wbwarnerb
New Member
I'm trying to see where I went wrong. I'm a new hobbyst here. I've had a salt water tank for about 6 months. Everything was ok, well i had my growing pains in the first month, till last night.
For the last 3 months I've had: Coral, 5 clown fish, 2 adolescent columnbian sharks (brakish), star fish, shrimp, clams, crabs, snails...
The tank is a 65 gallon reef tank set up:
- Wave maker
- Protein Skimmer
- Canister Filtration
I have had the live rock in there for 6 months, the fish in there for about 3-4 months. I've watched the water quality and made sure i had the right lighting (metal halide + PC bulbs) - i've had an occasional death (like a yellow tang) but for the most part, no real catastrophe.
Last night they seemed fine. I turned off the main lights, like I normally do. Everything was swimming like normal.
In the morning the sharks were floating at the top, all the clownfish (except 2) were dead. The remaining two were on the bottom looking like it was hard for them to breathe. the shrimp was definately dead. About half the snails looked dead. I couldn't find a crab, so perhaps they were dead as well.
One 1 fish remains swimming, two others are struggling at the bottom. The star fish survived, and the 2 of the 3 coral (so far) looks ok.
Since this was an immediate reaction I wasn't sure what could cause it. I made my mental check list and here is what happened on Saturday with the tank:
- I added the three adatives I add to the tank weekly (reef starter, ph balance, and a calcuium additive.)
- the only other thing was my wife was using a Rug Dr. Steam Cleaner all night on the carpets. I'm not sure if that could have caused something to enter the water.
Levels:
I checked the Nitrates, nitrates, PH, Alkalinity, etc... All came back in the normal to ideal range.
What I did to compensate the damage:
to try and save any remaining fish I did a large water change... about 50%... i know it's a lot but considering the damage done, i figured i had to remove a lot. I added some more salt to the water mixed in.
When fish die immediately within 6 - 8 hours... what's the most likely cause?
For the last 3 months I've had: Coral, 5 clown fish, 2 adolescent columnbian sharks (brakish), star fish, shrimp, clams, crabs, snails...
The tank is a 65 gallon reef tank set up:
- Wave maker
- Protein Skimmer
- Canister Filtration
I have had the live rock in there for 6 months, the fish in there for about 3-4 months. I've watched the water quality and made sure i had the right lighting (metal halide + PC bulbs) - i've had an occasional death (like a yellow tang) but for the most part, no real catastrophe.
Last night they seemed fine. I turned off the main lights, like I normally do. Everything was swimming like normal.
In the morning the sharks were floating at the top, all the clownfish (except 2) were dead. The remaining two were on the bottom looking like it was hard for them to breathe. the shrimp was definately dead. About half the snails looked dead. I couldn't find a crab, so perhaps they were dead as well.
One 1 fish remains swimming, two others are struggling at the bottom. The star fish survived, and the 2 of the 3 coral (so far) looks ok.
Since this was an immediate reaction I wasn't sure what could cause it. I made my mental check list and here is what happened on Saturday with the tank:
- I added the three adatives I add to the tank weekly (reef starter, ph balance, and a calcuium additive.)
- the only other thing was my wife was using a Rug Dr. Steam Cleaner all night on the carpets. I'm not sure if that could have caused something to enter the water.
Levels:
I checked the Nitrates, nitrates, PH, Alkalinity, etc... All came back in the normal to ideal range.
What I did to compensate the damage:
to try and save any remaining fish I did a large water change... about 50%... i know it's a lot but considering the damage done, i figured i had to remove a lot. I added some more salt to the water mixed in.
When fish die immediately within 6 - 8 hours... what's the most likely cause?