

Aquatic Concepts
863 Main St
Westbrook, Me 04092
(207) 856-7387
Fax
(207) 856-1882
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Aquatic Concepts
Maine's Leading Provider of Tropical & Salt Water Fish.
Large Selection of Fresh and Salt Water Supplies
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Frequently
Asked Questions:
- Is there any other means of
increasing salinity levels other than evaporation or a product
like instant ocean??
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- Salinity is actually an incorrect term, though we realize
many others have probably used it. The correct term is
specific gravity, which is a measurement of how much dissolved
solids are in water. The only way to increase the specific
gravity is to add more salt. Even evaporation does not have
much effect unless a lot of evaporation occurs.
- How often should I clean my
aquarium?
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- The answer to this rather generic question depends on the size
and type of aquarium, the filtration with which it is
equipped, the number of fish that are kept, and your
definition of "cleaning." For most aquariums, if time allows,
we recommend 10% water changes done once a week. If you use an
under gravel filter, gravel on the bottom, or a bare-bottom
tank, we suggest you vacuum out accumulated detritus and
debris as you remove water from the tank. Do not vacuum a
Jaubert (or plenum) system! Mechanical media in canister and
other filters should be rinsed or changed every two weeks.
Please note: Biological filter media used to support
beneficial bacteria populations should rarely be cleaned, and
should NEVER be cleaned in tap water. If biological media
becomes clogged, it should be flushed in a bucket of water
taken from the aquarium. Algae removal from the tank panels
can be done on an as-needed basis, but no more than once a
week. Remember that to your fish, your arm and hand look like
a giant predator. Each time you reach into your tank, you
stress the fish. Fish that get stressed too often get sick and
eventually die!
- What's the best way to vacuum the
substrate in my tank?
You should
vacuum the gravel in your tank as part of the process of
removing water during a water change. Use a gravel washer.
This is a 2" diameter tube that fits on a much smaller
diameter vinyl siphon hose. Some tank cleaning systems hook
directly to a sink and use water pressure to create a vacuum
in the hose, allowing you to drain the water from your tank to
the sink drain without carrying buckets. You should not vacuum
the gravel through a filter and pump that puts water back into
your aquarium.
Tanks equipped
with under gravel filters should always be vacuumed at every
water change. The substrate that is visible in reef tanks
should be siphoned free of detritus at every water change.
Care should be exercised not to disturb root systems when
vacuuming substrate in freshwater planted aquariums.
Unless
you have a reef aquarium or a planted freshwater tank, remove
half of the decorations before you remove water from the tank
for a water change. Put the other half at on end of the tank,
to provide cover for your fish. Vacuum the substrate in rows
from front to back, gravel-washing each row thoroughly before
going to the next. The trick to gravel-washing is to wash as
much gravel as possible while only removing the desired amount
of water. If you have removed as much water as you want, but
are not finished vacuuming, stop, redecorate, refill the tank,
and take up where you left off on the next water change.
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How much water should I change
and how often?
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- Water changes may be done on a regular schedule or as-needed
according to water test results. For most aquariums, if time
allows, we recommend 10% water changes, done once a week,
regardless of test results. If you use an under gravel filter
or a shallow layer of gravel on the bottom, we suggest you
vacuum out accumulated detritus and debris as you remove water
from the tank. At a very minimum, we suggest changing 25% of
the water at least once every four weeks. If you are
correcting a bad water condition and more than 25% of the
water is to be changed, add new water back to the aquarium
slowly or do smaller water changes every other day. For water
changes in excess of 25%, add one inch of new water every ten
minutes so as not to stress fish, or upset the environment. It
is possible to change too much water or change water too
often, and this happens more than you might think. Always
remember that an aquarium should not be a sterile environment
that is clean enough to drink out of!
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I use carbon in my filters. How
often should I change it?
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- Every two weeks to once a month. If the biological load is low
(the tank is under-stocked), you may stretch this to once
every two months. Some carbons or carbon/resin exchange
mixtures may advertise that they last longer, and they
probably do. Take what they recommend and cut that in half.
It's carbon. It works by the process of physical adsorption.
It gets clogged. If your filtration system depends on it . . .
change it. We may take some heat for this, but one of the
reasons we have a web site is so we can bask in the energy
created when arguing and discussing the merits of one aquarium
technique versus another. To those who would argue this, we
say: "Get a microscope. Examine a grain of freshly-washed new
carbon at 100X. You'll see hundreds of tiny pores in the
structure. Then examine a grain of carbon that's been in your
filter for a week. Unless your aquarium is immaculate, the
holes will be filled. At that point, it doesn't work anymore."
To those who advocate not using carbon at all, we say: "We can
dig it! If it's working . . . don't fix it."
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I have white deposits on my tank,
filters, etc. How do I get rid of it? I have tried lemon juice
and OxyClean.
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- You were on the right track with the lemon juice. The white
deposits are lime, mostly calcium carbonate, which is
alkaline. No household chemical should ever be used on
anything that will come into contact with aquarium water.
We've had OK results with white vinegar, provided it is
allowed to soak for several hours, but Python products makes a
product called RYDIT, which will dissolve lime deposits. They
make two versions, one which can be used on an aquarium and
equipment when not in use (a stronger version), and one which
can be used on the outside of the aquarium when the tank is
set up.
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After cleaning my tank and
changing the filter cartridge, my water had remained cloudy
for 2 weeks. What can I do?
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- You probably cleaned your tank TOO well! When you clean a tank
too thoroughly, you destroy the bacteria population that keeps
your fish alive and renders ammonia harmless. The bacteria
grow back, but until they start adhering to the gravel, your
filter and other items in the aquarium, they will live in the
water, causing cloudy tank conditions. You simply have to wait
it out, and change those filter cartridges every two weeks.
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I just got a 2 gallon tank for my
Betta and after about a week my air pump started making
fizzing bubbles across the entire tank. What does that mean?
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- If you mean that air is coming up through the gravel in the
tank, it sounds as though you have the airstone for the
undergravel filter pushed down so far that it is actually
releasing air below the gravel which is bubbling up through
the gravel. I would lift the air line up a bit so the air
rises up the tube and cannot be released below the gravel.
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I am going to have to move my
fish about 800 miles by car...what is the best way to do this
without losing any fish in the process? It is about a 12 hour
drive.
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- The only guaranteed way to safely make such a long move is to
take your fish into an aquarium store that uses oxygen-packing
to bag their fish for sale, and let them bag the fish for you.
They should use doubled, over-sized bags with about 1/3 water
and 2/3 oxygen. The bagged fish should then be packed into
styrofoam containers to prevent temperature fluctuations.
Expect to pay for the service, the bags and the styrofoam
containers. If such a store does not exist within an hour's
drive from you, then you'll have to try the hard way. You may
experience up to 50% losses with this method: Use large, deep,
plastic containers with snap-on lids, and you'll need a
battery-operated air pump for each container, and some jugs of
fresh spring or distilled water. The containers must be deep
enough so that when they are 1/3 full, the fish will be
completely covered with water. Fill the containers 1/3 full
with half tank water and half spring or distilled water.
Divide your fish up between the 1/3 full containers and start
the battery air pumps. When the journey is 1/2 over, do a 50%
water change on the road. If any fish die during the journey,
remove them immediately. Good Luck!
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How often should you add sea salt
to your aquarium?
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- You should never add salt to your aquarium without doing a
water change. Salt does not evaporate and if you keep adding
salt, the salinity will rise to dangerously high levels. Do a
25% water change once a month, or change 10% every week or two
weeks, by removing some saltwater and adding new water. When
removing water, you should vacuum the substrate (gravel). When
your tank evaporates, you should only add plain water, with no
salt added.
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