![]() |
|
#1
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() I would start by testing temperature and salinity although temperature at this point may not be accurate. So all fish dead? Coral still alive? Could be oxygen. What we need is details regarding your setup:
Tank size Equipment livestock what you know so far for parameters All that fun stuff. Equipment failure or negligence is usually the cause if such an incident. The key here would be to figure out what happened, fix it and learn from it so it doesn't happen again not just starting over. |
#2
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() maybe check with your neighbors if the power went out for a couple hrs during the night....
__________________
- John - 3x20g Display Established June 08|Koralia nano, 1, 4|Euroreef Skimmer|250W MH retro kit|Mag 18 return|RODI 120g Display Established Jan 1, 09|Vortech MP40|Koralia 4|I-Tech 100 w Tunze 9410.04A|Aquactinics Constellation 7x54W|Mag 18 return|RODI |
#3
|
|||||
|
|||||
![]() I agree with sphelps.
If you had a sudden total fish loss after simply adding a fish it is likely that for some reason the temperature got too high or too low. If your tank is small and the oxygen level borderline, adding a tang, other than a small one would do it. What was the water temperature when you discovered the loss? Do you have critters in your tank that would set off toxins? Boxfish, sea apple etc. |