How To Acclimate New Fish To Your Aquarium
by Aquariumpros.com staff
Reprinted with permission
http://www.aquariumpros.com/company
Aquarticles
It is important to remember that aquatic animals are sensitive to rapid changes in
their environment. A sudden change in temperature or water quality can send a fish into
shock. If a fish dies within a day or two after you buy it, the chances are good that it
was not acclimated SLOWLY to the conditions in your aquarium. The following procedures
will help a fish to adapt to the water conditions in your tank.
Please note that saltwater fish require longer acclimation:
Regardless of whether you have salt or freshwater fish, start by feeding the old fish
in your tank so that they don't attack the newcomers. If you have a saltwater aquarium, or
an aggressive community of freshwater fish (most saltwater aquariums can be classified as
aggressive in varying degrees), re-arrange the decorations in the tank to help reduce
aggression toward the new fish, by changing the territories around. Turn off the aquarium
lights to reduce stress. Float the UNOPENED bag of fish in your tank for THIRTY minutes.
Then open the bag and roll the bag down to the level of water in the bag in the same way
that you would roll up your shirt sleeves. This forms an "inner-tube" at the top
of the bag so it will float while opened without sinking.
NOTE! If you are acclimating an eel, a wrasse, goby or any other torpedo-shaped fish,
DO NOT ROLL THE BAG DOWN! These fish have a tendency to jump out prematurely into the
tank. Instead, open the bag, and while acclimating, trap the top of the bag under the tank
lid to keep the fish from escaping.
Freshwater: exchange 1/4 of the water in the bag with the water in your aquarium every
TEN minutes for a HALF HOUR. Then release the fish. Acclimate snails, crabs and crayfish
too!
Saltwater: exchange 1/4 of the water in the bag with the water in your aquarium every
TEN minutes for ONE HOUR. Then release the fish. Acclimate SW invertebrates the same way!
Larger fish may be acclimated to the aquarium using the "drip-line" method.
Here, the fish is placed in a bucket set below the tank which has been filled with several
inches of aquarium water. The fish in the "store water" is poured into the
bucket. A six foot section of aquarium airline is used to start a siphon from the aquarium
into the bucket. A loose "knot" is then tied in the airline so that the water
entering the bucket does so at the rate of one drop per second. After a couple of hours,
the fish may be netted and added to the tank.
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