Three days ago (Friday, June 3rd) my 10 gallon, which has been established for about 4 years and is live planted, imploded after a routine water change. Everything in it, from fish to snails, rolled over and died. The contents of the tank were 4 celestial danios, 2 otos, one sparkling gourami, a number of Malaysian trumpet snails, several wendtii crypts, rotala, ludwigia, and java fern. The only things left standing are the ferns. A water test at my LFS on Saturday revealed... Nothing. No ammonia, no high nitrates or nitrites, nada. The only noteworthy thing was that my ph is 8.5, which is a little more alkaline than we usually have but not atypically so because my town uses well-water. It's something which has never caused any of my fish problems in the past.
The guy at my LFS said that he saw no reason why I couldn't attempt putting a few inexpensive fish into the tank to see how things go, so I got a few Espei Rasbora (cute little guys, they are.) and watched and waited. All was well until tonight when, out of concern for the number of decaying snail bodies in the substrate, I did another small water change with a gravel vacuum. Fast forward 3 hours and 2 of the rasboras are belly-up. What could be going on here? I've never had to use a water conditioner in the past because my local water source doesn't use chloramine or many other additives, is it possible something's gotten into our wells with the onset of summer and lawn fertilizer season? Or could my ph indeed be problematic? Any other ideas? I've never had a well established tank simply fall apart like this, let alone do so without good cause. Also of note, I did a water change on my 29 gallon tank on the same day this happened with no ill-effects. Thanks for your advice!
The guy at my LFS said that he saw no reason why I couldn't attempt putting a few inexpensive fish into the tank to see how things go, so I got a few Espei Rasbora (cute little guys, they are.) and watched and waited. All was well until tonight when, out of concern for the number of decaying snail bodies in the substrate, I did another small water change with a gravel vacuum. Fast forward 3 hours and 2 of the rasboras are belly-up. What could be going on here? I've never had to use a water conditioner in the past because my local water source doesn't use chloramine or many other additives, is it possible something's gotten into our wells with the onset of summer and lawn fertilizer season? Or could my ph indeed be problematic? Any other ideas? I've never had a well established tank simply fall apart like this, let alone do so without good cause. Also of note, I did a water change on my 29 gallon tank on the same day this happened with no ill-effects. Thanks for your advice!