FAQs on Freshwater Infectious (bacterial,
fungal) Diseases: Identification, Diagnosis
Related Articles: Freshwater Fish Diseases, Freshwater Diseases, FW Disease Troubleshooting,
Choose
Your Weapon: Freshwater Fish Disease Treatment Options
by Neale Monks, Understanding
Bacterial Disease in Aquarium Fish; With a gallery of bacterial
infections, a discussion of Fish TB, and a listing of major
antimicrobial medications with examples available to
fishkeepers By Myron Roth, Ph.D.,
Related FAQs: Infectious (bacterial, fungal, viral)
Disease 1, Infectious FW
Diseases 2, Infectious FW Disease
3, Infectious FW Disease 4,
Infectious FW Disease 5, &
Infectious Disease: Causes/Etiology/Prevention, Cures/Medications, Case Histories:
Bacterial, True Fungal, & By Type/Organisms:
Fin & Mouth Rot, Columnaris, Mycobacteria/Tuberculosis, Whirling Disease, Bettas w/
Infections,
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Might be tuberculosis or something else
7/18/19
I have a new tank since March. I have been keeping track of the parameters and
doing a weekly or biweekly water change as needed to keep ammonia down.
<Mmm, ammonia? It should be gone; your system should have long since cycled...
are you referring to nitrate accumulation?>
It is a planted tank with Fluval dirt
<? What is this?>
and slow growing but varied plants. When nitrates started to appear I slowly
added fish 4 cories in a
60 gallon tank. I waited, watched, tested, and water changed as needed.
At some points I did add bacteria in bottle (was trying to grow them naturally
but got impatient to set up) as tank stabilized I added more. Right now it's
July and I have my 4 Cories, some random amount of Ghost Shrimp, two Assassin
Snails (to deal with pest snails that came with plants) an Oto cat, and a
Bristlenose, 6 Cardinal Tetras, 7 Glofish, 6 Von Ryan <Rio?>Tetras, one Platinum
Gourami, one 2 Dot Gourami, and one Snakeskin Gourami. I had a Betta but he
died. He has the same symptoms as my Snakeskin Gourami is experiencing. Losing
weight, lesions, and the behavior is the one that has me puzzled. He bends and
straightens into an s shape. He was mostly gasping at the top and not really
moving but them would dart around like crazy. I was told by a couple of people
he might have tuberculosis among other possibilities. I'm trying to know what it
can be. Obviously the Betta had it so it is contagious or if it is a parasite
then goes top different hosts.
<A couple notes. Mycobacteria aren't parasites; this is a group of bacteria; and
Mycobacteria are pretty much omnipresent in captive biological aquatic
systems... becoming pathogenic (disease-inducing) under
conditions favoring them, disfavoring their hosts>
I did put now the Snakeskin into a hospital tank and started giving him curative
baths twice daily. I am dosing both the hospital bath and main tank with Melafix
and have added salt.
<Mmm; do search WWM re Melafix; not of any real use>
He seems to have perked up and swimming around more normal. He is still bending
into
an S and straightening still. His color is looking much better but it's only
been 2 days of treatment. The other fish right now look normal. Good color,
healthy find and normal behavior. Can you tell me what he has?
<Not based on the information provided, no. The issues with the Betta, Gourami
may be pre-existing (from the breeders, handlers before your acquisition), or
infectious as you state. IF the latter there are
anti-bacterial, antimicrobial approaches to try...>
Is tuberculosis the only possible disease that he would have or is there
something else he might have?
<Please search, read on WWM re Tuberculosis... and follow the references listed
there re identification, possible potential treatments. Bob Fenner>
Re: Might be tuberculosis or something else
7/18/19
I have a new tank since March. I have been keeping track of the parameters and
doing a weekly or biweekly water change as needed to keep ammonia down.
<Mmm, ammonia? It should be gone; your system should have long since cycled...
are you referring to nitrate accumulation?>
~Well to begin with when there was no fish and not fully cycled but plants I
would do some water changes so that the plants would not be burned by the
ammonia.
<<... this shouldn't happen. Some, most plants can utilize ammonia as a food
source>>
Once the nitrates started showing I knew that I had achieved a level of cycle
and added my cories and I'm trying to remember what else. Maybe it was hasty but
I had miss having fish. This did cause a bit of an overload of ammonia on my
bacteria and was why I did some water changes to keep happy fish. Always the
levels were low. Nitrates were always low but still did weekly water changes
just to make sure they had fresh water.
Still watching levels every week I would add a fish but sometimes a
school.~
It is a planted tank with Fluval dirt
<? What is this?>
~[image: image.png]
<<Ahh, a commercial substrate>>
and slow growing but varied
plants. When nitrates started to appear I slowly added fish 4 cories in a 60
gallon tank. I waited, watched, tested, and water changed as needed.
At some points I did add bacteria in bottle (was trying to grow them naturally
but got impatient to set up) as tank stabilized I added more. Right now it's
July and I have my 4 Cories, some random amount of Ghost Shrimp, two Assassin
Snails (to deal with pest snails that came with plants) an Oto cat, and a
Bristlenose, 6 Cardinal Tetras, 7 Glofish, 6 Von Ryan Tetras, one Platinum
Gourami, one 2 Dot Gourami, and one Snakeskin Gourami. I had a Betta but he
died. He has the same symptoms as my Snakeskin
Gourami is experiencing. Losing weight, lesions, and the behavior is the one
that has me puzzled. He bends and straightens into an s shape. He was mostly
gasping at the top and not really moving but them would dart around like crazy.
I was told by a couple of people he might have tuberculosis among other
possibilities. I'm trying to know what it can be. Obviously the Betta had it so
it is contagious or if it is a parasite then goes top different hosts.
<A couple notes. Mycobacteria aren't parasites; this is a group of bacteria; and
Mycobacteria are pretty much omnipresent in captive biological aquatic
systems... becoming pathogenic (disease-inducing) under
conditions favoring them, disfavoring their hosts>
~Yes I guess I was hoping for not tuberculosis. Everything I read about it
sounds awful and before I nuc my tank I want to make sure it is what people are
telling me it is. ~
<<Better to educate yourself rather than rely on hearsay opinions>>
I did put now the Snakeskin into a hospital tank and started giving him curative
baths twice daily. I am dosing both the hospital bath and main tank with Melafix
and have added salt.
<<Mmm; do search WWM re Melafix; not of any real use>>
~It was all I had on hand at time. I want to get what I need. I don't want to
buy random stuff until I know what exactly will help my tank. I don't like to
just jump and get everything everyone says I need. I have been told to get stuff
to treat fungus and stuff I know is low bacterial cure. I did not follow that
advise. I have some knowledge but have never experience with tuberculosis. This
is why I'm reaching out to others with more knowledge than me.~
<<Read where you've been referred to>>
He seems to have perked up and swimming around more normal. He is still bending
into an S and straightening still. His color is looking much better but it's
only been 2 days of treatment. The other fish right now look normal. Good color,
healthy find and normal behavior. Can you tell me what he has?
<Not based on the information provided, no. The issues with the Betta, Gourami
may be pre-existing (from the breeders, handlers before your acquisition), or
infectious as you state. IF the latter there are
anti-bacterial, antimicrobial approaches to try...>
~I do not know the breeder but I could find out. I buy all my fish from a mom
and pop store. Good store, fish always look good and customers come from miles
around because of the quality of stock. Would a video help? I was going to send
one but thought it would be too big of a file.~
<<If large files, do park them elsewhere and send a link>>
Is tuberculosis the only possible disease that he would have or is there
something else he might have?
<Please search, read on WWM re Tuberculosis... and follow the references listed
there re identification, possible potential treatments. Bob Fenner>
Ok I will look again on your site. I was just wanting to make sure that it was
tuberculosis before I start to destroy my beautiful tank.
<<Real good. BobF>>
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Might be tuberculosis or something else /Neale
7/19/19
I have a new tank since March. I have been keeping track of the parameters
and doing a weekly or biweekly water change as needed to keep ammonia down.
It is a planted tank with Fluval dirt and slow growing but varied plants.
<Adding some fast-growing plants will help control algae. Even floating
plants will do! Slow-growing plants have little impact on water quality.>
When nitrates started to appear I slowly added fish 4 cories in a 60 gallon
tank. I waited, watched, tested, and water changed as needed. At some points
I did add bacteria in bottle (was trying to grow them naturally but got
impatient to set up) as tank stabilized I added more. Right now it's July
and I have my 4 Cories, some random amount of Ghost Shrimp, two Assassin
Snails (to deal with pest snails that came with plants) an Oto cat,
<These are social and rarely last long kept singly. Indeed, they rarely last
long in most community tanks given their need for copious green algae or its
substitutes.>
and a Bristlenose, 6 Cardinal Tetras, 7 Glofish, 6 Von Ryan Tetras, one
Platinum Gourami, one 2 Dot Gourami, and one Snakeskin Gourami. I had a Beta
but he died. He has the same symptoms as my Snakeskin Gourami is
experiencing. Losing weight, lesions, and the behavior is the one that has
me puzzled. He bends and straightens into an s shape. He was mostly gasping
at the top and not really moving but them would dart around like crazy. I
was told by a couple of people he might have tuberculosis among other
possibilities.
<Really hard to say. You're quite right that Mycobacteria infections can
cause lesions, wasting, and spinal deformities. But so can a range of other
diseases, including simple exposure to non-zero ammonia and nitrite levels.>
I'm trying to know what it can be.
<Understood, and probably impossible outside of a fish pathology lab.>
Obviously the Betta had it so it is contagious or if it is a parasite then
goes top different hosts.
<Or both succumbed to similar stress factors in similar ways.>
I did put now the Snakeskin into a hospital tank and started giving him
curative baths twice daily. I am dosing both the hospital bath and main tank
with Melafix and have added salt
<Melafix likely not useful here, especially if the problem is bacterial.
Salt may help, though it's hard to say: salt can reduce the toxicity of
ammonia and nitrite, and might reduce osmotic stress where lesions occur,
but on the other hand it isn't even remotely a treatment for bacterial
infections.>
He seems to have perked up and swimming around more normal.
<Good. If the problem is environmental, simply optimising water quality
could do the trick.>
He is still bending into an S and straightening still. His color is looking
much better but it's only been 2 days of treatment. The other fish right now
look normal. Good color, healthy find and normal behavior. Can you tell me
what he has?
<Nope.>
Is tuberculosis the only possible disease that he would have or is there
something else he might have?
<See above. Time, luck probably the best things to rely on here. If
Mycobacteria, nothing short of the fish's own immune system will help. No
medications sold to aquarists have any impact. But if environmental, as I
say, optimise living conditions and things may improve. Cheers, Neale.>
|
Fungus on some fish /RMF 11/3/14
Hi I wrote to you a few months ago about my large Silver Dollar who
suddenly developed pop eye & fungus patches. Despite my best efforts he
died.
<Am jumping in here; though Neale likely was corresponding with you.
He'll see this when the sun comes up in Europe>
Within the past few weeks I noticed fungus appearing on at least
4 other fish and I am beside myself as I have beautiful large, expensive
fish in this community tank. Went to a local guy who gave me a
white powder to put in (unfortunately I didn't get the name but was told
to keep it refrigerated).
<? What is this I wonder>
It is now 10 days later & I don't see much of a change & the tank is
overdue for a water change. I keep the temp at 78 & check the Ph
regularly & maintain it at approx 6.8.
<.... Ammonia, nitrite, nitrate? RedOx?>
Anything you could suggest would be greatly appreciated.
Rita~
<When, where in doubt, serial water changes... Send pix and data. Bob
Fenner>
Fungus on some fish /Neale 11/4/14
Hi I wrote to you a few months ago about my large Silver Dollar who
suddenly developed pop eye & fungus patches. Despite my best efforts he
died.
<Oh dear.>
Within the past few weeks I noticed fungus appearing on at least 4 other
fish and I am beside myself as I have beautiful large, expensive fish in
this community tank.
<As Bob F stated, without information about the aquarium hard to make
useful suggestions. As always with freshwater aquaria, check nitrite
first of all (as a test of water quality). Most fungal and Finrot
infections are
opportunistic. Physical damage (e.g., from rough handling or fighting)
plus non-zero ammonia and nitrite levels is (overwhelmingly) the
commonest scenario.>
Went to a local guy who gave me a white powder to put in (unfortunately
I didn't get the name but was told to keep it refrigerated).
<Presumably an antifungal. Methylene Blue is the oldest remedy for
fungal infections, but there are many (some better/safer). But
invariably remove carbon from the filter, if used, otherwise medications
generally won't work.>
It is now 10 days later & I don't see much of a change & the tank is
overdue for a water change. I keep the temp at 78 & check the Ph
regularly & maintain it at approx 6.8.
<Do of course review the pH, hardness and temperature are appropriate to
the species being kept. Rainbowfish and livebearers, for example, will
get fungus infections in acidic conditions.>
Anything you could suggest would be greatly appreciated.
Rita~
<Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Fungus on some fish
11/5/14
Neale and Bob ...thanks so much for your responses & Bob it was you I
corresponded w/ about the SD back in early July this year.
What are "serial water changes?"
<A quick succession of water changes; not so much temperature and water
chemistry are dramatically changed, but enough to rapidly dilute any
problems. Typically, 20% once or twice a day works well,
certainly leave a few hours between water changes. If you can keep water
chemistry and temperature steady, then changing 50% at once is
worthwhile. Basically, the idea is to change as much of the water as
possible, as frequently as possible, so that any stress factors (such as
ammonia, nitrite or nitrate) are diluted away.>
The med I was given sounds like lovosmel phosphate (sp?) & the 1st round
we did not remove the carbon but have done so now.
<Good. Almost always, if you leave (viable, fresh) carbon in the filter,
then medications have reduced/no effect.>
Don't have a nitrite test kit (never needed it) but will get one now.
<Together with pH, nitrite is the key beginner's chemical test kit, and
arguably the one every (freshwater) fishkeeper should have even if they
don't own any others. Less confusing than ammonia (because false
positives thanks to chloramine are common) and more immediately relevant
to health than nitrate (which can largely be ignored if you stock
moderately, feed moderately, and do regular water changes).>
A friend suggested we strip the tank, tossing the plastic plants &
bleach the decos, what do you think of that??
<Possibly, and won't do any harm, provided you don't strip the filter.
Leave the filter running, remove rocks and ornaments so you can give
them a good clean under a hot tap (bleaching isn't really necessary
though), then stir the gravel so you can siphon out more of the dirt
than otherwise. Deep cleaning a tank rarely/never fixes diseases, but
can help reveal problems such as dead/rotting cadavers that are causing
excessive water pollution.>
Attached are 2 pics of the most affected fish (lavender gourami). I have
a few baby clown loaches & see them after the fungus.
Many thanks,
Rita~
<Would actually wonder about Costia being the problem here. Sometimes
called "Slime Disease" because affected fish develop larger than usual
amounts of grey slime on their bodies. Various commercial medications
are available, usually containing formalin. Use very carefully as
directed because some fish (e.g., Loaches) respond poorly to these
formalin. Look out for signs of stress such as gasping at the surface.
Alternatives are
available. In the UK, I've found a medication called eSHa EXIT works
quite well on Costia, especially alongside seawater dips. Conversely,
avoid "cure-alls" such as Melafix that generally don't cure anything.
Cheers, Neale.>
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Re: Fungus on some fish 11/6/14
Neale, thank you so much for your detailed response. When I began
fishkeeping 30 yrs ago I did have all the test kits but never had an issue
w/anything other than pH.
<Indeed?>
Because I am disabled and need help doing stuff, typically 50% of the water
gets changed every 4 weeks but because of the meds we're about 2 weeks
overdue!
<Ah, well, best get on it this weekend!>
I will keep you posted. Thank you again.
Rita~
<Glad to help. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Fungus on some fish 11/7/14
Ok got the test kits, no nitrites but nitrates were a bit high, pH perfect.
<Good.>
Did a 50% water change (nitrates better), deep cleaned tank, threw out all old
plants, washed & put in new decos & will do smaller water changes every other
day for the next week & basically hope for the best.
<Sometimes all you can do/need to do.>
Thank you again.
Rita~
<Most welcome. Neale.>
|
What's that? 5/10/11
Hi,
<Hello>
My children and I were looking at some of our water through my
son's microscope. Found this. Would you identify it for me?
Thanks.
Jeff
<Looks like the edge of a bit of wood, plant material...
"Cells" from the early microscopists' views. Bob
Fenner>
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Differential diagnosis of mechanical fin injury,
nipping, and disease 4/30/11
I've searched this site, other sites on the net, and many books,
but I've found only a few vague guidelines to this question, so
I'm wondering if anyone can lay out some specific characteristics
for distinguishing between mechanical injury to fins from tank
contents, nipping, bacterial fin rot, and fungus infection.
Thanks! I love this site.
Tim
<You can't be 100% sure about the source of fin damage. But
generally, biting or fin-nipping produces clean, oval or circular
perforations to the fins. At the edges of the fins these will be
usually be semicircular. Such fin damage looks clean and, under good
environmental conditions, generally heals by itself with no need for
medicating. Healthy fish can prevent bacteria infecting damaged fins.
To some degree, many fish *expect* to get nipped periodically, and wild
fish have evolved strategies to deal with this, perhaps most famously
the eye-spots on the caudal peduncle of many fish that confuse
fin-predators over which end of the target fish to aim for (Oscars have
these for example, to deal with characin fin-predators including
Piranhas). Finrot is caused by bacterial infection of the fins,
typically because the fish is stressed somehow. Poor environmental
quality and lack of the rights sorts of food are the two most common
reasons fish lose their healthy immune system. Initially fins develop
white patches or specks where opportunistic bacteria have entered the
fin membrane. These usually become pink as blood vessels become
blocked, and eventually it's the lack of blood supply that causes
the fin membrane to die, hence the tears and holes in the fin. If you
see both dead white areas and holes in the fins, then Finrot is
probable. Other common symptoms include bloodiness to the fin, lack of
vigour in the fish more generally, and very often unusual behaviours
such as shyness, lack of appetite, etc. Fungal infections are very
distinctive thanks to the white hyphae that resemble cotton wool. They
rarely occur on healthy fish, but commonly follow on from fin damage
(include Finrot) in water where the environmental quality is low.
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Differential diagnosis of mechanical fin injury, nipping,
and disease 4/30/11
Neale - Thank you! That was very helpful. I'd seen hints of most of
the things you said, but I like hearing these rules explicitly stated
by an expert.
It would be a pity to misdiagnose something so important and treat
ineffectually.
Tim
<Glad to help. Yes, it's important to get the situation right
prior to medicating, but note that some medications treat both Finrot
and Fungus, and used appropriately, these shouldn't normally cause
harm to healthy fish, even if that fish doesn't have either Finrot
or Fungus. That said, some fish are more sensitive to medications than
others, so when it comes to Stingrays, Puffers, Eels, and so on,
holding fire until you're fairly sure there's a bacterial or
fungal infection is definitely worthwhile.
Cheers, Neale.>
Columnaris treatment; no, I think you're dealing
with Costia! 11/04/10
Hi Neale,
<Kara,>
I have been scrolling through pages and pages of previously submitted
questions, and doing a lot of research and I was hoping you could
assist me with a problem I'm having in my 5 foot (100 gallon)
tank.
<I'll try.>
Tank is a low tech heavily planted tank, stocked with 10 Rummynose, 4
Sterbai Corys, 6 Kuhli loaches, 3 x true SAE's and 5 half grown
angelfish. The tank is stable, with no water quality issues ever
experienced, and has been set up for 6 months. It is well filtered with
a large canister filter (2400lph), and the tank has good water
flow/current. I have had the Rummynose for 4 months - when they arrived
(mail order) they had ich, so these are survivors of that and have been
super healthy and eating like pigs since. The Cory's and sterbais
I've had for about 3 months, the 5 angels about 6 weeks. All went
through a quarantine period in a bare, cycled tank. When I got the
angels, one had a white pimple by his mouth, it never changed
throughout quarantine, and seemed to fade, so I assumed it was just an
innocent pimple. I recently went away for a week and left the house
sitter to feed the fish. Everything was fine, water parameters
excellent. I did notice that one Rummynose looked as though it might
have had a slightly foggy eye, at the time I thought it was a trick of
the light.
<Most often caused by physical damage if just one eye; if both eyes,
environmental issues become more likely.>
When I got home, I discovered the majority of the Rummynose had pale
patches on their backs around the dorsal fin, no evident signs of
Finrot, but some had white patches on their eyes. After some research I
found this to be a possible classic sign of the start of a Columnaris
infection.
<Don't agree at all. Columnaris, also known as Mouth Fungus, is
a fairly distinctive disease. As its name suggests, it's most often
found around the mouth, and the lumps have a thready texture similar to
that of fungus. It is usually some shade of grey though, so while
similar looking to fungus, should be fairly easily distinguished from
the white threads typical of fungus. Are you sure you are not confusing
Columnaris with Costia? Costia, also known as Slime Disease, is a skin
parasite that causes patches of grey on the body. It is readily treated
if caught early.>
I immediately tested the water and found: Ammonia: 0 Nitrite: 0
Nitrate: 10 - this raised my eyebrows because I have NEVER had a
nitrate reading in this tank due to the abundance of plants. I feel
that to have suddenly had the level rise to 10 in spite of all the
plants, there may have been an ammonia/nitrite spike preceding this
possibly due to the house sitter overfeeding? - Hard to say anything
factually as I wasn't here. The stress of an ammonia/nitrite spike
could have triggered the start of the problems.
<10 mg/l isn't all that high, so if this is the worst your house
sitter did, you were lucky. Generally, if you're gone for less than
10 days, skip feeding altogether; for longer periods, leave enough food
in individual envelopes for one or two meals per week. Hide all the
rest!>
PH - 8 (Usually sits at 7.8 - the addition of extra black gravel raised
the ph a little more than I'd expected.) GH - 8 KH - 7 I also found
the light had been left on 24/7 while I was away due to a timer
malfunction - which may have further stressed the fish and certainly
affected the plants.
<Possibly, but not seriously. I routinely do this when away on
vacations, and the plants are fine. A bit overgrown sometimes, but
nothing serious.>
I immediately did a 25% water change despite the ok readings, and fixed
the light. Everything I read on Columnaris said that it thrives in
hard, warm water, and can overcome fish when they are stressed, injured
or subjected to unsuitable conditions. Treatment widely recommended was
Tetracycline - which is basically ineffective with a PH as high as
mine. The next recommendation was Oxytetracycline in their food - I was
unable to acquire any despite talking to 3 different vets. While I was
trying to get hold of treatment, I began dosing Pimafix on the advice
of a vet, but I believe this was ineffective, so after 4 days I
eventually got a bottle of Tri-Sulfa tablets, and after another water
change began dosing at the recommended 1 tablet per 40 liters, which
for my tank is about 9 tablets. My bottle says repeat in 3 days if
necessary. So I did another water change, and dosed again on the 3rd
day. Tomorrow they will be due for a 3rd dose if you think it wise to
continue. I have found the saddleback lesions on the tetras to be not
as grey/white as they were, it's fading back to normal colour,
however 2 still have distinct white patches on their eyes. The
kuhlis/Corys have never displayed symptoms and still look fine. One of
the SAE's was pale, but now looks completely normal. The angels on
the other hand are a different story. The pimple that had been on the
one angel had flared up again and was a little woolly, it is no longer
woolly, but it's still present despite treatment with tri-sulfa,
and a few of the other angelfish have developed ragged fins with milky
spots on the ends that do not seem to be improving ( 2 are particularly
aggro with each other, so injuries to the fins may be allowing the
bacteria to gain a hold). Should I continue treatment with the
tri-sulfa? It says in severe cases that you can double the dose to 1
tablet per 20litres, however I'm not sure if my Corys, kuhlis and
tetras will cope with the higher dose. Do I need to allow the tri-sulfa
longer to take effect, or should I conclude that it is not working
efficiently and try something else? Water parameters as at this morning
are Amm/Nitrite 0, Nitrate less than 5ppm, PH steady at 7.9. So far I
have not lost any fish, and all are still active and eating despite
symptoms. However I am very eager to be rid of this once and for all
and would like to know how much longer I should continue treating with
the tri-sulfa. Any help you can give me would be much appreciated.
Sorry for the long email. Regards, Kara
<Kara, the bottom line is I suspect you're treating for the
wrong thing. Costia (strictly speaking, Ichthyobodo) symptoms include
excess mucous production leading to grey patches, and in serious cases,
bloody sores on the body. Affected fish often breathe heavily, become
lethargic, and go off their food. Treatment typically involves the use
of formalin-based medications, but these can be a bit hard on catfish
and loaches, so use judiciously. Brackish water is very good for
dealing with Costia, but obviously only suitable for those species
tolerant of brackish conditions and periodic seawater dips, such as
livebearers. Cheers, Neale.>
Poorly eel... Ps. Sorry for such a long email, but i
thought I'd tell you as much as i could,,, also forgot to add,
All the other fish seem ok... And the eel never seemed to eat
anything... i got some maggots from the local fishing shop.. the
other fish liked them, and the eel showed more interest in them
than bloodworms, or anything else I'd been trying to feed him,
and looked as if he was trying to eat one, he made a move towards
it, but didn't get it in his mouth,,, so I'm not entirely
convinced he's eaten too much since i got him.. (about 3 weeks
ago) hope you can help.... Sami <This spiny eel is extremely
mal-affected by a bacterial infection... though often termed
fungal... A very quick administration of antibiotics to the system
(Chloramphenicol if you can get it, Spectrogram (product) if not...
at double dose... 250 mg. per five gallons, addition of a teaspoon
of aquarium salt per five gallons... in a separate treatment
system, attention to water quality while there... offering
tubificid worms as food... Might save this specimen, but doubtful
at this stage. Bob Fenner> |
|
Septicemia Hello, First, I wanted to say that your website is
much appreciated and very helpful. The problem I'm having is
properly diagnosing and curing my female Bettas (both are opaque
whites). One of them now looks like a butterfly Betta due to the red
streaks on ALL fins...the other has a tiny red spot on her tail, and
some red streaks on her anal and dorsal fins. Thinking they might have
Septicemia, I've treated them with Maracyn 2 for 10 days and it
doesn't seem like anything happened. I'm not sure if I should
repeat treatment again with Maracyn 2...Any further suggestions or help
on how to cure these red streaks are welcome. The following is more
detailed information regarding their background, etc. Current
symptoms: They still have their red streaks in their finnage.
They've been off their meds for about 10 days now, and their
attitudes have severely changed. They are lethargic and listless, tend
not to eat as much, and scared (they often hide when I come to look at
them or they dash quickly into their pagodas when I gently drop their
food in)...They used to be more active swimming around (mainly because
the smaller one would get chased every now and then) and friendly
(coming to greet me when I'd feed them) Recent Changes &
Food: 3 days ago, I put a clear divider to protect the smaller
female (stop the chasing) since their behavior change. Sometimes, the
sisters hang out facing each other through the divider...I can't
tell if the smaller one now lost her appetite due to depression? She
still eats, but very little (maybe 3 pellets and 2 live brine shrimp
once a day). It's odd because the other female (the one that now
looks like a butterfly) eats well. I usually feed them twice a day
mixing flakes, pellets, and live brine shrimp. For example, 6 pellets
& 5 brine shrimp for each Betta twice a day...Am I overfeeding?
<Yep! Cut to all they eat in a minute or two once a day.> Tank
situation: I have them in a 10-gal with a sponge filter (I will be
getting a 2nd filter, now that the tank is divided). I do weekly water
changes (50%) adding only aquarium salt (Hawaii's tap water
doesn't have chlorine). I have enough floating water sprites
(Ceratopteris) to cover about half the tank (I clean off dead leaves
and rise plants weekly). For their "homes" they each have a
ceramic pagoda... <Are you sure about the chlorine? You may have
chloramines which must be removed.> Background: I got the
pair in early April (fully white). I didn't change their water for
about 3 weeks (since my aquarist friend told me not to) until one
female showed some red streaks in her fins. However, I was told that
they were just stressed out and no treatment was necessary. I then
began to do water changes weekly...When the red streaks worsened and
also began to appear on the other female in early May, I began to
worry. That's when I started treatment w/ Maracyn 2. Thanks, Nell
<Sure sounds like a bad case of Septicemia. Many times this can be
cured with water changes alone. Lots of them. Like 50% daily using a
gravel vac to get all the old organics out of the system. I do not see
any mention of water tests. You should be testing for ammonia, nitrite
and nitrate. You are looking for zero on the first two, nitrates below
20ppm. With the signs you are seeing I would bet you have very high
nitrates. The water changes will correct. If they continue to decline
treat with Oxytetracycline. If possible remove them to a QT tank for
treatment. The meds will kill off your beneficial bacteria causing
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