zeromus-x
Member
Hey guys... didn't know where to post this, so I figured this was my best bet.
We've had a 75-gallon tank set up here at work for almost four years now. Before that, it was up and running for probably ten years. Nice tank, drilled, we're running another tank with filtration under it (bio-balls for right now), pumps, powerheads, the works -- a pretty nice tank. It's always been fish-only, with lava rock and crushed coral, but we decided to convert it to live sand with live rock.
Over the course of 2-3 weeks, we slowly removed some crushed coral and replaced it with sand, etc. We had two damsels, a black angelfish of some sort (I didn't buy it, not a clue what it was, might not have even been an angel), and a chocolate chip star in there. I moved the angel to my home tank and we left the damsels and starfish in the tank during the move, trying to stir stuff up as little as possible. Eventually we finished the switch. After a few days, I bought two large chunks of live rock and put 'em in the tank. We did a 10% water change after every substrate switch, and after placing the live rock in the tank.
After a few days, I noticed the damsels weren't swimming around anymore. Ruh-oh. Finally found 'em, both dead. CC starfish upside down and dead. No good. Cleaned 'em out and did a larger water change (~20%). Let the tank sit for a few weeks. Brought my test kit from home -- tested nitrates, nitrites, ammonia, PH, and hardness. With the exception of some pretty hard water, everything looks perfect at this point. Decided it was time to move the angel back into the tank, and put a yellowtail damsel in there too. They both acted fine. Next day at work I didn't really see them. Next day, dead.
I just did another water test with that kit and nitrates/nitrites are literally at 0ppm, ammonia is at zero, pH is exactly where it needs to be, water salinity is right in the middle of the meter. What else should I be checking for here? It's not making any sense to me. There are about twenty-five snails in there that are living just fine, it's a clean tank, nothing has spilled into it, all the readings I've got are coming up perfect.
We've had a 75-gallon tank set up here at work for almost four years now. Before that, it was up and running for probably ten years. Nice tank, drilled, we're running another tank with filtration under it (bio-balls for right now), pumps, powerheads, the works -- a pretty nice tank. It's always been fish-only, with lava rock and crushed coral, but we decided to convert it to live sand with live rock.
Over the course of 2-3 weeks, we slowly removed some crushed coral and replaced it with sand, etc. We had two damsels, a black angelfish of some sort (I didn't buy it, not a clue what it was, might not have even been an angel), and a chocolate chip star in there. I moved the angel to my home tank and we left the damsels and starfish in the tank during the move, trying to stir stuff up as little as possible. Eventually we finished the switch. After a few days, I bought two large chunks of live rock and put 'em in the tank. We did a 10% water change after every substrate switch, and after placing the live rock in the tank.
After a few days, I noticed the damsels weren't swimming around anymore. Ruh-oh. Finally found 'em, both dead. CC starfish upside down and dead. No good. Cleaned 'em out and did a larger water change (~20%). Let the tank sit for a few weeks. Brought my test kit from home -- tested nitrates, nitrites, ammonia, PH, and hardness. With the exception of some pretty hard water, everything looks perfect at this point. Decided it was time to move the angel back into the tank, and put a yellowtail damsel in there too. They both acted fine. Next day at work I didn't really see them. Next day, dead.
I just did another water test with that kit and nitrates/nitrites are literally at 0ppm, ammonia is at zero, pH is exactly where it needs to be, water salinity is right in the middle of the meter. What else should I be checking for here? It's not making any sense to me. There are about twenty-five snails in there that are living just fine, it's a clean tank, nothing has spilled into it, all the readings I've got are coming up perfect.