Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Fish short of oxygen? - advice please
Hello
I have a pond of about 18 X 12 feet with a max. depth of 3.5 feet. The water is clear and there is lots of vegetation, mostly water lilies, irises and oxygenating plants. There are about 30-35 ghost koi, comets and shubunkins of varying sizes up to around 12" plus a load of small fish of various types from fry size to 3-4 inches - I would guess at about 60-80. I have adequate filtration which incorporates a fountain at one end and a waterfall at the other. What's concerning me is that most of the comets and shubunkins and one or two of the koi seem to spend all their time on the surface under the waterfall ( they ignore the fountain). Other than gasping at the surface they appear to be OK, there is no other unusual behaviour and they feed as usual. The weather (I am in southern England) makes no difference to their behaviour. I have bought some air stones which I am running for 3-4 hours a day. The fish move away from the waterfall whilst these are switched on but the next morning they are back to gasping on the surface again. I would like any advice on whether the pond is overcrowded or if the water needs testing. If the latter what do I test for and how do I interpret the results. I have thought for some time I would like to remove a lot of the smaller fish so any ideas as to the best method/least stressful to the fish would be appreciated. Thanks in advance. Conrad |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
"Conrad" wrote in message ... Hello I have a pond of about 18 X 12 feet with a max. depth of 3.5 feet. The water is clear and there is lots of vegetation, mostly water lilies, irises and oxygenating plants. There are about 30-35 ghost koi, comets and shubunkins of varying sizes up to around 12" plus a load of small fish of various types from fry size to 3-4 inches - I would guess at about 60-80. I have adequate filtration which incorporates a fountain at one end and a waterfall at the other. What's concerning me is that most of the comets and shubunkins and one or two of the koi seem to spend all their time on the surface under the waterfall ( they ignore the fountain). Other than gasping at the surface they appear to be OK, there is no other unusual behaviour and they feed as usual. The weather (I am in southern England) makes no difference to their behaviour. I have bought some air stones which I am running for 3-4 hours a day. The fish move away from the waterfall whilst these are switched on but the next morning they are back to gasping on the surface again. ## Why don't you REMOVE some of these fish? Your pond sounds terribly overcrowded. You can also add something like a water-foamer or water-ball run by a 500gph pump. I would like any advice on whether the pond is overcrowded or if the water needs testing. If the latter what do I test for and how do I interpret the results. ## I would think you do need to test the water and REMOVE some fish! The stress alone from overcrowding must be getting to them,.. no less the lack of oxygen. How much mulm is on the pond bottom? Are you doing partial water changes? I have thought for some time I would like to remove a lot of the smaller fish so any ideas as to the best method/least stressful to the fish would be appreciated. ## We drain down our ponds and net out the excess fish at least every 2 years. Those we're keeping go into a pool until the pond is *cleaned* and refilled. The others go into a pool until I can deliver them to the pet shop or whoever is taking them. When the ponds are refilled I return the fish and plants we're keeping. We've been doing this since 1995. Thanks in advance. Conrad -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries before flushing." NAMES ARE BEING FORGED. My Pond Page http://tinyurl.com/cuq5b ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o http://www.hyphenologist.co.uk/killf..._troll_faq.htm |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
On Mon, 22 Aug 2005 18:16:59 +0100, Conrad wrote:
I have bought some air stones which I am running for 3-4 hours a day. The fish move away from the waterfall whilst these are switched on but the next morning they are back to gasping on the surface again. I would like any advice on whether the pond is overcrowded or if the water needs testing. If the latter what do I test for and how do I interpret the results. It does sound like they are short of oxygen and I'd leave the airstones on all the time, especially at night. Plants respire (breathe in oxygen and breathe out carbon dioxide) all of the time. It's just that in the daylight the photosynthesis uses far more carbon dioxide and releases more oxygen than the respiration uses so the net result is the release of oxygen and the consumption of carbon dioxide. It also sounds as though you have more fish than your environment can cope with. You don't mention filtration. Bacteria also consumes oxygen and if you have no filtration to remove the detrius it will be lying at the bottom of the pond and bacteria will be decomposing it. Also both chlorine and ammonia can damage the gills of fish and that will result in them needing more oxygen in the water than they would require with normal gills. It's difficult to guess at exactly what the problem is but hopefully the above will give you somethings to investigate. It would also be worth testing the water (ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, PH, KH and GH) and posting the results. I don't know about the stocking level but http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.u...pages/home.php has calculators where you enter the size of your pond and it tells you what it recommends. -- Regards - Rodney Pont The from address exists but is mostly dumped, please send any emails to the address below e-mail ngpsm4 (at) infohitsystems (dot) ltd (dot) uk |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
On Mon, 22 Aug 2005 18:16:59 +0100, "Conrad" wrote:
Hello I have a pond of about 18 X 12 feet with a max. depth of 3.5 feet. The water is clear and there is lots of vegetation, 30-35 ghost koi, comets and shubunkins up to 12" plus a load of small fish of various types from fry size to 3-4 inches - I would guess at about 60-80. I have adequate filtration which incorporates a fountain at one end and a waterfall at the other. What's concerning me is that most of the comets and shubunkins and one or two of the koi seem to spend all their time on the surface under the waterfall ( they ignore the fountain). Other than gasping at the surface they appear to be OK, there is no other unusual behaviour and they feed as usual. Conrad Are these your largest fish? If they are all the big ones, I'd agree with the rest, add more O2 24/7. If some of the larger fish are swimming around unaffected, the others may have something wrong with their gills, damage from ammonia & chlorine as mentioned, or gill parasites... i.e., gill flukes. Regardless, I think we're all pretty much in agreement you need to remove fish. Though the math claims you might have over 5,600 gallons rarely is it actuate and you probably have more like 4500.... or room for all your adult fish mentioned, with adequate filtration, imo. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
On Mon, 22 Aug 2005 18:16:59 +0100, "Conrad"
wrote: Hello I have a pond of about 18 X 12 feet with a max. depth of 3.5 feet. The water is clear and there is lots of vegetation, mostly water lilies, irises and oxygenating plants. There are about 30-35 ghost koi, comets and shubunkins of varying sizes up to around 12" plus a load of small fish of various types from fry size to 3-4 inches - I would guess at about 60-80. I have adequate filtration which incorporates a fountain at one end and a waterfall at the other. What's concerning me is that most of the comets and shubunkins and one or two of the koi seem to spend all their time on the surface under the waterfall ( they ignore the fountain). Other than gasping at the surface they appear to be OK, there is no other unusual behaviour and they feed as usual. The weather (I am in southern England) makes no difference to their behaviour. I have bought some air stones which I am running for 3-4 hours a day. The fish move away from the waterfall whilst these are switched on but the next morning they are back to gasping on the surface again. I would like any advice on whether the pond is overcrowded or if the water needs testing. If the latter what do I test for and how do I interpret the results. I have thought for some time I would like to remove a lot of the smaller fish so any ideas as to the best method/least stressful to the fish would be appreciated. Thanks in advance. Conrad Way, way, WAY too many fish. You need to keep a sharp eye on ammonia, nitrate, and nitrite levels and remove most of those fish. My advice is to keep the 10-12 you like most and remove the rest ASAP. I use a minnow trap similar this in order to remove fish: http://wildco.com/vw_prdct_mdl.asp?prdct_mdl_cd=125G10 The local department store carries an inexpensice version of this trap that works great with a bit of food wrapped in cheesecloth for bait. Good luck! MP Mike Patterson Please remove the spamtrap to email me. "I always wanted to be somebody...I should have been more specific..." - Lily Tomlin |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
OK, thanks for the advice. It definitely looks like there are too many fish.
This kind of crept up on me this year - I didn't realize how quick the fish were breeding. I have had a close look at the fish on the surface and they do not appear to have signs of gill disease or indeed anything else amiss. I'm keeping the air stones on 24/7 until I can remove some of the fish. Thanks for the help. Conrad "Mike Patterson" wrote in message ... On Mon, 22 Aug 2005 18:16:59 +0100, "Conrad" wrote: Hello I have a pond of about 18 X 12 feet with a max. depth of 3.5 feet. The water is clear and there is lots of vegetation, mostly water lilies, irises and oxygenating plants. There are about 30-35 ghost koi, comets and shubunkins of varying sizes up to around 12" plus a load of small fish of various types from fry size to 3-4 inches - I would guess at about 60-80. I have adequate filtration which incorporates a fountain at one end and a waterfall at the other. What's concerning me is that most of the comets and shubunkins and one or two of the koi seem to spend all their time on the surface under the waterfall ( they ignore the fountain). Other than gasping at the surface they appear to be OK, there is no other unusual behaviour and they feed as usual. The weather (I am in southern England) makes no difference to their behaviour. I have bought some air stones which I am running for 3-4 hours a day. The fish move away from the waterfall whilst these are switched on but the next morning they are back to gasping on the surface again. I would like any advice on whether the pond is overcrowded or if the water needs testing. If the latter what do I test for and how do I interpret the results. I have thought for some time I would like to remove a lot of the smaller fish so any ideas as to the best method/least stressful to the fish would be appreciated. Thanks in advance. Conrad Way, way, WAY too many fish. You need to keep a sharp eye on ammonia, nitrate, and nitrite levels and remove most of those fish. My advice is to keep the 10-12 you like most and remove the rest ASAP. I use a minnow trap similar this in order to remove fish: http://wildco.com/vw_prdct_mdl.asp?prdct_mdl_cd=125G10 The local department store carries an inexpensice version of this trap that works great with a bit of food wrapped in cheesecloth for bait. Good luck! MP Mike Patterson Please remove the spamtrap to email me. "I always wanted to be somebody...I should have been more specific..." - Lily Tomlin |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
"Conrad" writes:
What's concerning me is that most of the comets and shubunkins and one or two of the koi seem to spend all their time on the surface under the waterfall ( they ignore the fountain). Other than gasping at the surface they appear to be OK, there is no other unusual behaviour and they feed as usual. The weather (I am in southern England) makes no difference to their behaviour. I have bought some air stones which I am running for 3-4 hours a day. The fish move away from the waterfall whilst these are switched on but the next morning they are back to gasping on the surface again. You received alot of excellent advice already. Another option would be to add aeration to the filter if possible. I added a spraybar to mine and it solved a similar problem. It makes for a less noisy pond to aerate the filter if you prefer quiet sometimes. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Oxygen level and fish varities | Ponds | |||
Oxygen level and fish varities | Ponds | |||
Short short shoud you keep you bonsais/ | Bonsai | |||
Plants to fish ratio/oxygen depletion in the AM's | Freshwater Aquaria Plants | |||
Plants, Carbon Dioxide and Oxygen | Plant Science |