Start With Your Source Water

Before buying equipment or rare livestock, take a closer look at the water you’re filling your tank with.

⚠️ Important: Most “master test kits” don’t include GH or KH. Even many pet stores won’t test for them. Yet these values are critical for plants, shrimp, snails, and overall stability. In saltwater, alkalinity, calcium, and magnesium take their place as the “big three.”


Reality Check: Saltwater vs Freshwater

Saltwater Aquariums

Freshwater Aquariums


General Hardness (GH) – Freshwater Only

GH measures dissolved calcium and magnesium.

Where it comes from: geology (limestone, dolomite, gypsum), tap water, or RO/DI (zero unless remineralized).

Why it varies:


Carbonate Hardness (KH) – Freshwater Buffer

KH measures carbonates and bicarbonates, which buffer acids and stabilize pH.

Think of KH as your tank’s shock absorber:

⚠️ Why it matters: KH prevents acids (from fish waste, CO₂, or organics) from dropping your pH too quickly. Without KH, water may test fine in the morning but crash by night.


Saltwater Balance: Alkalinity, Calcium & Magnesium

In reef tanks, the focus shifts from GH/KH to the “big three”:

⚠️ If these drift, sensitive corals (especially SPS) can lose tissue or stop growing.


pH – The Number Everyone Watches

pH shows if water is acidic or alkaline. Stability matters more than the exact number.


Easy vs Difficult Species

Easy species (adaptable):

Difficult species (need stability):


Real-World Ranges (With Plant Matches)

Community Planted Tank (Tetras, Rasboras)

Livebearers (Guppies, Mollies, Swordtails, Platies)

Neocaridina Shrimp (Cherry Shrimp, etc.)

Caridina Shrimp (Crystal, Bee, etc.)

African Rift Cichlids (Mbuna, Peacock, Tanganyikan)

Reef Tanks (Saltwater)


Adjusting GH, KH, or Alkalinity

To raise hardness/alkalinity:

To lower hardness/alkalinity:

⚠️ Avoid quick fixes: Chemicals like pH Down don’t remove minerals — they only mask them.


Testing That Matters

Accurate testing is the backbone of stability.

⚠️ Reminder: Most “master kits” skip GH and KH. Many pet stores won’t test them either — ignoring these values leads to long-term problems.


Final Thoughts

Stable water chemistry is the single most important factor in long-term aquarium success.

When your parameters are balanced:

👉 Next up: We’ll cover water testing in detail and how to use RO/DI properly — when it’s required and how to remineralize for total control.

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