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My fish are dying - please help
I sent this last night, but I don't know where it went????
On Sat, 23 Jun 2007 11:11:11 CST, "Carole" wrote: Hi all, I have a mature pond about 8 years old, 800 gallons, about 50 goldfish ranging from tiny tiddlers to about 5" long, plus one really big ghost koi about 18" long. I have all the usual filtration (comprises two large drums containing filter brushes and 'foam' pads - these are cleaned 2-3 times a year), waterfall and oxygenating plants, UV light, water is nice and clean and clear and always has been. There is a drain/filter at the bottom of the pond which takes out the water and feeds it through the filter system and back up into a small top pond, over a small waterfall, and back into the main pond. I feed the fish about every couple of days - if they get too much they get frisky. I top up the pond every few weeks, as and when needed due to evaporation, from a tap and use a water conditioner at the same time. Big problem - In the last week I've found 3 of the larger goldfish just floating dead in the water. They have no signs of any disease and look perfectly OK otherwise, just dead. This is very distressing as I'm spending every moment checking the pond and expecting all my little friends to die. I put some medifin in the pond a couple of days ago (I treat it twice a year normally - Spring and Autumn), but I've had another death since then. The only thing that's changed recently (don't know if it could possibly be the reason) - I recently netted the pond because we were visited by a heron, then I realised that the frogs and newts couldn't get in and out so I put a length of wood into the water from the side. The wood is sapele (sp?) and is definitely untreated, but I know some hardwoods have funny substances in them - do you think this might have poisoned the water ?? I've removed the wood now of course. I have pond test kits and use them regularly - recent tests (a couple of weeks ago) gave the following results : - Ammonia less than 0.1 - no problem - Nitrate zero - no problem - PH 8.5 - acceptable. Thanks for any help, Carole Hi Carole, Usually when it is the biggest fish dying there is an O2 problem. If that isn't the case.... your above numbers tell me the Ammonia could be have fried their gills so they aren't getting enough O2. The higher the pH the worst any ammonia in the water is. I highly recommend reducing your fish load.... but since you mentioned something about sapele, I googled for it, and it is a toxic wood. It can cause irritation, dermatitis and respiratory problems in people. Imagine what it would do to a fishes gills and slime coat. Thus, water changes, 25% every day, for 6 days. As far as a climb out for the critters, go to a fish store and look at real or fake drift wood for aquariums. HTHs, ~ jan ------------ Zone 7a, SE Washington State Ponds: www.jjspond.us ------------ Zone 7a, SE Washington State Ponds: www.jjspond.us |
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