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#1
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fish have died randomly
My friends bought a house that has an approx. 500 gal brick pond with
a waterfall, and some sort of closed external filter. After they cleaned the filter the fish in the pond started dieing. Some small, some large, they have five fish left and and some are very young and others are older. The deaths occurred among established and newly introduced fish randomly, but did not kill all the fish. These friends now are questioning me about their problem thinking I have some expertise because I have had a pond much longer than them. Yet my ponds either have no filter or a skippy filter. The only fish deaths I have had were caused by forgetting the hose and chlorinating the poor things to death, or sucking them up into the pump. I would think that if cleaning the filter, improperly, released enough ammonia to kill fish all the fish would die? Maybe this is not the case? someone else suggested temp. because we are in the deep south and it has been very sticky lately. Their pond does not get sun all day and they have goldfish, what would a max temp. be for a pond? Can someone give me a rundown of the correct way to identify their problem. I assume testing the water would be the first course of action. |
#2
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"nortyler" wrote in message oups.com... Can someone give me a rundown of the correct way to identify their problem. I assume testing the water would be the first course of action. ================== I would also suspect those newly introduced fish. There are plenty of shops out there selling fish with parasites and other infections. When I started to quarantine all new fish for 21 days and treat them for a variety of parasites, whether I suspected any or not, the deaths stopped. That's just one possible explanation. -- 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 |
#3
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On 21 Jul 2005 05:53:35 -0700, "nortyler" wrote:
Can someone give me a rundown of the correct way to identify their problem. I assume testing the water would be the first course of action. Yup, but it's too late now, unless they're still having troubles. I suspect cleaning the filter made the ammonia spike. What they needed was to be checking their water and the fish reactions after the cleaning. And to have an ammonia locking chemical on-hand. Now if they're still having trouble, it could be nitrites, an a little salt will help there. ~ jan ~Power to the Porg, Flow On!~ |
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