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Guppies hanging out towards top of tank

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39K views 11 replies 5 participants last post by  Desert Pupfish  
I recently added 3 male guppies to a moderately planted 20 gallon long tank (48 hours ago). On the first day, all three roamed around the tank and acted very normal. The following day, one was spending a lot of time right up against the surface of the water. His fins move, but he stays in place. I tested my water, and everything looked fine (ammonia 0ppm, nitrite 0ppm, nitrates 10-20ppm), but I went ahead and did a 25% water change to be safe. I did not notice a change in this behavior. Today, two guppies are now exhibiting this behavior. The third occasionally comes to the surface, swimming near the other two but eventually going back to roaming around the tank.
It is normal for guppies to spend most of their time near the surface. If they show other signs of distress, such as; closed fins, hiding in corners, wobbling along their length or obvious disease symptoms, then you should be concerned.
 
Your water parameters look good for live-bearers. I think you just have a finicky one that may, or may not, adapt. I can't tell how long your tank has been set up, but if it's only recently, keep your eye on ammonia and nitrites for a few weeks. Continue with the weekly water changes and make sure you clean the filter with each water change.

Are they all eating normally (jump for the food)? If so, that's a good sign, but inspect them once or twice a day for signs of disease.
 
My guppies are constantly very active at, mostly, the top ...and I have very poor water parameters for guppies (~2.8 dGH, 0 dKH and TDS <100). Your conditions are better, the guppies may be ok with a little more time and consistent water (no big changes unless you measure something bad developing).

The only other thoughts I can come up with are:

- Circulation - could it be a little too much for them? You have to be the judge of that but, if you decide to cut down, try not to sacrifice surface agitation to keep gas exchange going strong.

- Could your tap contain something evil, such as way too much copper or other metal? Your water company should be able to provide this info.

- I'd put some AC in my filter and, also, some Purigen. It may be possible to scavenge some bad actors, if they are present. You can remove them when/if the guppies return to an active condition.
 
I wouldn't give up. My guppies (mostly male), in the unfavorable water I have for them, behave just like @jeffkrol's do by swimming (playing) directly into the flow from the pumps and are very active throughout the tank.

I think you hit it when you suspect a knock-down shock from transfer. It may help to acclimate your fish between LFS and your tank - assuming that you don't now. For example; when I set up my QT for new fish, I test the LFS water for GH, KH and TDS. I then adjust the QT water to match these LFS levels before putting the new fish into it. Then, over several weeks (primarily to observe for disease), I gradually adjust the QT water to my display tank water so that they match before moving the fish into the display tank.