Jzehr125
New member
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2011
- Messages
- 47
- Reaction score
- 2
- Points
- 0
- Location
- East-Central Pennsylvania
- Country
- United States
- Display Name
- Ailin
In the past week-week and a half, I've come to notice that my axolotl's water is cloudy. At first, I thought this was just general uncleanliness, or caused by some food that I may have missed during clean-up, but after extensive cleaning with a siphon (I have sand as substrate), stirring up the sand, removing objects before siphoning, and doing 25-30% water changes and having no effect on the cloudiness, I've come to suspect that the problem is dust.
A bit ago, I had posted a thread about a film on the surface of my water, which turned out to be a layer of dust, caused by a fan that I use to keep the water from getting too warm. I got rid of the problem of dust on the surface (although there's still a bit of it in "whirlpools" by the edge of my filter), but I've come to wonder if perhaps there is dust building up in the water itself. What has me baffled is why the filter won't pull any of it out. Or, perhaps, is it something to do with the sand? I like how the sand looks, but if it's causing problems, I have no issue with taking it out.
I'd rate the "cloudiness" as a bit of a minor fog: I can see through the entire tank just fine, but like low-lying fog, the more distant objects seem to be paler and a bit hazy. Other details: There seems to be "white scale" (or perhaps, more dust) around where the waterline has been.
My tank is relatively small, since I have a 2 month old axolotl (it will be upgraded when Ailin gets bigger). The tank is about 2-2.5 gallons and 14.5 inches long, and with the fan, there is a high evaporation rate. Some dust and sand seems to be sticking to the inside of the plastic below the water level. Even with water changes, the cloudiness doesn't seem to change for better or worse. Unfortunately, I can't provide water parameters at the moment, as my pet store doesn't carry a water test kit that tests anything other than pH. My axolotl doesn't seem to be stressed, however, this is also my first axolotl so it is possible I'm missing stress signs, and I don't want conditions to get to the point where Ailin is stressed.
Also, the water has no foul smell or odor at all.
Any ideas as to what may be causing this or how to fix it?
A bit ago, I had posted a thread about a film on the surface of my water, which turned out to be a layer of dust, caused by a fan that I use to keep the water from getting too warm. I got rid of the problem of dust on the surface (although there's still a bit of it in "whirlpools" by the edge of my filter), but I've come to wonder if perhaps there is dust building up in the water itself. What has me baffled is why the filter won't pull any of it out. Or, perhaps, is it something to do with the sand? I like how the sand looks, but if it's causing problems, I have no issue with taking it out.
I'd rate the "cloudiness" as a bit of a minor fog: I can see through the entire tank just fine, but like low-lying fog, the more distant objects seem to be paler and a bit hazy. Other details: There seems to be "white scale" (or perhaps, more dust) around where the waterline has been.
My tank is relatively small, since I have a 2 month old axolotl (it will be upgraded when Ailin gets bigger). The tank is about 2-2.5 gallons and 14.5 inches long, and with the fan, there is a high evaporation rate. Some dust and sand seems to be sticking to the inside of the plastic below the water level. Even with water changes, the cloudiness doesn't seem to change for better or worse. Unfortunately, I can't provide water parameters at the moment, as my pet store doesn't carry a water test kit that tests anything other than pH. My axolotl doesn't seem to be stressed, however, this is also my first axolotl so it is possible I'm missing stress signs, and I don't want conditions to get to the point where Ailin is stressed.
Also, the water has no foul smell or odor at all.
Any ideas as to what may be causing this or how to fix it?
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