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Hoots : Cooling a goldfish tank during summer During the peak of last summer we had several goldfish that died after several days of hot weather and I suspect it was related. According to the Goldfish article on Wikipedia: Extremely - freshhoot.com

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Cooling a goldfish tank during summer
During the peak of last summer we had several goldfish that died after several days of hot weather and I suspect it was related.
According to the Goldfish article on Wikipedia:

Extremely high temperatures (over 30°C (86°F) can also harm goldfish

The ambient temperature sat over over 40°C (104°F) during the day and only dropped to a little under 30°C (86°F) overnight so it's almost certain the tank temperature would have exceeded that amount.

Doing some research I see there are some commercial tank cooling products available although they are relatively large / expensive and this is only a once or twice a year event in my area. A few thoughts I'd considered are:

Setup a fan pointing across the tank as a form of evaporative cooling. I assume though that would cool the top layer of water more than the bottom and I wasn't sure if the differential in temperature may make things even worse?
Introduce a large amount of tap water that I measured as a bit under 20°C (68°F) because it comes from a cooler mountain range. Considering that would need to be treated quickly chemically I could see that also having potential downsides.
Add ice cubes that have already been treated, but I imagine that could result in them floating on top and mainly cooling the top portion of the tank.

I wondered if anyone has been in a similar position and can recommend a good alternative or suggest expert opinion on which of the above options may be best?


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I have had the same issue last couple of years. I thought instead of making icecubes and treating etc also adding more water to the tank, I filled three 2ltr water-bottles and froze. No worries for the smell. Also using one at a time in the tank allowed me to have a standby ready anytime I needed. Seemed to do the trick. I lost no fish. I should say though that I have goldfish so are quite hardy to cold not so much to heat.


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Well, you didn't say so, but I assume you have a thermometer inside your tank, no? Or measured the temperature using a portable, temporary one? Since your tank is inside your house, it´s not directly at sun light, perhaps some breeze was on it, etc...

For the solutions, since it only happens few times a year, I´d go with ice cubes of pre-treated water. or as @Baarn suggested, water that you have taken from your aquarium (although it might get.. smelly... when you freeze and unfreeze it, since you´ll be killing some bacteria) . Since they won´t have chemicals that are harmful for your fish, it can be used without problems.

Since it´s necessary some energy to transform ice to water, the ice will "steal" this energy from the water, cooling all the tank. And due to convection, the cold water around the ice cube will go to the bottom of the tank, and the warmer water will go to the top, being in contact with the ice cube, and doing a cycle.

You'd just need to make things slow (so you won´t change the water temperature too fast, causing some cold shock on your fish). The thermometer will be your friend here...


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One solution I saw recently was ice, but rather than mixing it with the tank water, you add icecubes inside a sealed plastic bag like a sandwich bag.

This drives down the temperature while the ice melts, but doesn't introduce anything unexpected - our local water supply has become chlorinated recently, and its quite disgusting.

Another useful point is the little air in the bag keeps it floating, which is easier to fish out, and you can re-freeze it well enough if you're mindful of leaks.

Bonus tip - add a water thermometer inside the bag so you can see when its no longer effectively cooling and due for replacement.


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A friend of mine uses the water bottles. He also put Styrofoam or bubble wrap around to insulate the tank from the heat.
I used Styrofoam around my tank when we had a power outage in January. The tank was not in the room with the fireplace.


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Ice cubes are a good solution. I live in India where the temperatures go above 40 degrees Celsius for about 4 months of the year. Ice Cubes are what keep my fish alive. During these months my fishes enjoy the ice cubes - I have often found then fiddling around and playing with the ice cubes.

Make sure not to add more than 1% of the aquarium capacity in ice at a time as this could disturb the fish. Add ice cubes 3 times a day every 2-3 hours.


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The problem with high temperatures is that it reduces the content of dissolved oxygen in the water. Just add aeration and/or water movement (to increase the surface area of air-water interface). I have a small pond with a few 30 inch (76 cm) koi: the temperature has reached 85 °F (29 °C), I seldom check it. This is no problem with circulation.


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