Acclimating saltwater mollies to freshwater?

AudreyG

New Member
So I’ve done a lot of googling, and everything I can find is all about acclimating freshwater mollies to salt, but I can’t find anything about the opposite.

I was setting up my saltwater aquarium and wanted some cheap cyclers for my tank, so I decided to go with mollies because I read that they could be used in saltwater too. I had my first algae bloom and got my inverts and all was good until my black molly decided to procreate a bunch of babies overnight. I knew she was pregnant (or I had some sort of idea), but I didn’t know when she was going to have her fry and I planned on putting her in a breeders box first so that I could catch all the babies.

Anyways, now I have nine fry in a diy breeders box and my tank unplugged because they keep on slipping down my sump box to their deaths. I was wondering if now that I have my aquarium established, I could move all the babies (and eventually the parents) to their own freshwater tank so that I can start getting some actual saltwater fish and not have to worry about the fry dying.

I vividly remember the guy at ***** saying that you could just throw the freshwater mollies into a saltwater tank and they will be fine (which I obviously was not going to do) but that when going from salt to fresh you have to be very careful. Has anyone ever attempted to bring saltwater mollies back to freshwater, and if so, is there a different procedure than just the slow acclimation process I used to put them in saltwater?

Thanks,
Audrey
 

jay0705

Well-Known Member
Kudos on you caring about the mollys. Mollys actually do best brackish, most live bearers are the same. Platys, swords, guppies, ect. So if you only want molly's in a tank just fill it up with water from a water change. Then add fw when you do a water change in that tank. Just keep the salt level around a 1.05-.07 and they will be fine
 

beaslbob

Well-Known Member
IME mollies do best in saltwater. In FW mine got a white cotonny fungus. Which cleared up in hours by adding some aquarium fw salt treatment.

my .02
 
Kudos on you caring about the mollys. Mollys actually do best brackish, most live bearers are the same. Platys, swords, guppies, ect. So if you only want molly's in a tank just fill it up with water from a water change. Then add fw when you do a water Nox Vidmate VLC change in that tank. Just keep the salt level around a 1.05-.07 and they will be fine
this is helpfull , thank you
 
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SALTWAT3RFISH

Administrator
Staff member
Mollies are super tolerant of a great diverse range of chemistry and salinity. Living in Fl, I have seen them at inlets to the ocean in both incoming and outgoing tides. They seem to adjust to salinity changes on the fly. I think as long as you acclimate them over a few hours they would probably be fine. Taking the extra time to do it through water changes is probably bulletproof.
 

roundcubeten

New Member
As far as acclimating them I'm pretty sure a couple hours would be sufficient...perhaps drip method would be good. In their native habitats they often switch between salt and fresh so they can do so fairly easily. When I was a younger guy, I put 3 black mollies in a saltwater tank with about 30 minutes of acclimation...they all survived in fact 1 released all their babies and they survived until they were eaten by the adults. shareit app vidmate
 
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