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Higher temps = lower oxygen levels. How is your dissolved o2? The more densely stocked your tank is the more quickly things can go wrong.
You have almost 4000 gallons circulating through the system but you didn't say how big the fish tank is. Some more details of the system might also help.
Fish tank size?
Grow bed type?
Grow bed/filtration size?
Pumping flow rate and schedule if using a timer?
Supplemental aeration?
And yes the testing methods?
What is your source water?
I agree that the chelated iron addition may have been totally incidental and you may have had a dead fish in the tank just not yeat floated up when you added the iron. That fish would have spiked the ammonia and could easily have triggered many more deaths.
So cloudy water and dieing fish. Question I haven't seen asked yet is... Is there a build up of fish waste or uneaten fish feed in the tank? This is the primary cause of fish deaths and opportunistic fish diseases in my personal experience, that or more lately I've had an issue with some spoiled feed giving me some issues.
Basically my system is a water feature with vegetables. The fish tank is pond with about 2250 gallons, the water is skimmed from the top and bottom into a vault with bio-filtration, pumped at approximately 7200 gallons per hour into a 100 gallon stock tank filled with filter media which is my waterfall vault. The water then cascades into two 750 gallon grow bed reservoirs containing floating rafts, the water then cascades back into the pond by way of three waterfalls. There is six waterfalls and they are providing my only aeration. I dug this into the floor of my greenhouse with a shovel and an unguided dream. Admittedly it is not the best design.
I have not been testing DO (not equipped)
Ammonia, Nitrites, and PH all cheap liquid test kits. None of them work I have realized and am out to purchase something new today.
Water comes from our well
I did find quite a large amount of uneaten feed in the water fall vault
I have not necessarily trusted my test kits all along and suspected ammonia. The only reason I have not ruled out disease is because of the place I initially got the fish and the strange snails that I assume came with them. The words "opportunistic disease" are key in that my balance and health of my system was clearly in downward spiral if and when any disease may have begun to spread.
Where to go from here? Can't let my rafts with all this good growth go just cause I killed all or most of my fish. But I do not want to repeat the massacre either.
Thanks everyone for all of your input
TCLynx said:
You have almost 4000 gallons circulating through the system but you didn't say how big the fish tank is. Some more details of the system might also help.
Fish tank size?
Grow bed type?
Grow bed/filtration size?
Pumping flow rate and schedule if using a timer?
Supplemental aeration?
And yes the testing methods?
What is your source water?
I agree that the chelated iron addition may have been totally incidental and you may have had a dead fish in the tank just not yeat floated up when you added the iron. That fish would have spiked the ammonia and could easily have triggered many more deaths.
So cloudy water and dieing fish. Question I haven't seen asked yet is... Is there a build up of fish waste or uneaten fish feed in the tank? This is the primary cause of fish deaths and opportunistic fish diseases in my personal experience, that or more lately I've had an issue with some spoiled feed giving me some issues.
Well, is the water clearing up? If so, then see what your new test kit tells you and if the fish seem to have stabilized then you may be recovering.
Sounds like you have a good amount of flow so perhaps you just had an issue of perhaps overfeeding or the fish having gone off the feed briefly (and the excess feed being sucked into the filtration before you realized it) could have caused an undetected ammonia spike due to faulty test liquid (yea the stuff sometimes goes bad.)
If things are clearing up then the remaining fish could recover and you will just have to see how it goes.
It doesn't necessarily take a huge amount of fish to provide nutrients for the plants and if the plants seem happy then even if the nitrate reads 0 there may still be enough.
I've lately had some issues with some old feed going bad and causing system health issues. I've disposed of the old feed and cleaned out all the feeders and bins and things seem better here since.
Well, is the water clearing up? If so, then see what your new test kit tells you and if the fish seem to have stabilized then you may be recovering.
Sounds like you have a good amount of flow so perhaps you just had an issue of perhaps overfeeding or the fish having gone off the feed briefly (and the excess feed being sucked into the filtration before you realized it) could have caused an undetected ammonia spike due to faulty test liquid (yea the stuff sometimes goes bad.)
If things are clearing up then the remaining fish could recover and you will just have to see how it goes.
It doesn't necessarily take a huge amount of fish to provide nutrients for the plants and if the plants seem happy then even if the nitrate reads 0 there may still be enough.
I've lately had some issues with some old feed going bad and causing system health issues. I've disposed of the old feed and cleaned out all the feeders and bins and things seem better here since.
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