katman
03-21-2007, 03:21
Hi folks. It's tadpole season out here in California, and we're now the proud foster parents for about 300 of them because we couldn't just let them die when their small pond dried up in the sun.
We have an ammonia problem, and are wondering if you might offer some advice.
We're using a couple of tanks, sized to accommodate that many tadpoles (5 & 15 gallon) - but like all babies, they're either eating, resting, looking cute, or crapping. Even with frequent small feeding of foods like Sera Micron, and frequent water changes that include dosings of the change water with AmmoLock, our Ammonia alert (great product!) seems stuck in the "Alert" zone. At least it isn't going higher, but it isn't going lower, either. Since Ph Alert (great product #2) confirms what we already knew and tells us out Ph level is consistently in the 8.0 range, that's a problem.
I should add that we're on a well - this Ph level is normal for our water, and matches outside ponds like the one the tadpoles were found in (I tested). But it's hard to bring down, even using Ph decreasers, and dangerous to change things too much because tadpoles are far more sensitive to these shifts than fish.
So we've really, really got to lower the ammonia levels and keep them low.
Tadpole tanks can't use filters, because tadpoles are small and don't swim well. They'll get sucked in, or sucked against the filter and hurt. All water changes are manual, therefore, and so any solution we seek needs to be a manual solution that works without a filter.
I'm looking at stuff like Purigen, Matrix, de Nitrate, et al, and wondering if one of them might help if used as a gravel substitute. Getting all the detrius out of the gravel is hard to do without a pump + filter, so maybe biological warfare will help. Or do you have something else?
Your sensors were so well thought out, I figured you'd be my best bet to help stay ahead of the game. Thoughts?
We have an ammonia problem, and are wondering if you might offer some advice.
We're using a couple of tanks, sized to accommodate that many tadpoles (5 & 15 gallon) - but like all babies, they're either eating, resting, looking cute, or crapping. Even with frequent small feeding of foods like Sera Micron, and frequent water changes that include dosings of the change water with AmmoLock, our Ammonia alert (great product!) seems stuck in the "Alert" zone. At least it isn't going higher, but it isn't going lower, either. Since Ph Alert (great product #2) confirms what we already knew and tells us out Ph level is consistently in the 8.0 range, that's a problem.
I should add that we're on a well - this Ph level is normal for our water, and matches outside ponds like the one the tadpoles were found in (I tested). But it's hard to bring down, even using Ph decreasers, and dangerous to change things too much because tadpoles are far more sensitive to these shifts than fish.
So we've really, really got to lower the ammonia levels and keep them low.
Tadpole tanks can't use filters, because tadpoles are small and don't swim well. They'll get sucked in, or sucked against the filter and hurt. All water changes are manual, therefore, and so any solution we seek needs to be a manual solution that works without a filter.
I'm looking at stuff like Purigen, Matrix, de Nitrate, et al, and wondering if one of them might help if used as a gravel substitute. Getting all the detrius out of the gravel is hard to do without a pump + filter, so maybe biological warfare will help. Or do you have something else?
Your sensors were so well thought out, I figured you'd be my best bet to help stay ahead of the game. Thoughts?