arvin
NJRC Member
I finally (once again) hooked up the display tank to the basement sump. No leaks to be found which was a big relief. I ran the pump for about an hour last night and it kicked up a wind storm in my display tank. Apparently there is lots of flow coming to the tank. I thought I'll turn off the pump for the night and run only during the day until I tune the flow so that it doesn't kick so much sand.
This morning I woke up only to find all dead fish. Two damsels, two percula clowns, one coral beauty, one blue tang and one hawk fish. They are all dead.
Inverts are doing fine so far. I didn't have many corals; Just waiting on this project to complete to stack more.
Anyway, what the hell went wrong? Can the sand storm be deadly? Or is it just too much flow that fish cant handle? The fish were healthy and ate very well last night after all the sand had settle down.
The added water was aerated for nearly a week with 1.024 salinity tested with refractometer and temperature of the water was a constant 78. I even tested the refractometer with RO/DI water to make sure the calibration was current. Should I have cycled this water before introducing to the display tank? I thought this was just one big water change.
Some of the PVC parts, I had to cut them after they were installed. Even though I cleaned the ends thoroughly is it possible that the dust from PVC could have killed the fish?
I didn't get a chance to run the tests on the water yet and planning to do it tonight. I am wondering how to to mitigate the damage from now on.
Any help is appreciated.
This morning I woke up only to find all dead fish. Two damsels, two percula clowns, one coral beauty, one blue tang and one hawk fish. They are all dead.
Inverts are doing fine so far. I didn't have many corals; Just waiting on this project to complete to stack more.
Anyway, what the hell went wrong? Can the sand storm be deadly? Or is it just too much flow that fish cant handle? The fish were healthy and ate very well last night after all the sand had settle down.
The added water was aerated for nearly a week with 1.024 salinity tested with refractometer and temperature of the water was a constant 78. I even tested the refractometer with RO/DI water to make sure the calibration was current. Should I have cycled this water before introducing to the display tank? I thought this was just one big water change.
Some of the PVC parts, I had to cut them after they were installed. Even though I cleaned the ends thoroughly is it possible that the dust from PVC could have killed the fish?
I didn't get a chance to run the tests on the water yet and planning to do it tonight. I am wondering how to to mitigate the damage from now on.
Any help is appreciated.