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Correct, Guppies & Mollies do not require salt. Some folks keep them with salt all the time though, so it can be done but it isn't necessary. Like the previous poster said, salt can be used to medicate so having salt in the tank all the time takes away that ability, which is a bad thing in my opinion. I've treated Ich with salt only and it worked great.
Ruskull is correct that you don't need to add salt. There are good arguments for using salt when keeping Mollies, and certainly they're easier to keep that way. But is it essential? No.
Guppies shouldn't need salt at all unless you have soft water, in which case salt helps them enormously. Guppies have a high tolerance for salt, and (wild Guppies at least) can be adapted to fully marine conditions for extended periods. Half-strength seawater is easily tolerated by Guppies indefinitely, even the fancy varieties.
However, Ruskull is not right about using salt reducing its value as a medication. When used to treat whitespot, it's the salinity (2-3 grammes/litre) that kills the free-living stage of the whitespot parasite. If you have a freshwater tank and then add the salt, then the parasite is killed. If you routinely add 2-3 grammes of salt per litre, then the parasite will be killed in just the same way. It doesn't matter either way because the ambient salinity that kills them, not the action of adding salt. Put another way, you add salt to kill whitespot, but if you add salt all the time anyway, then the whitespot can't get established in the first place.
Bottom line, if you want to add salt to a livebearer aquarium -- and many people do -- then go ahead. It won't make it more difficult to treat whitespot because whitespot can't get started, assuming of course you're adding 2-3 g/l. Salt doesn't medicate against other diseases well, if at all, so for things like finrot, you'd need to use your usual medications (though at salinities above 5 g/l, fungal infections are rare).
Cheers, Neale
Correct, Guppies & Mollies do not require salt. Some folks keep them with salt all the time though, so it can be done but it isn't necessary. Like the previous poster said, salt can be used to medicate so having salt in the tank all the time takes away that ability, which is a bad thing in my opinion. I've treated Ich with salt only and it worked great.
I see what you're saying but at the same time there are different forms of Ich, and fish can still get it even in an aquarium that has AQ salt added. In fact there are marine strains of Ich (Cryptocaryon irritans), but then having the salt wouldn't help or hurt either way if the form of Ich that you end up with is resistant to salt.
Thanks for all the replies. The reason i am askign is that i have guppys in one half and mollys in the other half of a tank (4 ft long with a divider in the middle). The guppys are all fine, but the mollys seem to hang out at the bottom of the tank a lot....hence i was wondering what was up with them. Water parameters are fine. PH is about 7 but i have just added some coral sand to get it up a bit. Any ideas?
Can Siamese fighters deal with salt?