I have always been told that we should try and maintain constant temp, or raise or lower temp very slow. I am wondering if this holds true with temprate fish. Even in South Alabama in the summer time there is a noticeable difference between top layers of water and the bottom, in almost any river, or large lake.
if i do a 50% water change on a tank and lower the temp by 6 or 7 deg F how is that different than a fish swimming to a deeper location on a river where there is a temp change of the same or different ammount?
I can understand keeping constant temp with tropicals, i would bet the tempature layering in most rivers in brazil or central america is much less than in north america.
O2 content of water is a seperate issue, warm water has less o2 than colder water, but i would think that this can be eliminated using power heads or air stones

question about tempature swings
Started by
Guest_hmt321_*
, Oct 31 2006 04:41 PM
8 replies to this topic
#1
Guest_hmt321_*
Posted 31 October 2006 - 04:41 PM
#2
Guest_Irate Mormon_*
Posted 31 October 2006 - 06:37 PM
Well, fishes in the wild can change their position in the water column at will, so if they get too hot/cold they can always move. Not so in an aquarium. I think temperate fishes should have the same temperature regimen as tropicals WRT short-term changes.
#3
Guest_Skipjack_*
Posted 31 October 2006 - 07:01 PM
I am a temperature swinger! I change water with cold faucet water year around except for species (few) that I find to be intolerant. I do the changes slow. I Am even a bit lax on acclimating natives. I do it, but likely not as long as reccommended. I find that I have alot more trouble bringing native fish UP in temp, than DOWN in temp. I do not advocate my laziness, but simply say that it causes me no real amount of trouble. To quantify this, ALOT of fish pass through my basement in a year with very little death loss, and many very happy buyers.
#4
Guest_dredcon_*
Posted 31 October 2006 - 07:27 PM
What species are you cautious with?
#5
Guest_Skipjack_*
Posted 31 October 2006 - 07:39 PM
SRBD mostly, seem to be the most susceptible to slimecoat issues of any of the fish I keep. Also various "shiner" types. Other than that Temp swings seem to be a non issue. I am not talking huge temp swings, but less than 10 degrees. Again, I am not advocating this! I am simply stating what seems to work fine for me. I know, I am bad! I break the rules! But a fish that dies from a temp swing, was not healthy in the first place! I believe that it can be used as a tool to cull out the weak.
#6
Guest_hmt321_*
Posted 01 November 2006 - 11:50 AM
let me give you a "for instance"
I do 50% water changes on my 40 gal weekly, with a 3year old in the house i have a hard time aging 20 gal of water. In the summer time my tap water is around 86 f my tank stays at 79-80 in the summer. so when i change the water, via python i end up with 83- 84 deg water
the tank is heavily planted and i have co2, the plants pearl constantly (which i have read is a sign of o2 saturation) so i am not worried about o2 depleation, do you think i am causing the fish harm? I add declorinater into the tank about 3 times during the fill up.
thanks
I do 50% water changes on my 40 gal weekly, with a 3year old in the house i have a hard time aging 20 gal of water. In the summer time my tap water is around 86 f my tank stays at 79-80 in the summer. so when i change the water, via python i end up with 83- 84 deg water
the tank is heavily planted and i have co2, the plants pearl constantly (which i have read is a sign of o2 saturation) so i am not worried about o2 depleation, do you think i am causing the fish harm? I add declorinater into the tank about 3 times during the fill up.
thanks
#7
Guest_Irate Mormon_*
Posted 01 November 2006 - 06:38 PM
I don't really see a problem there, Harry.
#8
Guest_Skipjack_*
Posted 01 November 2006 - 06:48 PM
I really would not be concerned. Watch your fish, do they seem stressed? If you are really concerned, keep a couple of ice packs in the freezer, and add them when you do water changes. Should help keep it a bit cooler.
#9
Guest_hmt321_*
Posted 01 November 2006 - 09:13 PM
the fish dont seem concerned at the least
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