Need Help!

Wrayne

New member
Joined
May 30, 2021
Messages
16
Reaction score
0
Points
1
Location
Canada
Country
Canada
I just did my first water test on my axolotl tank before I get one.. I am going to do more throughout the time being before I get one... but I need someone to tell me if this sounds right to house a happy axo!

PH- 7.5
Nitrate- 0ppm
Nitrite- 0ppm
KH (carbonate hardness)- 80ppm
GH (general hardness)- 180ppm
 
Hi! I am guessing you are using test strips for this? The best and most accurate thing to use, while still being affordable, is the API Master Freshwater Test Kit.

Have you ever heard of cycling a tank? This is the process of allowing the tank to grow the beneficial bacteria that converts ammonia into nitrites, then nitrates. Ammonia and nitrites are harmful, in any quantity. Nitrates are safe generally up to 30 ppm. Nitrates are removed from the tank either by plants or regular partial water changes. If you would like I would be happy to guide you through the steps of cycling the tank, and the different options you have here. This is the most important step. Nitrites and ammonia kill your axolotl, as will nitrates in high amounts.
 
Thank you so much! Yes I am aware of tank cycling, which is a very important part.. and do know that any ammonia and nitrite is extremely harmful to an axo.. I was planning on buying the master kit but just didn't get around to it.

From you, what are the proper levels that all of that should be at?
 
Thank you so much! Yes I am aware of tank cycling, which is a very important part.. and do know that any ammonia and nitrite is extremely harmful to an axo.. I was planning on buying the master kit but just didn't get around to it.

From you, what are the proper levels that all of that should be at?
Ammonia - 0 ppm
Nitrite - 0 ppm
Nitrate - 0-30 ppm
your GH and kh look good

Did you add a source of ammonia to the tank?
 
No I haven't
The tank will not cycle itself unfortunately! You need to add a source of ammonia (either pure ammonia or fish food) to the tank. The bacteria needs that ammonia to grow, and will start turning the ammonia into nitrites then nitrates. The API test kit will be much better than the test strips, much more accurate. It also tests ammonia, which the strips don’t do. I personally use both, they’re good to have on hand. For cycling, the test kit is a necessity. You could do what is considered a “silent cycle”. This involves purchasing a lot of plants and adding your axolotl. The plants use the ammonia and nitrates to grow, and will eat up the ammonia and nitrates while your beneficial bacteria grows, keeping it safe for your axolotl.

For a normal cycle,
1. Buy the API master test kit
2. Add some fish food
3. Test the ammonia in the tank the next morning
4. Add enough fish food for the ammonia to read 3 ppm
5. Test the ammonia, nitrites, and nitrates regularly
6. ”feed” the tank the fish food regularly

Your cycle is complete when you are regularly testing the water and the readings show only the nitrates rising. At first, the ammonia will go up, then over time the nitrites will go up, then the nitrates will go up, then the ammonia and nitrates will start to go down. The nitrates will always continue to rise. Over 30 ppm they can hurt your axolotl. Water changes and plants keep the nitrates down
 
So I had my tank cycled for over 6 months, then moved it and reset it up..

I have the same filter cartridge and I did add about a cup of water frm the cycled tank, plus I have been adding seachem stability too it.
 
So I had my tank cycled for over 6 months, then moved it and reset it up..

I have the same filter cartridge and I did add about a cup of water frm the cycled tank, plus I have been adding seachem stability too it.
The beneficial bacteria doesn’t grow in the water unfortunately, it grows on your substrate and in your filter sponge or cartridge. How did you rinse your filter cartridge when you moved it? If it dried out or you used water with chlorine in it, the bacteria will have died.

The seachem stability is great! Add a big pinch of fish food to your tank, and watch what those nitrites and nitrates do, get an API test kit too so you can see what the ammonia does. If in a day or two after the food there is no ammonia or nitrites your tank is cycled
 
Okay I will do that! I kept the filter cartridge in a baggie without rinsing it, it had only been in the bag for a day until I set my tank up again.
 
General chit-chat
Help Users
  • No one is chatting at the moment.
    There are no messages in the chat. Be the first one to say Hi!
    Back
    Top