Acclimating Discussion

poniegirl

Active Member
I am a supporter of some old school ideas (and some not so old). I also like the idea of preventative maintenance and have been known to clean some things that are not dirty.
This is good info. I am not the author, but I agree.
"What Acclimate Means and Reasons for Acclimating-
Ac·cli·mate: To make or become accustomed to a new environment or situation; adapt. Synonyms: Acclimatize, harden, season, toughen.
Reasons for Acclimating
Properly acclimating any new fish or other critter addition to your saltwater aquarium is probably the most important thing you can do to ensure a smooth transition from the bag to your tank. Although fish or invertebrates, such as shrimp which are very sensitive to rapid water parameter changes, may not be under stress and might do just fine without acclimation, why take the chance?
Proper acclimation takes little of your time and will eliminate the disappointment of having to watch any new fish or other marine livestock introduced to struggle or just sink to the bottom of your tank and lay there after you drop them in.
Even bringing home a new critter from a LFS (Local Fish Store) that may only be minutes or hours away can create stress.
A saltwater hobbyist once told me of bringing home a shrimp from his LFS, hanging the bag in his tank until the temperature of the water in the bag was the same as in his tank, he put the shrimp into the tank and a few minutes later the shrimp was laying dead on the substrate. He took the shrimp back to the LFS and was given a replacement. He took the new shrimp home, followed the same acclimation process as before and ended up with another dead shrimp.
Once again puzzled, the hobbyist decided to check his tank pH, which came out at a healthy 8.2 reading. Following that he went back to the LFS and tested their pH, that came out at 7.7, the difference of which was obviously more than enough to cause pH shock and kill the shrimps. His third try with another shrimp was successful after taking the time to properly acclimate the shrimp before introducing it into to his tank.
Fish and critters which have been shipped by mail order will be under additional stresses, as they are usually in the bag for at least one day. From the time they are put in the bag, the pH of the packing water will start to drop. Add to that the factor of ammonia build up in the packing water if the shipper doesn't use an ammonia buffer and you have a fish that is under stress when you get it.
After years of receiving a great number of fish from the South Pacific, we found that we could successfully acclimate fish which were gilling heavily and laying on the bottom of the bag. It only took a few minutes (O.K., more like an hour in the worse cases), but it was very satisfying to see a near death fish up and swimming happily around in the bag, ready for introduction into our system.
Acclimation helps to reduce the changes of stress inducing diseases like saltwater ich to pop up.
A choice of acclimation should be be made before bringing any new additions home, and whether you decide to use our measuring cup method for dummies, or one of the others, each procedure allows your precious new critters to adjust to four basic things that causes stress: Lack of O2 (oxygen), drastic pH and temperature differences, and in most cases ammonia build up in the bag."
 

zeke92

Active Member
i personally think that acclimation, even with some fish like seahorses, shouldn't be dragged out too long. it just adds to stress.
i just try to get them acclimated to the water and as soon as i think there has been enough water exchange then i wait about 5 minutes for luck. but long 2-3 hour acclimations, i think, just add to alot of stress these fish already have.
thats just my thoughts. i know some people acclimate them for a really long time, i just think it adds to there stress.
 

poniegirl

Active Member
I have noticed that SWF has different recommendations for different fish. I would think that they have a reason for this and that if a buyer follows the recommendation, where is the harm?
If ammonia has accumulated during shipping and any damage has been done, I wonder if a sudden change will be end of the animal or the cure? Does a slower transition mean a better chance of survival in the new tank?
I do not trust LFS to keep their systems in top form and so I do take at least the 1 1/2 hr in that case. As the article states, a significant change in PH can be fatal.
 

suzy

Member
I drip acclimate to my sump over maybe 20 minutes. I haven't lost a fish post acclimation so it works for me.
Ocean Rider has a pretty specific process they recommend, and I think it violates the ArriveAlive quarantee if you don't do it (like how are they going to prove you didn't though?). I can't remember the exact details, but I think you add a cup of water, wait 10 minutes, add another cup, wait and repeat once, then let 'em go.
Maybe it's on their site if one is planning on newbies soon...
 
Have u gotten horses from them OR?? I have been thinking about it, Id like to hear what u thing of them and the horses! Thanks!!!
 

suzy

Member
I got my dwarfs from them last millenium! I also got some cultures from them. I think they are great. I also think they use ocean water in their systems, and get live plankton from the ocean. They are in Hawaii and have been in business longer than any breeder!
They used to have a guard to watch their facility 24/7/365 to prevent anyone from getting their secrets. Now, you can tour it! I really want to go!
 

rykna

Active Member
Originally Posted by Suzy
http:///forum/post/2498968
I got my dwarfs from them last millenium! I also got some cultures from them. I think they are great. I also think they use ocean water in their systems, and get live plankton from the ocean. They are in Hawaii and have been in business longer than any breeder!
They used to have a guard to watch their facility 24/7/365 to prevent anyone from getting their secrets. Now, you can tour it! I really want to go!
SWEEEEEEEEET!!!!!
 
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