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ivansng
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Posted: Nov 23rd, '11, 21:53 |
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Joined: May 13th, '09, 21:28 Posts: 2126 Gender:
Are you human?: Depends
Location: Southern River, Western Australia
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Not sure about the rest of the members, but my impression of salt bath is:
1) Take a suitable amount of water out from your existing system. So depending on the number of fishes you have, you might need a larger container, hence more water, otherwise you could be doing this for a while and require another holding tank.
2) Add sea salt to that amount of water until the recommended concentration of salt. In most cases, a salt bath would be from 6ppt and above... possibly 10ppt (10kg of salt per 1000L; do you own division).
3) Take the fishes out and put them into this container. Because the water was from the existing system, the only change is the salt, which should do them good.
4) After about 10mins, take the fishes out and put them back into the tank. Time here should be gauged depending on the health of the fish.
5) It is usually best to add salt to the tank up to 3ppt before Step 1. So when the fishes return back into the tank from the salt bath, they are in 3ppt salt concentration water.
Your method involves adding new water that would change the composition of the water, such as pH, which could stress the sick fishes out more.
And you don't use water ager because most water agers are not suitable for fish meant for human consumption. In fact on most quality brands, this statement is printed in fine print.
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RupertofOZ
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Posted: Nov 23rd, '11, 22:25 |
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If you are doing a salt bath... make sure your container is heavily oxygenated.. due to both the number of fish in a small volume... and the high salinity...
Observe.. and remove fish immediately if they appear distressed...
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