors, and gently pour into a
specimen container, then using a net put them directly into the
aquarium. {don't have the facility to quarantine, really} Yes,
sometimes we've tried introducing tank water into the shipping bag.
I do have concerns of raising the ph of the shipping water, thus making
the ammonium more toxic as ammonia. Might that only be a valid concern
if the ph of the shipping water is below 7? 7.4 o.k.? < Two things
going on. If the fish have been in the bags for a long time then there
may be a build up of CO2 in the bag which is an
acid and lowers the pH of the water. You are right in the sense that
the lower pH has made the ammonia less toxic to the fish. Check the Ph
of the newly opened bag with a pH meter. Add an airstone for 20 minutes
and check the pH again. If the pH has risen then the CO2 has been aerated out of the water and the pH should be
closer to your tanks at the store. The second is a build up of
ammonia in the bag. Check the ammonia levels in the bag. The ammonia
levels in the water can be quickly neutralized with chemicals and
resins. Neutralize the ammonia then volatize the CO2. In the 20 minutes that the CO2
is being given off, the fish will lose some of the ammonia back into
the water as a waste product. So there should be less of a pH shock and
stress from ammonia.> Since at work the fish are shipped with
'blue water' already in the bag, should I still make a mix of
Methylene blue in the 'holding water'? < No, waste of time.
> Shipping in 'blue water' may make testing for ph harder,
we use the questionable accuracy of strips from jungle to do it. I
could always bring in a digital ph pen to give me a more accurate
number. Is that the best choice? < Absolutely. Make sure it is
calibrated with a standard solution.> So from the guerilla's
mouth I should change the way I acclimate at least my angels to;
Floating the bag for temperature < Waste of time unless extremely
hot or cold> Remove a portion of holding tank water to a kitty
litter bin scissor off the fish bag and test the ph add enough ph-down
to the holding water in the litter bin to match the ph (does that take
long?) < Extreme pH changes should be avoided. Aerate to drive off
the CO2, Neutralize the ammonia.> 8 drops of
Methylene blue, tablespoon aquarium salt, band-aid in a bottle nova
aqua maybe some Maracide and Maracyn and an air stone So in essence we
have given a medicative dip to a fish at the same time as acclimation,
which does indeed eliminate many of the nasties in shipping bag water.
The salt is purely to help the stressed fish, you apply to this to
tetras and S. American catfish? < No way. They hate salt!!> These
fish are known to be salt intolerant, but in this instance the salt is
short term. Probably best to avoid with elephant nose fish, though.
< Absolutely.> NovAqua would be helpful - for physical injury and
slime coat damage < I do like the Kordon products.> For my work
I'm thinking angel fish from Coast, for myself I'm thinking
wild caught zebra Plecos or queen Plecos. Any difference in procedure?
< You are talking captive bred angels with wild caught Pleco's.
If the Pleco's are coming from the same guy then they should be in
the same water and the same procedures will apply. Wild Pleco's
from South America are a different story.> Thank you for your help.
I know I have to chew the fat of the guide for awhile. The airstone
contradiction.. the combining of medicating and acclimating in the same
step... but I do see it as working, and perhaps a better way. I should
ask to view the acclimation of sensitive S. American catfish at my LFS,
if they don't think I'm stealing their secrets for the
competition. Thank you, again < If your fish are dying after a few
days then there may be something wrong with your tanks too. Baby
angelfish are usually at the wholesalers for awhile and get little or
no food at all. Once they are in the tank they should get lots of
aeration and at least one feeding of live food live worms. Check the
nitrates. They should be under 25 ppm, the lower the
better.-Chuck>