Churley, These DO test do not have to be done in actual tournament conditions, they can be done any time, in any boat livewell containing any species of fish, any day, anywhere or any boat livewell.
If the livewell water has been treated with Rejuvenade, your DO meter reading will be inaccurate. Your meter will go hay-wire immediately when you put the probe into the water… the reading will immediately peg off the scale. And when you test the water, please record the date, the biomass of fish in the well, the well water temperature, the DO Concentration (PPM) and the DO Saturation (% Saturation)… DO % Saturation and biomass of fish being most important. Also note if the livewell is being aerated with air bubblers, water pumps and spray bars, livewell vents, Oxygenators, compressed oxygen –injection systems, etc.
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Degreen, Thanks for joining the discussion.
Yes, I have seen this Sure Life infomercial staring Doug Hannon the bass pro promoting the use of hydrogen peroxide to oxygenate livewell water to bass fishermen. Your right, H2O2 is still somewhat popular around the bass tournament fishing industry; it’s cheap and available at any drug store or 7/11.
Here’s a couple other more scientific based opinions about using hydrogen peroxide to oxygenate livewell water you may not have seen or be aware of.
I am far more impressed with the opinions and validity of the H2O2 research published by TP&WD and B.A.S.S./ESPN professional fishery biologist.
Check this out when you have time if you like:
Hydrogen peroxide for bass boat livewells published February 14, 2012 by Randy Myers, Fishery Biologist, Texas Parks and Wildlife Department Inland Fisheries Division District 1D, Management 12861 Galm Rd. San Antonio, Texas 210-688-9460
http://www.slideshare.net/raminlandfish/hydrogen-peroxide-for-bass-boat-livewells
Keeping Bass Alive A Guidebook for Anglers and Tournament Organizers
http://assets.espn.go.com/winnercomm/outdoors/bassmaster/pdf/Keeping_Bass_Alive.pdf
By: Gene Gilliland [Gene Gilliland is currently the B.A.S.S. National Conservation Director effective January 1, 2014.]
Oklahoma Fisheries Research Lab
Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation
Norman, OK 73072
By: Hal Schramm
US Geological Survey
Mississippi Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Center
Mississippi State University
Mississippi State, Mississippi 39762
By: Bruce Schupp
National Conservation Director B.A.S.S.*
Montgomery, AL 36117
Published by: ESPN Productions, Inc./B.A.S.S.
5854 Carmichael Rd.
Montgomery, AL 36117
Copyright 2002 B.A.S.S.* Montgomery, AL
CHEMICALS
Another chemical that has sometimes been used to treat livewell or holding tank water is Hydrogen Peroxide (H2O2). Hydrogen Peroxide breaks down into oxygen and water in the presence of organic matter. However, this chemical can injure fish and should not be used. Most people have used this colorless, odorless, tasteless liquid to disinfect a cut or scratch. You can see it fizzing and bubbling on the skin as it oxidizes. Now imagine what it does in a livewell full of bass. The bass’ mucus coating protects its skin from the oxidation reaction, but there is no such protective coating on the delicate gill filaments. Unfortunately, anglers that use Hydrogen Peroxide think that is a little is good, a little more should be better. Wrong! Damage to gill filaments, suffocation, and death may result. DO NOT USE HYDROGEN PEROXIDE IN THE LIVEWELL - pg 21
Looks like a no-brainer to me when/if you actually compare this Sure Life infomercial staring Doug Hannon (G bless Doug’s soul) to the published research from these TP&WD and B.A.S.S./ESPN organizations and their fishery experts.
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WaterChap, Thanks for joining the discussion today.
Actually maintaining safe water quality is very simple and easy with steady state aquarium conditions; controlled environment, no stress, controlled water temperature, never overstocked with fish, very low to no stressors.
Transporting traumatized tournament caught mature bass for 5-6 hours in a vibrating rough bass boat livewell on a hot summer day in August is continuous unnatural extremely high stress during summer tournament conditions compares to the home aquarium environment. Managing water quality is also very different in summer bass boat livewells during all day transports vs. managing water quality in your home aquarium.
Running the livewell pump a few minutes occasionally during the day totally controls ammonia and nitrites in bass boat livewells. Running the livewell aerator aerates the well water reducing dissolved CO2 and some of the carbonic acid in the water the water pump doesn’t flush out.
You may or may not know that hypoxia (lack of oxygen) can kill fish and people in a few minutes. For captive tournament caught bass being transported in boat livewells; ammonia, nitrites and dissolved CO2 take many hours to build to lethal concentrations. These toxic concentrations are continuous being minimized, flushed out with the livewell water pumps during the day… unless the livewell water pump fails.
Finbully, thanks for joining in and sharing.
You ask, “If I leave my system on recirculation, will that solve the problem of low DO? It's a 2018 Ranger Z521L with the factory oxygenating system Ranger uses.”
Maybe… have you tried that yet?
Do you or have you ever had any problems with low DO killing bass in your livewell?
Most tournament fishermen have never had any problems with low DO’s because they have never overstocked their livewell with a tournament catch. They have never caught 5 bass large enough to overstock their livewell and cause a DO deficit in their livewell water. The boat aerator and water pumps provided enough DO for the catch.
Generally when a low DO problem exhibits and you see your bass suffocating in boat livewells is when the oxygen demand of the total biomass of fish has exceeded natural oxygenating limits using air, aerators and water pumps. That’s common in the summer around 2 PM when you have a winning stringer of bass in your livewell hoping and praying that 1 or 2 bass don’t die before the weigh-in and you’re popped with the “dead fish penalty” and lose the money.
What kind of factory oxygenating system came with your Ranger boat? Do you have any idea how much that oxygenation system added to the price if your boat? It definitely was not free.