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#11
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![]() Not sure if heat would be the cause since the fish died at night when the temp is not at its highest. If a fish looked completely healthy during the day and ends up dead in the morning, without any other info, low oxygen is a very good guess. In my tank the oxygen drop is huge overnight. I've also had angels die in the next morning after I unplugged my aerating device and forgot to plug it back in. In addition, not all skimmers are good at aerating water. The ones that are poor are closed loop ones (The ones that don't actively draw water from the tank into the skimmer and back out).
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#12
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![]() Don't let it get you down Draco,
I find S.W. to be somewhat like surfing (or snowboarding for us Canucks ![]() I wouldn't discount the heat issue so quickly (though at this point it is a bit of a guessing game). Often a fish will encounter a stressor that weakens it and will linger for a while before dying. As if it has lost its will to live and is waiting for death to overtake it. To continue the temp theme, for discussion sake: If you have a smaller tank in a hot apartment you may want to look into some means of stabilizing the temp swings. It's not the high or low limits that will harm marine species so much but rather the swings back and forth. The first thing I would do is to start tracking your tank temps, particularily in the late afternoon/early evening, this is when your tank will have ramped up to its peak temp. Compare these to your morning temps. Since responding to the effect of the heat spell on my tank (opening all cabinet and hood doors, directing a fan at my sump, reducing my lighting duration) my temps have run 80 - 82F. In the end we can only do our best. Test and correct. Good luck! ________ herbalaire Last edited by Dale; 01-21-2011 at 01:19 PM. |