Hi,
I have recently finished cycling a 50 gallon aquarium in my classroom. Currently there are 2 clownfish, 6 hermit crabs, 3 snails, and a serpent starfish. The school ran out of money before they could buy my light, and the assistant principal just ordered a 48 watt light yesterday, so I have nothing that photosynthesizes.
I have been having problems with my pH and KH due to the nature of this location.
Throughout my cycle I have been noticing that my pH was consistently low, with the windows open (the DOE turns on way too much heat), my pH was usually between 7.9 and 8.1. After a 3 day weekend where I wasn't allowed in the building the maintenance staff closed the windows and when I returned the pH was 7. I purchased a carbon dioxide monitor for my classroom and noticed that when the classroom is empty and all the windows are open, it is usually in the 1700 ppm range, and when I have students, it rises quickly to 3000 ppm or higher. (every other classroom is worse because somehow the teachers there don't mind the oppressive heat and keep the windows closed, no wonder all the students are always falling asleep in their desks or complaining of headaches!) I put notes on all the windows not to close them unless the carbon dioxide levels are in triple digits. Maintenance always closes the windows at night because otherwise the rats crawl in and wreak havoc in the classrooms.
Before adding animals I put a lump of crushed corals to try to prevent the pH from dropping. i wasn't testing kh yet. This was about a week ago and since then I have added the animals. Today I went into the classroom and tested the kh for the first time. It was 19, despite the pH never once having risen above 8.0, ever. Is this dangerous for the animals I currently have, and what can I do about this problem? I don't want to dilute it with RODI water because it's hard to access, only one person is strong enough to get the jugs back and forth from the LFS to the car to the building and that person is very much not me. In addition, the salinity is only 31 ppm currently on both my Hanna and my hydrometer, and I want to raise this up before getting corals.
Is there any possible source of this problem that I'm missing, and what can I do about it?
I have recently finished cycling a 50 gallon aquarium in my classroom. Currently there are 2 clownfish, 6 hermit crabs, 3 snails, and a serpent starfish. The school ran out of money before they could buy my light, and the assistant principal just ordered a 48 watt light yesterday, so I have nothing that photosynthesizes.
I have been having problems with my pH and KH due to the nature of this location.
Throughout my cycle I have been noticing that my pH was consistently low, with the windows open (the DOE turns on way too much heat), my pH was usually between 7.9 and 8.1. After a 3 day weekend where I wasn't allowed in the building the maintenance staff closed the windows and when I returned the pH was 7. I purchased a carbon dioxide monitor for my classroom and noticed that when the classroom is empty and all the windows are open, it is usually in the 1700 ppm range, and when I have students, it rises quickly to 3000 ppm or higher. (every other classroom is worse because somehow the teachers there don't mind the oppressive heat and keep the windows closed, no wonder all the students are always falling asleep in their desks or complaining of headaches!) I put notes on all the windows not to close them unless the carbon dioxide levels are in triple digits. Maintenance always closes the windows at night because otherwise the rats crawl in and wreak havoc in the classrooms.
Before adding animals I put a lump of crushed corals to try to prevent the pH from dropping. i wasn't testing kh yet. This was about a week ago and since then I have added the animals. Today I went into the classroom and tested the kh for the first time. It was 19, despite the pH never once having risen above 8.0, ever. Is this dangerous for the animals I currently have, and what can I do about this problem? I don't want to dilute it with RODI water because it's hard to access, only one person is strong enough to get the jugs back and forth from the LFS to the car to the building and that person is very much not me. In addition, the salinity is only 31 ppm currently on both my Hanna and my hydrometer, and I want to raise this up before getting corals.
Is there any possible source of this problem that I'm missing, and what can I do about it?