FAQs on Freshwater Stingray Infectious Disease
FAQs on FW Stingray Disease:
FW Stingray Disease 1,
FW Stingray Disease
2, FW Stingray Disease 3,
FW Stingray Disease 4,
FAQs on FW Stingray Disease by Category:
Diagnosis,
Environment,
Nutrition,
Trauma,
Parasitic,
Social,
Treatments
Related Articles:
Freshwater Stingrays,
Related FAQs: Freshwater Stingrays,
FW Stingray Identification,
FW Stingray Behavior,
FW Stingray Compatibility,
FW Stingray Selection,
FW Stingray Systems,
FW Stingray Feeding,
FW Stingray Reproduction,
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Potamotrygonids are VERY
susceptible to infectious agents from simple environmental insults,
traumas, tankmate mal-interactions.
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Potamotrygon, bacterial involvement?
1/6/17
I am trying to find out if Potamotrygon species of stingrays can be infected
by Columnaris.
<Mmm; yes... I think so. Try the string, "Potamotrygon and Flavobacterium
columnare" and you'll find a few "scholarly articles" linking the two>
A friend recently had new pups appx 7 days ago and now these white
spots/patches have randomly started to appear on them. I have treated
Columnaris on Scats and cichlids for other bacterial and fungal issues
topically with Methylene Blue with great success, but not sure if this would
be OK with Stingrays.
<Methylene Blue should be safe; though I don't know how effective>
I also breed them but have never had this issue. Any help would be
appreciated, I do have a couple pics he sent.
<I'd do your best to produce and maintain "high quality" water; of low total
bacteria count... I.e., massive water changes with soft, acidic new water
frequently; over-filtered, uber-aerated... And optimized nutrition.
Bob Fenner>
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Fungus on Reticulated Stingray
8/8/13
Picked up new pair of Reticulated (Teacup) Stingrays, the female
developed a small fungus on the barb. There were no caps used at the LFS
they were purchased from, however it could have already been there just
unnoticed when purchased.
They are currently in a 55 gallon quarantine tank, once fungus is
removed they will be moved into a 225 gal with a fx5 canister and 55
gallon sump.
My question is, how to treat this fungus outbreak? I've done what I feel
to be inferior research, even though its been extensive. I've never
owned rays before this. I started a Pimafix regime, read online it was
ray safe. Been 4 days and there has been no improvement visible to the
naked eye. Can I continue usage and add salt? Should I finish the week
of Pimafix, and if not better try salt?
What are your recommendations?
Thank you for your time, hopefully you can help me,
Devin
<Hi Devin. Since you're keeping stingrays, money is presumably no
object, as you already (hopefully) know that these fish are very
expensive to keep well. Basically, prevention is 99% of what you can do
so far as stingray health goes. Once they're sick, then you really can't
rely on anything bought from an aquarium shop -- including Pimafix. On
the plus side, if you can get these fish into optimal conditions
immediately, and by that I mean your 200+ gallon system (with mature
filter, naturally) then your stingray may well heal spontaneously.
That's often what happens with very minor wounds. Paradoxically, most
fungal infections happen secondarily to bacterial infections, so the
recommended treatment (e.g., by Richard Ross, whose book/s you must
surely have read) is injectable antibiotics that get rid of bacterial
infection so the fungal infection can fade away. That's where the money
no object aspect comes in. Call a vet specialising in fish, because
you'll need reliable advice here. Obviously you can't randomly add
antibiotics to the water because these have the real potential to cause
stingrays harm. Again, Richard Ross goes into all this. You can't use
traditional medications like Methylene Blue or Malachite Green either as
these tend to be quickly toxic to stingrays. As for Pimafix and Melafix,
some folks have used them successfully, others find they do more harm
than good (WWM owner Bob Fenner for one), and as a very general comment,
time wasted with these sometimes-useful, sometimes-harmful medications
is time you could have used something with a much higher probability of
working at less risk, so on that basis alone I'd skip them. The use of
salt is an interesting idea. The Potamotrygonidae have some tolerance
for salt, likely given their marine ancestry, as evidenced by laboratory
work as well as
aquarium hear-say, so in itself it shouldn't cause any undue harm to
these strictly freshwater rays. Salt can and does slow down the spread
of fungal infections (though rarely bacterial infections) and may
provide some degree of support to a fish with an otherwise functional
immune system that can drive off a mild infection given that little
extra help. But salt is rarely a "silver bullet" in itself, so do review
aquarium environmental conditions and any potentially damaging objects
in the tank (including tankmates), and act accordingly. But as I say
above, at the end of the day calling a qualified vet is the best/only
reliable approach for medicating stingrays, and something you presumably
budgeted for before purchase, so the minor expense shouldn't phase you
(and in any case, will be trivially small compared to the cost of those
thousands of gallons of reverse-osmosis water you're going to be getting
though during water changes every year!). Hope this helps, Neale.>
Re: Fungus on Reticulated Stingray (Bob, is Pimafix/Melafix useful on
Elasmobranchs?)<<Is not. RMF>>
Neale,
Without explaining too much into detail, lets just say the area I'm
located isn't... stingray friendly.
<Understood.>
So vets aren't an option unfortunately. I may be able to call in a favor
to a friend who works at a aquarium.
<Ah, next best thing. As I said, provided conditions are optimal in the
aquarium, minor wounds can/will heal under their own steam, but if the
infection spreads/shows no sign of clearing up, then treating stingrays
is troublesome. As Bob says in the subject line of this message, Melafix
and Pimafix are not reliably useful when treating this group of
animals.>
Thank you for your time, I appreciate the rapid response.
Devin
<Most welcome. Do also procure Richard Ross' book; will be money well
spent. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Fungus on Reticulated Stingray (Bob, is Pimafix/Melafix useful on
Elasmobranchs?) 8/8/13
I found a copy of the book, will be purchasing. Didn't know the
literature existed till I found this website.
<Good purchase. Richard Ross is "the man" when it comes to stingrays.>
Again I appreciate your time and your response, I have one more question
for you. Promise, this will be the last.
<No need for promising such; we're happy to help.>
The LFS I purchased the rays from has done their best to help me. I
called them yesterday about possibly procuring some injectable
antibiotics and overnighting them to me, and she didn't know what I was
talking about. I explained to her what you had sent me in previous
emails, and what I had found online (which contradicted her original
treatment plan -Melafix/PimaFix), should sent me an email a few hours
later talking about a treatment called Maracyn 2.
<Yes. Widely sold in the US, not necessarily elsewhere. In any case,
it's simply Minocycline (Maracyn 1, if you're curious, is
Erythromycin,
while Maracyn Plus is Sulfadimidine and Trimethoprim. Both Maracyn 1 and
Maracyn 2 are relatively mild and seem well-tolerated by most/all fish,
and worth a shot, though can't promise anything.>
I looked it up and found some personal reviews by other ray keepers on
monsterfishkeepers.com. Was wondering what your thoughts were before I
might try this treatment is PimaFix and salt prove to be unsuccessful
(as of this morning still no signs of improvement).
<I would rate Maracyn 2 far above Melafix and Pimafix; you can certainly
use the Maracyn 2 alongside salt if needs be.>
The 225 is not quite cycled, or they'd have been moved already, should
be another few days at the least before that tank is ready.
<Sounds like you have a game plan. Good luck, Neale.>
Re: Fungus on Reticulated Stingray (Bob, is Pimafix/Melafix useful on
Elasmobranchs?) 8/8/13
You've been a wonderful help, I appreciate the feedback.
<Glad to help.>
Good news, water tested out last night, tank was cycled. I put the
pair of rays into the tank and fed slightly on the heavy side. Both ate
their fill and I turned the lights off. This morning I went in to check
them, the fungus is completely gone.
<Excellent!>
I'm treating the tank with the Maracyn 2 and some salt to make sure,
keeping it at 50-60% of recommended dosage.
<All sounds very positive.>
But, in regards to your reply, for my knowledge bank, you wrote that
Maracyn 2 is Minocycline, Maracyn 1is Erythromycin, and Maracyn
Plus is Sulfadimidine and Trimethoprim. What is, doesn't have to be well
defined if you can keep it basic, the differences? The Maracyn 2 box
proclaimed to treat bacteria which caused certain ailments, are the
other two for the same?
<Okay, here's the deal. All these are antibiotics. They kill bacteria.
But no *one* antibiotic kills *all* kinds of bacteria. Some kill one
sort well, another a second sort, and so on. Kind of like how the air
force has a dozen kinds of airplanes, but there's no one airplane good
at everything, so depending on the mission, you choose a particular
airplane for the task.
You wouldn't use an F15 for a job where a Hercules would be better, or
vice versa. The tricky bit when choosing which antibiotic to use is that
you cannot say which antibiotic would be ideal without first identifying
the bacteria your fish has -- which obviously needs a microscope, a
tissue sample, a Petri dish, and about 4 years medical training...!
Anyway, aquarists either go with the Maracyn 1 and 2 combination at the
same time, which kills off many kinds of common bacteria, or try one and
then the other a week later if the first didn't work. Some aquarists
will have a hunch about which Maracyn works better for a certain
complaint in a certain species, but without a microscope and appropriate
study, they really are making educated guesses. I don't personally have
any experience with these
because Maracyn products aren't sold in the UK; by law, if you want to
use an antibiotic on a pet animal, you need to consult with a vet, which
removes the uncertainty but of course limits your range of quick, cheap
options. Anyway, going with the Maracyn 2 makes sense if you've found
some fish keepers for whom this works well. Hope this makes sense!
Cheers Neale.>
Re: Fungus on Reticulated Stingray (Bob, is Pimafix/Melafix useful on
Elasmobranchs?) 8/9/13
It did make sense, and again I appreciate your time. No matter how much
research I conducted, I still feel as if I have an inferior knowledge
base when keeping these beauts.
<They you'll really enjoy keeping these fish and reading Richard Ross'
book alongside the aquarium, and a few months from now, you'll be
telling me what to do!>
Have a good one! If I ever have any other ray related questions, I will
be sure to shoot an email out to you.
<Glad to help. Cheers, Neale.>
motoro rays... Fdg., nutr. dis. 7/13/10
Greetings Crew,
I have two Male Motoro rays. They are about 10' disks now. Both
have lived in a 1200 gal tank since they were 4" disk. They have a
complete Life support system, reservoir, sand filter, chemical filter
,bio filter, R.O., UV sterilizer, chiller the works! I Back wash the
system 2-3 times a week.
They live with discus and an Arowana and a few Blood Parrots they are
in an aquarium we custom built in a local Casino. Within the last week
they have slowly lost their appetites. They seem to have lost their
desire to swim.
One has been bumping into walls and is now showing a lot of trauma to
his disk. He swims upside down and has been puffing from the top. All
my water tests are perfect.! They eat krill, bloodworms and any small
schooling fish they can catch. I feel the bloods are taking advantage
of them. Though the owner doesn't want to let them go! Ughh! To my
question...I retrieved the Rays last night and isolated them in their
own tank. I don't know what to treat them with. They are swimming
about a little more today but the white (picking) areas look bad. And
still not eating. Any and all suggestions are much requested.
Thank you
Ginger
<Hello Ginger. The reasons why Stingrays refuse food are varied. As
you correctly surmise, environment is the commonest issue. So yes,
checking water quality, water chemistry, and water temperature are all
important.
Consider any possible toxins: paint fumes, insecticides, etc. Make sure
no-one has been doing anything silly to these Stingrays like feeding
them human food "treats". Next up, the use of feeder fish.
This cannot be
stressed too strongly. If you have predatory fish and you want them to
die, feed them feeder fish. Never, EVER use store-bought feeders.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fdgfdrartneale.htm
Goldfish and Minnows are the worst because they not only contain
parasites but they also contain large amounts of Thiaminase and fat,
and used regularly will cause [a] vitamin B deficiency and [b] damage
to the internal organs. Thiaminase is common in some types of seafood
and fish, notably prawns, shrimps and mussels. Use Thiaminase-rich
foods no more than once or twice a week, and all the rest of the meals
must be Thiaminase-free foods. Until quite recently most aquarists had
never heard of Thiaminase, but it is now reasonably clear that this is
a major source of ill-health and premature mortality.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_6/volume_6_1/thiaminase.htm
If you've been using feeders or not taking care of the Thiaminase
issue, the damage may be done. A vet trained in handling cartilaginous
fish may be able to offer some help, but otherwise there's little
you can do. Next up, there's monotony. Stingrays need a varied die,
and surprisingly, it needs to include some green foods for fibre.
Cucumber, cooked peas and lettuce leaves are nibbled on by hungry
Stingrays, and whether they're a major source of nutrients
isn't clear, but their value as fibre does seem helpful. Zoos often
create mixes with things liked cooked brown rice and carrots! If they
won't take greens, then live earthworms are nearly as good, having
guts filled with decaying leaves. Finally, there's harassment.
Stingrays generally mix poorly with other fish, and Suckermouth catfish
in particular can harass them. As for their injuries, if these are
nothing worse than scratches, these should heal fine assuming water
quality is good. There are no completely reliable medications for
treating Stingrays, which is why avoidance of sickness is so important.
Potamotrygon spp. tolerate salt quite well, at least for periods of a
few weeks, so in some instances slightly saline water may be helpful
for external parasites, but generally that isn't necessary. If the
Stingray can recover, it will do under its own steam. Cheers,
Neale.>
Re: motoro rays [RMF, any ideas on medications?] <<Furan
cpd.s RMF>> 7/13/10
Thank you, unfortunately I lost one of them earlier today after writing
to you. The other fellow is still struggling with himself. I have
offered bloodworms twice to no avail. Is there no treatment to help the
healing I could add to his tank?
<No. As stated, a vet who treats sharks and rays may be able to
help, but adding "potions" as you'd do with regular fish
won't have any positive effects at all. An antibiotic might be used
safely, but you'll need to check with your vet or the manufacturer
first.>
I have him now isolated in a 500 gallon holding tank. With a soft sandy
bottom. The wounds are pretty much all white and some dark patchy areas
on his upper side. Thank you for your time with me.
<As stated, if you have ever used feeder fish, you've basically
thrown all your chances out of the window. Feeder fish are hands-down
the single best way to kill predatory fish short of hitting them over
the head with a priest. If you've offered Thiaminase-rich foods too
often, again, the damage is already done. It really comes down to this:
if water quality is excellent, and the internal organs haven't been
damaged by Thiaminase or parasitised by the use of feeder fish, sick
Stingrays can get better under their own steam. But if the damage is
done, there's really nothing left but praying to the Fish Gods.
Cheers, Neale.>
FW Stingray fungus 11/30/07 Hi there,
<Hello> I have a problem. I have a 90 gallon freshwater tank with
2 back river stingrays. <A good species for such a size tank:
Potamotrygon orbignyi only grows to about a foot across> They are 3
inches long in body width w/ 3 more inches additionally on the tail. My
pH is 6.8 nitrite 0, nitrate 0 and ammonia 0. I am using very fine sand
along with a small lava rock <Mmm, all reads as good till here...
Lava rock is too sharp, may have metal contaminants> setup in the
corner. Filtering the system is an Eheim 2128 and Fluval 404. The
stingrays are the only fish in the tank. They have been in there for 4
days and have not been eating, however they are active, so active that
one of them decided to go into the caves, I presume, and injured/cut
his little foot. <? Foot?> I noticed the cut yesterday. I read on
your site it's good to raise the temp, which I did and it now sits
at 27.2 degrees Celsius. Today he is a growing a white fungus (looks
like cotton) on his foot. Also he is curling his fins upward, 95% of
the time. He has swam a bit, but mostly to glide along the tank, water
and leaps up. I am confused as I do not know what to do as the fish
store is telling me to use fungus treatments (use half of the
recommended dosage) but I don't want to remove the stingray into a
quarantine tank because they are so new and stressed. Please help
me.........I can be emailed back at XXXX Thanks again.. <Let's
see... it is not unusual for new FW rays to not feed, and these are
quite small, likely traumatized in being handled, moved... I am leery
of suggesting any "fungus remedy" here as most are outright
too toxic, more harmful than helpful. IF you felt it was worthwhile one
comprised of nothing but "Sulfa" drugs would be my choice...
otherwise, removing the lava rock, placing a pad of Polyfilter (to
remove possible metal) in your filter flow path, would be my course of
action. Do keep proffering foods... perhaps some small ghost shrimp,
live worms... Bob Fenner>