Siphon Cleaning A RCS Tank
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Siphon Cleaning A RCS Tank
Hi All,
Great site and forum! I'm an experienced fishkeeper and a novice shrimpkeeper who appreciates all the great info here. In order to keep fish healthy, we do periodic water changes and siphon waste and organic debris from the bottom of the tank. As I begin to establish my ecosystem with RCS and lots of Java Moss for the babies and adults to forage on, I notice that the newborn RCS are REALLY small and easily lost in the bottom debris that I would like to siphon off without sucking up my new shrimplets.
Anybody have any experience or a good trick up their (rolled up) sleeves as to how to effectively clean the tank bottom periodically without sucking up the smallest shrimp?
Any and all ideas will be appreciated.
Great site and forum! I'm an experienced fishkeeper and a novice shrimpkeeper who appreciates all the great info here. In order to keep fish healthy, we do periodic water changes and siphon waste and organic debris from the bottom of the tank. As I begin to establish my ecosystem with RCS and lots of Java Moss for the babies and adults to forage on, I notice that the newborn RCS are REALLY small and easily lost in the bottom debris that I would like to siphon off without sucking up my new shrimplets.
Anybody have any experience or a good trick up their (rolled up) sleeves as to how to effectively clean the tank bottom periodically without sucking up the smallest shrimp?
Any and all ideas will be appreciated.
fishguy_1955
Hello and welcome to the Forum.
I use a mess style, 5gal Paint strainer, They can be found at any do it yourself store.
Tied around the end of the siphon tube.
This mess has holes a little smaller than the fish nets. And still lets the waste go through.
It still gets plugged every once in awhile. This is the best method I have found.
Again, Welcome
John
Hello and welcome to the Forum.
I use a mess style, 5gal Paint strainer, They can be found at any do it yourself store.
Tied around the end of the siphon tube.
This mess has holes a little smaller than the fish nets. And still lets the waste go through.
It still gets plugged every once in awhile. This is the best method I have found.
Again, Welcome
John
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I use airline hose with a hard stiff length of tubing attached and I siphon this into a 5 gallon bucket. The airline tubing draws water and waste slowly from the tank and you are able to control the placement of the draw. Keep your finger on the oulet as it enters the 5 gallon bucket ready to put your finger over it in case you suck up a shrimp. Raise the hose higher than the tank and the shrimp will go back in the tank. Lower it again and continue siphoning. I use this trick for real tiny fry also.
good luck
Jason
good luck
Jason
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Great Suggestions
Thanx for the great suggestions. Turns out I had at hand a couple feet of rigid tubing and of course lots of airline tubing so I tried out Erie's suggestion and it worked perfectly in my 10 gallon RCS tank.
Paul P.
Paul P.
I never siphon/vacuum. The organic "waste" turns into shrimp food over time as bacteria colonize it. Then the shrimp eat it and process the rest into water soluble (or near water soluble) organic matter which will either get sucked up by your filter or partially removed during the next water change. That's exactly the reason why I only use enough substrate to barely cover the bottom. That way, no waste can fall through the cracks into deeper layers of a gravel substrate(where shrimp can't reach them) and rot.
Wendyjo
I have MTS, And there Poop is very fine, some what like Shrimp.
Maybe, I just do not notice it, or the bacteria breaks it down fast.
When I do water changes, I have stuff floating around in the snail free tanks, and not in the tanks with snails.
I believe snails are at the bottom of the food change and what ever comes out the south end of a north going snail have very little nutrients left.
And then the bacteria can go nuts.
Just my uneducated quess
John
I have MTS, And there Poop is very fine, some what like Shrimp.
Maybe, I just do not notice it, or the bacteria breaks it down fast.
When I do water changes, I have stuff floating around in the snail free tanks, and not in the tanks with snails.
I believe snails are at the bottom of the food change and what ever comes out the south end of a north going snail have very little nutrients left.
And then the bacteria can go nuts.
Just my uneducated quess
John
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I am glad I could be of help.
Snails are poop machines. Espescially apple snails. They like to chew on sponge filters if they do not get enough food and as soon as they do that the mess really starts.
Most of my tanks are bare bottom. And I do not like the way the crap looks like on the bottom so I siphon the crap off. It is not harmful to the shrimp it just looks crappy.
I guess it just bothers some people like myself so I remove the crud from time to time.
Jason
Snails are poop machines. Espescially apple snails. They like to chew on sponge filters if they do not get enough food and as soon as they do that the mess really starts.
Most of my tanks are bare bottom. And I do not like the way the crap looks like on the bottom so I siphon the crap off. It is not harmful to the shrimp it just looks crappy.
I guess it just bothers some people like myself so I remove the crud from time to time.
Jason