I just setup a 100 gallon pond in my back yard and I have a couple questions and one mystery.
1. I'm using a 633gph pump to feed a pressurized canister filter filled with lava rocks and a course filter pad giving ~6 turnovers per hour. I'm used to saltwater tanks where more turnover is better. Is this turnover too much for bio filtration to work well in my pond?
2. Would covering the bottom with gravel or lava-rocks be a good idea or not? Right now there is no substrate
3. I used water conditioner, de-chlorinator, and bacteria. Then stocked the pond with 10 1" feeder goldfish. Aeration is sufficient. I expected to lose a few as the pond established and I have so far lost 4. Here's the weird thing, I tested the water both myself and at lfs and there were no traces of ammonia, nitrite, or nitrate. The water was only a little acidic, probably from the lava rocks. I've fed several times as well. Question is, how could there be no nitrate if ammonia and nitrate are at zero ? And Whats killing the fish?
1. I'm using a 633gph pump to feed a pressurized canister filter filled with lava rocks and a course filter pad giving ~6 turnovers per hour. I'm used to saltwater tanks where more turnover is better. Is this turnover too much for bio filtration to work well in my pond?
2. Would covering the bottom with gravel or lava-rocks be a good idea or not? Right now there is no substrate
3. I used water conditioner, de-chlorinator, and bacteria. Then stocked the pond with 10 1" feeder goldfish. Aeration is sufficient. I expected to lose a few as the pond established and I have so far lost 4. Here's the weird thing, I tested the water both myself and at lfs and there were no traces of ammonia, nitrite, or nitrate. The water was only a little acidic, probably from the lava rocks. I've fed several times as well. Question is, how could there be no nitrate if ammonia and nitrate are at zero ? And Whats killing the fish?