Hi there!
I'm from Perth and a relative newbie to fish keeping, having managed to kill a number due to my lack of knowledge and learning the hard way as I go.
I joined because this has been the site where I have gained the most information, so thank you!
Right now I have started cycling a small 25L tank in preparation for adding a betta and some shrimp. It was an impulse buy of a system someone else bought from a pet store and despite their 'help' the fish died.
Here's what I received:
25L tank
25W heater
Aquaone 100 filter
8W light
a pH testing kit with pH up and pH down
Stresszyme
water conditioner
Here's what I went and bought:
Complete testing kit (pH, ammonia, nitrite, nitrate)
A cute piece of gold vine
5mm cream gravel
a few live plants (hairgrass, ambulia, and one with little round leaves I think is bacopa?)
I've had the tank sitting for 3 days and left the plants in their little pots as I'm not sure if I should change the gravel for sand or very small gravel to suit the shrimps. The vine is still being weighted down with a glass bowl so I haven't arranged anything until it's waterlogged.
Here's my current test readings:
pH 7.4 (used a little pH down to adjust it from 7.8)
ammonia 1.0ppm
nitrate 0ppm
nitrite 0ppm
lights are on during the day for the plants ~ 12 hours
heater is mounted near the filter and the thermometer is mounted on the opposite wall. The heater is set for 27 degrees C and the thermometer sits at 22 degrees C (+- around 3 degrees with ambient temperature during the day in the house around 15 degrees C).
Here are my questions if anyone could help as I'm starting to panic lol:
Do I need to get a larger heater as this one seems to be struggling - get a 50W or a second 25W?
I'm new to live plants so do I need anything more for them?
There's a fine white film on the gold vine, I'm assuming this is just a little mould?
Is it okay to add a few shrimp now to help the tank cycle? I don't have ammonia.
Also can I put a little sand over the gravel for the shrimp or is the large gravel okay for them.
Thanks heaps
I'm from Perth and a relative newbie to fish keeping, having managed to kill a number due to my lack of knowledge and learning the hard way as I go.
I joined because this has been the site where I have gained the most information, so thank you!
Right now I have started cycling a small 25L tank in preparation for adding a betta and some shrimp. It was an impulse buy of a system someone else bought from a pet store and despite their 'help' the fish died.
Here's what I received:
25L tank
25W heater
Aquaone 100 filter
8W light
a pH testing kit with pH up and pH down
Stresszyme
water conditioner
Here's what I went and bought:
Complete testing kit (pH, ammonia, nitrite, nitrate)
A cute piece of gold vine
5mm cream gravel
a few live plants (hairgrass, ambulia, and one with little round leaves I think is bacopa?)
I've had the tank sitting for 3 days and left the plants in their little pots as I'm not sure if I should change the gravel for sand or very small gravel to suit the shrimps. The vine is still being weighted down with a glass bowl so I haven't arranged anything until it's waterlogged.
Here's my current test readings:
pH 7.4 (used a little pH down to adjust it from 7.8)
ammonia 1.0ppm
nitrate 0ppm
nitrite 0ppm
lights are on during the day for the plants ~ 12 hours
heater is mounted near the filter and the thermometer is mounted on the opposite wall. The heater is set for 27 degrees C and the thermometer sits at 22 degrees C (+- around 3 degrees with ambient temperature during the day in the house around 15 degrees C).
Here are my questions if anyone could help as I'm starting to panic lol:
Do I need to get a larger heater as this one seems to be struggling - get a 50W or a second 25W?
I'm new to live plants so do I need anything more for them?
There's a fine white film on the gold vine, I'm assuming this is just a little mould?
Is it okay to add a few shrimp now to help the tank cycle? I don't have ammonia.
Also can I put a little sand over the gravel for the shrimp or is the large gravel okay for them.
Thanks heaps