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Charlie Spitzer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > soap > why are you concerned about surface tension in the first place? Charlie's right. In a freshwater aquarium, the only way you will deviate from "normal" surface tension is by adding a surfactant like soap or dawn or laundry detergent etc. But then your fish will be injured or dying... Surface tension does not play a role in oxygenation. Oxygen gets into your tank primarily by diffusing into the water at the surface. If the water is still, the layer at the surface gets more saturated with oxygen, but the lower depths can become oxygen defficient. That is why water movement is important. It is the water movement caused by bubbles (from an airstone) that promotes oxygenation and not the bubbles. They are small and have very little oxygen in them compared to the rest of the atmosphere that interacts with the surface of your water comlumn. In overstocked tanks when the power goes out and there is no pump or filter or airstone to circulate the water, fish can suffocate to death because they will use up the dissolved oxygen faster than it can diffuse into the tank. On the other hand, if you run a sump/trickle tower arrangement, you will never have to worry about low oxygenation because the large surface area of the biomedia promotes very efficient gas exchange. See: http://cichlidae.com/articles/a014.html JLD
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