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#1
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Fish and temperature change
It's a commonly accepted rule that fish need to slowly adjust to
changes in water temperature and this is one of the reasons why bagged fish are supposed to float for a while before being introduced into a new body of water. I'm starting to think that this temperature adjustment rule is a whole lot of bunk. One of the things I've noticed about pondkeeping is that different areas of a pond can have radically different temperatures, and that goes double for ponds without any circulation. Shallow areas without much vegetation are significantly warmer than areas just 2' in depth, and this situation must be the norm since one of the tips to trigger faster growth of water lilies is to lift the pots near the surface because the water is warmer! Even with these big temperature differences in portions of a pond goldfish and koi will peacefully cruise from cool areas to warm areas without showing any concern at all. How can this be if fish are really as sensitive to temperature changes as we've been lead to believe? Does it have to do with the fact that a fish can return to water that it's adjusted to if it finds a new pocket of water that's too uncomfortable? If so, sometimes it takes a long, long time for them to become uncomfortable. Is it possible that this rule is mainly for aquarium fish where the entire body of water is likely to be the exact same temperature and a newly introduced fish wouldn't be able to find water of its body temperature? |
#2
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"scs0" wrote in message oups.com... It's a commonly accepted rule that fish need to slowly adjust to changes in water temperature and this is one of the reasons why bagged fish are supposed to float for a while before being introduced into a new body of water. I'm starting to think that this temperature adjustment rule is a whole lot of bunk. $$ If the water is only slightly warmer or cooler I haven't found any problems. However I did lose some young fry when the temps dropped to near freezing here for two nights. They were in 30 gallon tubs and probably cooled too fast once the temps plummeted. One of the things I've noticed about pondkeeping is that different areas of a pond can have radically different temperatures, and that goes double for ponds without any circulation. Shallow areas without much vegetation are significantly warmer than areas just 2' in depth, and this situation must be the norm since one of the tips to trigger faster growth of water lilies is to lift the pots near the surface because the water is warmer! Even with these big temperature differences in portions of a pond goldfish and koi will peacefully cruise from cool areas to warm areas without showing any concern at all. How can this be if fish are really as sensitive to temperature changes as we've been lead to believe? $$ I observe this in my ponds and pools as well. :-) It's much cooler under the water lilies and in the other, shallower end of the pond exposed to the sun. Does it have to do with the fact that a fish can return to water that it's adjusted to if it finds a new pocket of water that's too uncomfortable? If so, sometimes it takes a long, long time for them to become uncomfortable. Is it possible that this rule is mainly for aquarium fish where the entire body of water is likely to be the exact same temperature and a newly introduced fish wouldn't be able to find water of its body temperature? $$ I personally would tend to think so. -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries before flushing." :-) ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#3
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On 16 May 2005 11:18:56 -0700, "scs0" wrote:
It's a commonly accepted rule that fish need to slowly adjust to changes in water temperature and this is one of the reasons why bagged fish are supposed to float for a while before being introduced into a new body of water. I'm starting to think that this temperature adjustment rule is a whole lot of bunk. One of the things I've noticed about pondkeeping is that different areas of a pond can have radically different temperatures, and that goes double for ponds without any circulation. snip Not bunk. Fish that are bagged are under a lot of stress, from being bagged, so you want to remove as many stresses as you physically can, like letting the "unopened" bag acclimate to the temperature of the quarantine tank. I go one step further and match my Q-tank's pH to the sellers, and if the fish has been in the bag long enough to have drop the pH way down, I lower the pH to 7.0. If a fish has been in a bag longer than 30 minutes, leave the bag closed and do not add pond water to the bag. Get the temperatures and pH numbers similar and lift the fish out of the bag without putting the bag water into the pond. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#4
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We always net fish and toss water. Lowers contamination! We do adjust
water by mixing before moving the fish and tossing the water. Our aquaria sure don't need disease water from a pet store. Jim ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote: On 16 May 2005 11:18:56 -0700, "scs0" wrote: It's a commonly accepted rule that fish need to slowly adjust to changes in water temperature and this is one of the reasons why bagged fish are supposed to float for a while before being introduced into a new body of water. I'm starting to think that this temperature adjustment rule is a whole lot of bunk. One of the things I've noticed about pondkeeping is that different areas of a pond can have radically different temperatures, and that goes double for ponds without any circulation. snip Not bunk. Fish that are bagged are under a lot of stress, from being bagged, so you want to remove as many stresses as you physically can, like letting the "unopened" bag acclimate to the temperature of the quarantine tank. I go one step further and match my Q-tank's pH to the sellers, and if the fish has been in the bag long enough to have drop the pH way down, I lower the pH to 7.0. If a fish has been in a bag longer than 30 minutes, leave the bag closed and do not add pond water to the bag. Get the temperatures and pH numbers similar and lift the fish out of the bag without putting the bag water into the pond. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#5
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"Phyllis and Jim Hurley" wrote in message .. . We always net fish and toss water. Lowers contamination! We do adjust water by mixing before moving the fish and tossing the water. Our aquaria sure don't need disease water from a pet store. ======================================= I hope you're using a quarantine tank for at least 14 days. To add new fish to an established aquarium or pond is really taking a chance. -- McKoi.... the frugal ponder... EVERYONE: "Please check people's headers for forgeries before flushing." :-) ~~~ }((((o ~~~ }{{{{o ~~~ }(((((o |
#6
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Phyllis and Jim Hurley wrote:
We always net fish and toss water. Lowers contamination! We do adjust water by mixing before moving the fish and tossing the water. Our aquaria sure don't need disease water from a pet store. Jim If you are going to add water to a fish bag, it's always a good idea to add an ammonia neutralizer. That way you don't raise the pH and trigger ammonia toxicity. My bagged fish get transferred to a covered bowl or bucket with a couple drops of AmQuel, and then I drip in water until the fish is in about 3/4 Q-tank water. Finally, I net the fish out of the container so that I don't add store water to the Q-tank. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
#7
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On Mon, 16 May 2005 20:53:56 -0500, Phyllis and Jim Hurley wrote:
We always net fish and toss water. Lowers contamination! We do adjust water by mixing before moving the fish and tossing the water. Our aquaria sure don't need disease water from a pet store. Jim Mixing is fine, if the fish is purchased locally. If not, if the fish has been bagged longer than an hour, the water in the bag is loaded with ammonia that is non-toxic because the pH is very low, due to the Carbon Dioxide. You add water with a higher pH and the ammonia is now toxic to the fish. The longer the fish has been bagged the worst this can be. ~ jan See my ponds and filter design: www.jjspond.us ~Keep 'em Wet!~ Tri-Cities WA Zone 7a To e-mail see website |
#8
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scs0 wrote:
It's a commonly accepted rule that fish need to slowly adjust to changes in water temperature and this is one of the reasons why bagged fish are supposed to float for a while before being introduced into a new body of water. I'm starting to think that this temperature adjustment rule is a whole lot of bunk. .... Does it have to do with the fact that a fish can return to water that it's adjusted to if it finds a new pocket of water that's too uncomfortable? I don't know that anybody can really answer that question. The same problem occurs with species of fish that are caught at great depth. In the aquarium trade there are African cichlids that are caught at 120' or deeper, that really need to be "decompressed" as they're brought to the surface (otherwise they develop swim bladder problems), yet these same fish are known to come to the surface on their own. I would think it comes down mostly to the fact that the fish know when they are approaching the limits of the temperature or pressure change that they can handle (it probably hurts), but we can't tell the point at which the change is stressing them too much. -- derek |
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