Maintaining Oxygen Levels in Fish and KOI Ponds
The oxygen level in your pond has a dramatic effect on your pond fish. Read this
informative article and learn how to provide better care for your pond fish.
By Brett Fogle
Severe environmental stressors are the most frequent causes of sudden fish death in
garden ponds or other fish habitats, and the lack of oxygen in the water is the number 1
stressor of all.
Two major factors contributing to fish-pond oxygen loss concern blooming algae. During
daylight hours, algae make oxygen; during the night,however, the plants take oxygen. If
algae are profusely blooming, the plants deplete all the ponds oxygen during the
night, which in turn, causes fish inhabiting the pond to die.
Another way that algae trigger oxygen loss is by dying suddenly. Algae-bloom death
occurs naturally or from chemical treatment of an algaecide. When algae die suddenly
from either cause the oxygen becomes quickly depleted because the algae no
longer are alive and making it.
Then, when dead algae begin to decompose, the decaying process even further depletes
oxygen. Fish have been observed gulping for oxygen at the waters surface in sixty
minutes or less from the onset of sudden algae death.
In ponds stocked liberally with many fish, often the oxygen level is just adequate
enough to sustain them. If any further claim on the existing oxygen is made, this delicate
environmental balance will be upset. When no or inadequate aeration is provided, along
with rising warm-weather water temperatures, the conditions for fish survival become
critical.
As water warms, its oxygen-retaining capacity decreases. Consequently, small fountains,
waterfalls, or other water-aerating devices are incapable of providing adequate oxygen for
fish. Additional oxygen should be introduced through brisk aeration when fighting algae,
most importantly when water temperatures surpass eighty degrees Fahrenheit.
Testing devices are the only sure method to accurately read oxygen levels. Because
these devices are not usually on hand for the average person maintaining a water garden or
fish pond, the easiest way to ensure sufficient oxygen levels is to provide generous and
continual aeration. Pumps and diffusers that bubble air into the water or
large waterfalls, fountains, and other splashing water devices are common ways
to get sufficient oxygen into the pond. When the weather is warm, or if an algae problem
exists, it is imperative that supplemental aeration be provided constantly, throughout the
day and night.
One other algae-caused loss of fish has gained attention and is being studied in areas
around the world. These fish-killing algal varieties contain potent toxins that trigger
sudden fish death. If a pond hosts these particularly virulent algae, devastating fish
loss can result, seemingly more so when a quick die-off of algal bloom occurs. The blooms
discharge their toxins concurrently, and some or all fish in the pond are adversely
affected or killed. Fortunately, since pond owners are unable to identify these algae,
this danger is rare.
Keep your oxygen levels under control at all times and you will greatly increase your
the lifespan of your fish.
About The Author
Brett Fogle is the owner of MacArthur Water Gardens and several pond-related websites
including macarthurwatergardens.com and pond-filters-online.com. He also publishes a free
monthly newsletter called PondStuff! with a reader circulation of over 9,000 pond owners.
To sign up for the free newsletter and receive a complimentary 'New Pond Owners Guide' for
joining, just visit MacArthur Water Gardens website.