FAQs on Panda Corydoras
Cats
Related Articles: Callichthyid Catfishes, Summer loving: cats in the garden, kittens in
the kitchen by Neale Monks,
FAQs on: Corydoras Catfish 1,
FAQs on: Corydoras
Catfish Identification, Corydoras
Catfish Behavior, Corydoras Catfish
Compatibility, Corydoras Catfish
Stocking/Selection, Corydoras Catfish
Systems, Corydoras Catfish
Feeding, Corydoras Catfish Health,
Corydoras Catfish Reproduction,
FAQs on: Pygmy
Corydoras spp.,
FAQs on: Callichthyids 1, Callichthyids 2,
FAQs on: Callichthyid
Identification, Callichthyid
Behavior, Callichthyid
Compatibility, Callichthyid
Selection, Callichthyid
Systems, Callichthyid
Feeding, Callichthyid
Disease, Callichthyid
Reproduction, Catfish: Identification, Behavior, Compatibility, Selection, Systems, Feeding, Disease, Reproduction,
|
|
New Pandas also Re: Epsom salts, peacock gudgeons and blockages
10/11/17
Thanks Neale and Bob for your replies. And Hi Crew! Thought you would like an
update on how my poor gudgeon is doing, and I have some extra troubles which I
will get to later in this email.
<Oh dear.>
I kept watching the display tank after it was treated with Epsom salts and could
see the prolapsed portion of the affected gudgeon had shrunk by half overnight
and looked much better.
<Good.>
However after a full day many of the other peacock gudgeons were showing some
stress colouration and hiding, so I performed the scheduled water change. By the
following morning the gudgeons were back to normal, but
prolapse was back to its original size. I took the plunge and managed to catch
the affected gudgeon by tricking him with food. If they get the idea they are in
trouble they can dart and jump surprisingly quickly but I was
very lucky to catch him off guard. Anyway after 3 or 4 days in his own tank, and
after treatment with what I hope is Metronidazole (bought off the internet due
to not being readily available in Australia, the packaging is slightly
unconvincing), the prolapse had reduced down again but did not yet resolve.
<The Metronidazole is a good thought here, as prolapses of this type are
sometimes a reaction to parasites inside the gut.>
The gudgeon was becoming very stressed so I put him back into the display tank.
It's been over a week and he is back to his normal self behaviourally. The
prolapse has still not resolved but it is not as big as it was, or at least, it
looks fleshier and a lot less likely to burst than it used to so I will keep my
eye on him and continue to be mindful of what I feed that tank. No one died so I
am counting that as a win for now!
<Indeed. Such things do take weeks to resolve. So like Dropsy, if the fish is
getting incrementally better, and still eating, that's good!>
I'm writing now about an old familiar problem - trying to keep some new panda
Corydoras alive. My existing school of 6 panda Corys is quite happy and doing
well (thanks for your help in getting them to that point!) and I
had the idea that the tank they are in has room for a bigger school.
Originally I wanted to try some pygmy Corydoras in a separate species tank but I
saw pandas had become available again for quite a cheap price. I ordered 15
expecting to lose a few but hoping to keep enough alive to
eventually expand the existing crew and I'm using the unused pygmy Cory tank for
the quarantine tank. The store sent me 16 pandas (and also 2 sterbai Corys by
mistake instead of trilineatus), but unfortunately put all
the pandas in the same bag. 4 died in transit, but the rest seemed mostly quite
lively and feisty after getting into some fresh water. I lost 1 more from
quarantine in the first few hours, one overnight, and then one more on
the following day. This last one had his barbels curled under him and his gill
covers looked like they were stuck open. I suspect it was just residual damage
from being in poor water conditions during shipping.
<Agreed, but the "cheap price" might also suggest less than perfect breeding
conditions. Sometimes fish are maintained poorly, but "juiced" on antibiotics,
which keeps them alive on the fish farm. Once shipped, the
drugs where off, and you're stuck with sickly fish. Careful quarantining, good
food, and judicious medical treatment as needed can help though, so all is not
lost!>
The remaining 8 pandas are still lively and have good appetites, and the 2
sterbai seem much the same although definitely more nervous due to their small
school size. The zoomy pandas seem to terrify them even though the
sterbai are three times the size.
<Corydoras sterbai do need warmish water to stay healthy, 25-28 C, so they're
not quite as adaptable to lower-end tropical conditions as other members of the
genus. On the other hand, they're good choices for Angelfish, Discus and Gourami
set-ups where high temperatures are needed.>
I am using the refund from the dead fish/wrong fish to buy a few more sterbai so
eventually they will be in a comfortable school size - they definitely behave
differently than the pandas and trilineatus that I already have so I am looking
forward to setting them up in their own tank.
The current quarantine tank is 65lt with a fine sandy bottom and I have been
doing daily 20lt water changes and vacuuming out uneaten food trying to give
these guys as clean an environment as possible to recover. They
have been getting live grindal worms and some small pellet food and none of the
survivors seem skinny like a few were when they first arrived. I am mixing up
their water to be the same as the water my existing panda Corys
live in as that's where I want to move them to after quarantine is over, so
medium softness and temp is 24C.
<Understood.>
Anyway now to the problems. After the quarantine population stabilized I noticed
2 of the pandas had thickened white patches on their fins, faces, and one had a
coated barbel on one side which was twice as thick as it
should be. Very difficult to see what's going on with white on white but I
thought it looked like fungus so began treatment with a Multicure product
(malachite green, Methylene blue, Acriflavine, supposed to be good vs.
fungus and some external parasites).
<Sounds about right; Methylene Blue is a good first choice for fungus
infections. Low toxicity, even with baby fish and eggs.>
After 2 days of this treatment there was no improvement and the patches were
thicker so I began to worry that it was actually the dreaded Columnaris instead.
I couldn't actually see any fibrous or fuzzy growths, the white patches seem
more flattened and blobby than anything. All I had at hand was some tri-sulfa
(which does say it can treat Columnaris on the label) and I remember reading
somewhere that Columnaris will not tolerate salt.
<Possibly true, but can't imagine the salt level needed would be tolerated by
Corydoras for long. I'd be using a plain vanilla antibacterial treatment here
instead. Salt is almost never useful against fungus or bacterial infections at
"safe" freshwater levels.>
I also checked to make sure I could mix tri-sulfa and the other product and as
far as I could tell all would be well. I have had tri-sulfa and salt in the tank
for 2 days now (this is the third day) and re-dosed as required, accounting for
the water changes I did (additional to the existing course of Multicure). I
added equivalent of 5 tsp of salt on the first day, and another 5 on the second
day, dripped it in slowly via airline. The fish are all tolerating this well. I
know Corydoras can handle more salt than this after having success treating Ich
this way, but I don't know if that level of salt is required to treat Columnaris
(or even if that's what I'm fighting here).
<I do suspect you are right: the 2 gram/litre level used for Whitespot is easily
tolerated by freshwater fish, but for bacterial and fungal infections you'd
surely need a lot more -- bear in mind marine fish can get both!>
I am holding off on adding more salt for now pending further advice.
<See above.>
I'm a bit worried that my water conditioner has reacted with the Multicure as it
seems like a lot of it has come out of solution and settled on the sand (or
perhaps just the top layer of sand is now dyed green).
<One risk with organic dyes like Malachite Green and Methylene Blue is precisely
this. Tends to fade away in time, but not always. The blue is generally
overlooked, looking watery I suppose, but the green is more annoying, it is
true.>
The first dosage I put in stained the water quite dark for a couple of days but
the second dose looks to be almost gone overnight, even though I followed the
instructions and didn't use it immediately after the water change. Anyway there
is still no improvement and the white patches are spreading to the other Corys.
Yesterday one of the sterbai had a patch on his forehead although that is gone
today, but a lighter patch of skin is visible in that place. I now realise
tri-sulfa is bacteriostatic rather than bacteriocidal and probably won't get rid
of Columnaris by itself, but I thought if I kept the Corys eating well they
might be able to fight it off. The package for this medication says I can double
the dosage for severe cases and I am considering doing this as I only used the
single dose to start with.
<Follow the instructions, and remember to remove carbon from the filter, if
used.>
Since I've had no success so far and it is spreading, today I had the idea that
maybe this is slime coat disease (Costia?) and not a fungus or bacteria. The
most notable thing is that it seems the extremities of the fish (fins, barbels)
are affected much moreso than their bodies. Where it is on their faces, it's
mostly around their nostrils, and it is on the fins that are closest to the
substrate.
<This is not uncommon. It's usually explained in terms of a scratchy substrate,
or a dirty substrate, or both. The belly and barbels are scratched, bacteria
infect the wounds, and something similar to Finrot sets in. Indeed, it probably
is the same Aeromonas and Pseudomonas bacteria at work. That said, there are
mystery plagues or red-blotch diseases associated with Corydoras that don't have
any definite aetiology. A broad spectrum antibiotic is helpful, but with the
Corydoras moved to a substrate-free aquarium for the process, so that the skin
has time to heal over properly as well.>
The one with a patch on his body seems like it spread there from his fin.
The Cory with one affected barbel now has both barbels coated. It seems like it
covers the entire surface of some of their fins. I have not seen any redness
anywhere on the Corys but maybe that symptom would not show up
on fins (or can't be seen under the thick coating).
I would have thought Costia would be affected by the ingredients in Multicure,
if that's what this disease is, however if the Multicure is being cancelled by
the water conditioner it would explain why the disease is spreading. If the
disease is Columnaris it also explains why it is spreading quickly, although I
would have hoped triple sulfa would have slowed it down. I do have some eSHa
Exit available which I didn't use yet, as I am not keen on mixing up my
medications. I had assumed it had similar ingredients to Multicure however I
found a webpage stating it contains Acridine, Malachite Green, Meth.Violet,
Meth. Blue so not quite the same.
So it might work differently I guess?
<Indeed.>
At this point I am wondering what your opinion is of this disease and how I
should be treating it. I am fairly sure by now that this is not fungus as the
water has been kept quite clean, I haven't seen any obvious hairy fuzz,
and it has not responded to that treatment. I hope it's not Columnaris, but if
it is, it's taking its time on killing off all my fish and they aren't really
acting unwell. I've had advice that Kanaplex will work on Columnaris but at this
point I don't have access to any (although I could ask my vet when I take my
cats in tomorrow) however, obviously antibiotics are pointless if this is
Costia. But if it's Costia, why didn't the first treatment get rid of it (maybe
because it's not as good as eSHa Exit)? I'm hoping you have some ideas or tips
as to what to do next.
<Costia is frustrating because it can't be easily diagnosed without a
microscope. While some fish are prone to it, others aren't, and to some degree
it's "the thing you suspect next" if fungal and Finrot bacterial infections have
been dismissed. It's all very annoying.>
I'll attach some pictures but its quite hard to see since everything is kind of
green, I have a terrible camera, and the Corys are tiny and won't sit still.
They are still very white, reflective and you can see some of their internal
structures and iridescent bits showing through which looks like white patches on
their bodies but isn't.
<Indeed, I can see what you're talking about clearly. I'd be assuming the
substrate and bacteria are somehow the issue, and treating as described above.
I'd also double check the tank is Corydoras-safe, e.g., you used smooth silver
sand rather than sharp sand.>
When the extra sterbai Cory arrive they are going to have their own separate
quarantine well away from this tank since it is a bit of a disaster area. I'm
lucky to have a very understanding spouse who has let me set up many tanks
around the house!
Thanks as always for your help, your experience and advice is invaluable.
Cheers,
Bronwen
<Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
|
|
Re: New Pandas also Re: Epsom salts, peacock gudgeons and blockages
10/11/17
Thanks Neale for your quick reply.
<Welcome.>
Regarding the sand, it is an extremely fine river sand which I had left over
from my other Corydoras tank which has been running for over a year now, no
issues with the sand. It's very smooth and inert and I've put a thin layer for
comfort more than anything. Fresh from the bag and rinsed before using here.
Only one of the Corys has anything on his barbels but I can see the sense of
sucking out the sand for now so that it doesn't provide a hiding place for the
bacteria. I can do that during the next water change and it also gives me a
chance to see if the green will rinse off.
<Indeed.>
No carbon in the filter at the moment but I have some fresh stuff at hand in
case I needed to remove medication from the water.
<Understood, though rarely necessary; most organic medications will decompose
rapidly in mature tanks.>
I do have a microscope but I understand Costia are small and hard to identify
and my scope only goes to 100x - useful for larger parasites but not so much the
tiny stuff. It might be worth a try, if I see anything at all zooming around it
is indicative that something is going on at that scale as well as anything at a
bacterial level. I'll report back if I find anything.
<Cool. Images of Costia aka Ichthyobodo can be found online.>
I'm going to the vet for my cats yearly check up tomorrow so I will ask if he
can prescribe me anything to help. I don't think he is a fishy vet but he does
have a huge tank with a turtle in it at his surgery so he might know something
about aquarium medications. I found some tetracycline at the back of my supplies
cabinet but I'm wary of using it on new fish weakened by shipping. Other
medications I've heard could be useful are Kanamycin,
neomycin, Nitrofurazone but I guess I have to wait and see what the vet says.
<Indeed; the old Metronidazole and Nitrofurazone combo is a good one, if you can
use it.>
Thanks again, at least I feel like I have a battle plan now.
Cheers,
Bronwen
<Good luck! Neale.>
Re: New Pandas also Re: Epsom salts, peacock gudgeons and blockages
10/15/17
Hi Crew! I'm still battling the white blobby patches on my new panda Corydoras
so here is an update of what's going on.
<Sure!>
The visit to the vet on Wednesday wasn't much use, he was reluctant to supply
any medications without a diagnosis, and was unable to provide a diagnosis
himself even if he had a fresh sample - he's more of a
cat/dog/horse vet, despite keeping a turtle.
<Often the case. Medicating fish with help from a vet is the ideal, but rarely
practical. It can also get expensive given the low cost of fish, though it has
to be said there are fish vets out there, usually specialising in Koi, the best
of which reach prices comparable with pedigree dogs and horses! My point being
if you have a local or national
Koi club, they might be able to point you in the direction of a fish-friendly
vet.>
He did suggest some places that might be able to give me a diagnosis and
prescription, but they are all quite far away and mostly oriented towards trout
farming so it didn't really help. I don't think I'm getting a prescription any
time soon, and not soon enough to help my fish anyway.
Once again I'm thwarted by living in the middle of nowhere!
<Oh!>
I did manage to get a better scraping from one of my Corydoras and some of a
white patch came off so I had a look at it under my own microscope. I didn't see
any movement at all in any of the sample, and I also didn't see
any fibrous structures so I am much more confident now that it is bacterial and
not Costia or fungus.
<Understood.>
The white stuff was fairly sticky so I am guessing it is either fish slime or a
bacterial film. Zoomed in, it looked a lot like the chunks you get when you stir
up gelatin jelly. Not much else to see at x100, my entry level microscope is not
so useful this time.
<Certainly fungus should be obvious as x40, let alone x100; Protozoans a bit
variable in this regard, but at x100 I'd expect to see something moving about or
waving their cilia! As you say though, bacteria are elusive at x100.>
I stopped using Multicure (M. blue, M. green & Acriflavine) in the tank as it
was not really working and was making it too hard to see what was going on, and
continued with the course of triple sulfa. I found on day 3, the
day before the second dose was due, the patches seemed thicker and were
spreading. But the morning after the water change and second dose of triple
sulfa, it looked like the start of recovery. Some of the Corys looked
completely clear while the other affected ones seemed slightly better.
However by the following day it was obvious that triple sulfa really was not
working - maybe it was just the water change that made them look temporarily
better.
<Agreed.>
The white patches are spreading again and some patches were visible on fish that
were previously completely clear. The sterbai Corys also are starting to have
light markings on their faces which look like they could be ulcers.
I completed the course of triple sulfa but I think at best it merely slowed the
spread of the disease.
<Triple-Sulfa contains sulfamethazine, sulfacetamide, sulfathiazole, only one of
which, sulfacetamide, is an antibiotic; the other two are antimicrobials. Taken
together they're a bit hit-and-miss as an aquarium medication, and not really
anyone's first choice. While useful enough as preventatives, for example once a
fish is injured and you're concerned it might get infected with Finrot, I'd not
recommend Triple-Sulfa for dealing with an established infection.>
In any case, behaviourally the fish are still all eating, acting like they are
well and so on so I decided to switch to tetracycline as I think they are well
enough to handle the side effects for now. I keep finding conflicting
information regarding whether tetracycline will treat Columnaris but I think its
worth a try since I don't have anything else at hand right now, and I don't know
for sure that I'm dealing with Columnaris anyway - if it is, it must be the
slow-acting strain. I have ordered some Kanaplex and furan 2 from the internet
and if the tetracycline doesn't work I'll switch to whichever one gets here
first - although is it true that they have a synergy effect when dosed together?
I will wait and see how dire the situation is and if its not so bad maybe I'll
wait for both before
treating.
<Using two antibiotics can have mileage. Being very specific, if you choose one
for gram-positive and one for gram-negative, they can provide a two-pronged
approach without a risk of poisoning your fish.>
I'm also considering the possibility of using the Multicure product as a bath
since the Methylene blue and Acriflavine ingredients might still help and that
way I'm not mixing my medications "in tank".
<Agreed; I'd tend to back off the organic dyes (Methylene blue, etc.) while
using antibiotics. Whereas antibiotics are focused and have low toxicity, the
dyes and antimicrobials are much more akin to poisons, intended to kill
'germs' before they kill the fish. So overuse, or combining them, can pose a
risk. Do a water change, stop using the dyes, and then begin the antibiotics --
removing carbon from the filter, if used.>
I hope the tetracycline will work but it wouldn't surprise me at all if this
bacteria is also resistant to tetracycline as we don't really have access to
much else in Australia. So at this point I'm just planning ways to keep the fish
alive until the big guns get here. The bath instructions I've read are to use
water from the current tank to fill the "bath", then use the medication at
double the strength intended for in-tank use. Bathe fish for 30 min.s, watching
and removing back to the main tank if signs of distress are noted.
<Viable, if used carefully alongside the antibiotic.>
Multicure has 0.4% malachite green, 4% Methylene blue and 2% Acriflavine which
previously the fish have tolerated fine at the recommended half strength for
scaleless fish. Do you think Corydoras would handle a double
dose of this medication (which would actually be a regular dose)? How often is
it necessary to bathe, once a day? Uh, don't take that last one out of context,
haha.
<In other words bathe them at full dose? Personally, I would try this, but
carefully watching for signs of distress.>
These little guys have lasted almost 2 weeks since arrival, and despite their
external condition they still seem vigorous and I haven't lost hope that I will
be able to get them to be well again, that is, as well as possible after nuking
them with so much medication. What do you think of my treatment plan?
<Worth a shot!>
Cheers,
Bronwen
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: New Pandas also Re: Epsom salts, peacock gudgeons and blockages
10/26/17
Hi Crew!
<Hello Bronwen,>
Further update on the Corydoras white blobby patch disease saga. Somehow,
despite the disease failing to respond to anything I've thrown at it so far, the
only loss I've had has been from someone jumping out of the tank.
I do think despite not being curative, the treatments and baths did stop things
from getting worse, temporarily at least. The ulcerations I noticed on the
sterbai Corydoras faces actually cleared up during the tetracycline treatment,
however nothing has shaken the white blobby patches.
<Oh dear. Presumably indicates not a bacterial infection. Next most common
causes are either fungal or protozoan; the former is relatively easy to
identify, if not by eye, then with even a low power microscope because of the
hyphae. Protozoans difficult to see directly, so mucous and cysts will be what
you can see with the naked eye. I'd be choosing medications accordingly, perhaps
going with the protozoan option first, as this would
tend to be a bit more blobby than the usually fluffy appearance you get with
fungi. That said, if you're dealing with an effectively untreatable bacterial
infection, like a Mycobacteriosis, or a viral infection, then nothing much will
help. Viral infections (look up Fish Pox and Lymphocystis for examples) do
produce blister-looking things, but otherwise don't normally cause actual
physical harm, and may clear up in time -- though usually across months if not
years in some cases. Viruses in fishes do seem to be stress related as often as
not, contact with heavy metals in the water or substrate being one example known
in the wild.>
I still have 4 mostly okay panda Corydoras with either just fins or no obvious
infection, and 4 severely affected ones. Of the rasboras that were also
quarantining in that tank, 8 are fine, one jumped out, and one has a small white
patch on his lower lip. One of the sterbai Corydoras has an extremely small
white patch at the tip of one fin. I would say the tetracycline was pretty harsh
and the fish are not as well or perky in attitude as they were at the start but
they are still eating. A quick recap for any crew who haven't seen this case so
far: New panda Corydoras started showing white patches on day 2 in quarantine.
Treated with Multicure (malachite green, Acriflavine, Methylene blue) in case of
fungus or Costia, no effect noted after a few days. Treated with triple sulfa,
full course as per label, slight improvement then worsening. Treated with
tetracycline for 5 days, once again slight improvement then worsening. Treated
with aminacrine (desperate measures while waiting for more medication to arrive)
and once again slight improvement followed by worsening symptoms. I have pretty
much exhausted every medication available to me over the counter and a trip to
the vet for help resulted in an unwilling shrug as he was not willing to
prescribe anything due to being unable to diagnose anything. Due to my location
that exhausted my local options.
<Understood; see above.>
A couple of weeks ago I ordered both Furan 2 and Kanaplex online (I am in a
country where these aren't available) hoping for at least some of the fish to
survive long enough to be treated with either of these, and aiming to use both
to achieve as broad a coverage as possible and get the reputed synergistic
effect of these medications used together. However the Furan 2 arrived first and
I am not sure how much longer I can wait before the worst
affected fish start dying. I have enough medication to do 2 full 4-day
treatments with Furan 2 and I don't know when the Kanaplex will arrive. It could
be another 2 weeks according to the worst case scenario shipping
estimate and I don't think anything will last that long. Even if it comes Monday
that might not be soon enough for some of these fish.
<I would medicate with what you have rather than waiting for something else.
Synergies between medications do exist, of course, but are vague, at best, in
standard issue aquarium fish drugs.>
I am considering doing one four day course of Furan 2 to at least see if it is
effective, and if not, save the remainder for when the Kanaplex arrives.
However it occurred to me that perhaps this would merely strengthen the bacteria
further if it is not sufficient to kill it off. Do you think this is possible?
<Nope. Not the way antibiotic resistance works.>
I think if I treat with Furan 2 and it does not cure or reduce the symptoms in
the 4 worst panda corys, I will have to euthanize them to remove them as a
bacteria source in the tank and hopefully ensure the survival of everyone
else. I do have a hope that since this medication is not readily available
around here, the bacteria should not be resistant to it but I can't help but
think ahead.
<I would only euthanise if the fish are actually distressed -- but isolating
them does make sense. As stated above, viral infections for example are
environmental issues and as such not usually catchy (some exceptions of course,
like Dwarf Gourami Iridovirus) and the dratted Mycobacteria problem is also more
environmental than anything else, the bacteria being latent in many aquaria and
fish farms, but only a problem when the fish are otherwise weakened.>
Tough times! I was not expecting this to last so long, particularly due to panda
Corydoras' reputation for being less hardy. I thought the medication would kill
them even if the disease did not and yet they are stubbornly holding on. I am
almost certain the medication I have put them through hasn't done them much good
in the long term, the tetracycline in particular seemed to shake them up a fair
bit.
<Possibly.>
Anyway what are your thoughts regarding starting to treat with Furan 2? I do not
plan to start anything until tomorrow at earliest as I would like to do a water
change and run carbon in the tank for a bit beforehand to remove any traces of
previous medication.
<Makes sense. But do remove after use; before adding new medications.>
Cheers, Bronwen @ South Australia, amateur fish nurse
<Good luck! Neale.>
|
Panda Cory Advice; hlth., sel. (Note: divide genus...)
6/1/16
Hi Crew!
<Hello Bronwen!>
It's been a long time since I've written and I feel a lot more capable
in fish keeping than when I started out, many thanks for providing such
a great educational resource! I have written before asking about
Corydoras and have since set up a sandy bottom 90 litre planted tank
with the goal of keeping some small Corydoras - I chose Corydoras panda.
I have had a few mishaps along the way, which is a long story involving
Corys wasting away, failing to thrive, then an extremely fast acting and
virulent Finrot that hit penguin tetras and coincided with white patches
on Corys while all guppies were spared of either, and this was after no
known recent change or addition to the tank. But that's in the past now,
and it's not what this email is about. Currently I only have 3 panda
Corys left of 10, and I would love to get this back up to a proper sized
school. I'm planning to remove the guppies as I suspect they were
stealing all the food before the more timid Corydoras could get their
fill. Anyway I am looking for help on which is the least bad choice for
me to obtain more panda cories.
<Understood.>
The first batch of 5 or 6 panda Corys I purchased online had no barbels
to speak of, and some were quite thin and sickly, most of those died - I
believe this store to be a possible source of the Camallanus infestation
I had earlier on so I had pre-emptively wormed these fish but it didn't
help.
<Sounds plausible. Certainly, fish received in this sort of condition
should be quarantined for at least 4 weeks, and ideally longer.
Basically, until such time as they're putting on weight and obviously
repairing any previous damage.>
The next batch I purchased from elsewhere, and were a lot healthier with
beautiful barbels, but they spent an extra day in the post and I believe
were quite stressed from the voyage. A couple of those were thin and
sickly and died too, although they lasted a fair few weeks. This second
shop charges 2-3 times more per panda Cory than anywhere else I have
seen. Lastly. I have seen panda Corydoras sold locally very rarely, but
every single fish I have bought from the local fish store has died
within the first month or so. They frequently have ich outbreaks,
livestock with visible white fuzzy patches or red spots, or wounds, dead
fish in display tanks and in shared sumps. I really don't want to
purchase anything from there as it would mean almost guaranteed disease,
and I don't want to give money to people who mistreat their fish so
badly - but I do have better medication available to me than I have had
previously (eSHa 2000 which saved some fish during the great Finrot
disaster after I was sure I would lose every single one), and at least
I'd be able to see the state of the fish before committing to buy.
Ideally I don't want to be medicating Corydoras at all, I know they're
sensitive.
<Yes and no. They're no more sensitive than Dwarf Cichlids or Loaches,
say.
Indeed, they're probably tougher in some regards. But they do have
specific weaknesses. Copper and formalin are two chemicals to avoid. On
the other hand, antibiotics shouldn't cause and problems, and short-term
used of low salt doses (i.e., 2 gram/litre across 10-14 days) is a safer
way to treat for Ick/Whitespot than many commercial medications.
Complicating things is heat stress, Corydoras mostly doing best at 22-25
C (one or two exceptions, such as Corydoras sterbai, do well above this,
and a few, like Corydoras paleatus, are actually happier even cooler).
Heat increases their demand for oxygen while reducing the amount of
oxygen in the water, and the tendency to keep Corydoras in overstocked
tanks makes the risk of heat stress even higher. Of course they will
gulp air when they need to, but
that in turn makes them more likely to inhale airborne toxins such as
paint fumes compared with regular fish.>
I'm really not sure which option is the least bad. If I get cheap but
barbel-less fish I can buy more of them and hope to nurse them back to
health. If I get expensive but healthier fish, will they recover from
shipping stress better than they would recover from illness? Or are the
odds that the stress would make them get ill anyway? And then also, I
wouldn't be able to buy as many and each lost fish would cost me more.
<A real conundrum, for sure. If you have a quarantine tank, then buying
2-3 at a time from the less reliable place might be worth a flutter.
Each time quarantine until they're back to health, pre-emptively
deworming if you think that's necessary. But if that isn't an option,
getting them from the more expensive place would probably make more
sense. Better to have a group of 5-6 good specimens and breed from them
than to try to buy a dozen or more that simply don't survive for long.>
The local option would involve me waiting long enough for a panda Cory
shipment to come in, and then buying them before they've been held in
the shop for long since the longer they're there the more likely they
are to get sick - which is the complete opposite of the usual method of
waiting to see which new arrivals last a few weeks in the shop.
<Correct; but in this case, with the cheap place, you've got to do the
quarantining.>
I haven't got a quarantine tank ready yet and I want to do that first
before I buy any more Corydoras. I'm really stumped on where to get them
from. Due to where I live my options are pretty limited - some online
stores just don't deliver here, others expect me to drive to the nearest
capital city to pick my fish up from the airport (500km away)! My gut
feeling is that the best option is to buy cories from the most expensive
source and just treat them with kid gloves and feed them up once they
arrive as they definitely had the best barbels.
<Agreed.>
Is this a good indicator of healthy Corydoras, or is it just that Corys
with no barbels are definitely unhealthy?
<Neither really. Worn barbels can happen to otherwise perfect specimens
kept in tanks with an abrasive substrate. But since erosion of the
barbels does seem to be caused by bacteria, worn barbels can also
indicate less that perfect environmental conditions, in much the same
way as Finrot. On the other hand, sickly fish can have perfect barbels
if the problem is something internal, like worms. So you have to take
the barbels for what they are, a sign that some unknown combination of
abrasive substrate, lack of hygiene, and ambient bacterial infection has
caused barbel erosion, and
whether that's something you can fix will depend on the rest of the
fish's health.>
I know it's a bit of marketing trickery to overprice something so that
people think its higher quality but maybe for these Corys it's actually
true.
<It can be, but if they're all getting them from the same Southeast
Asian exporter, it probably doesn't matter a lot. Depends on the
retailers. Some will have a good reputation for quarantining their
livestock and keeping their aquaria spotless. Some won't. Conversing
online at fish forums specific to your country is a good start if you
need some feedback from other aquarists. Alternatively, catfish-specific
sites, like PlanetCatfish, have forums where you can place appeals for
recommended retailers in your country.>
What do you think my best options are? What are the best foods for
nursing stressed Corys back to health?
<Same as feeding Corydoras generally, but I'd skip anything live (like
bloodworms or Tubifex) in favour of frozen, gamma-irradiated equivalents
just to be safe. Otherwise the usual sinking algae wafers and so on.>
How many panda Corydoras could fit in a 5 gallon quarantine tank (that's
the best I can do)?
<Definitely limited, but 2-3 shouldn't have problems for a few weeks.
They'll be skittish in such small groups though, so keep the tank shady
and put it somewhere really quiet.>
I'm prepared to do frequent water changes due to the small size of the
tank. I do think in my previous attempts to quarantine Corydoras, I
neglected to make sure they were eating really well and did not fatten
them up before putting them in with the pushy guppies and that is
something I definitely want to do differently in future.
Thanks again!
Cheers,
Bronwen
<Most welcome. Neale.>
Re: Panda Cory Advice 6/17/16
Hi again Crew! After my last email I realised I have a big plastic tub
(around 90lt) which is much better for long term quarantine than the 5
gal tank I'd been thinking about using. I already had four double sponge
filters running in other tanks ready for a different project, so I stuck
them in the tub, along one side. They stick on the side by suction cup
so provide a bit of cover underneath. I've set the quarantine tub up for
comfort over bare sterility, so there are some Catappa leaves to hide
under and a very thin layer of fine sand to snuffle through, the aim
being stress reduction and recuperation.
<Understood...>
Decided to get my Corydoras from the closer seller to minimise shipping
time. I was expecting heavy losses of panda Cory based on previous
experience, so I ordered 7. A friend urged me to try some trilineatus
too, dismissing pandas as too fragile, so I got 7 of those as well. I
was expecting to lose over half the pandas and maybe 2 or 3 of the
trilineatus.
The fish arrived last Tuesday and there was a remarkable difference
between how well the trilineatus took to being shipped and how ill the
panda Corys were; one had died in the bag too which probably didn't
help. The trilineatus looked a little pink/flushed but were very lively
and I could only describe the pandas as limp! Worrying; but they
recovered quite
quickly upon arrival in quarantine. They all had nice looking barbels!
No visible Finrot or white patches, unlike previous batches from this
supplier.
<Good.>
It's been over a week in quarantine now and although one or two of them
still look a little on the thin side, they are all very lively and I
have had no losses! The trilineatus are a little more shy than the panda
Corydoras and the two kinds seem to school together a lot of the time as
they are pretty much the same size. I didn't think through one aspect of
my
quarantine tub, and that was to raise it off the floor to make siphoning
out uneaten food a little easier, I have had to resort to using a
pipette to manually suck out the pieces that I could see. I put a small
powerhead/filter in today to increase water movement and try to help
keep the bottom a bit cleaner, and I got an instant reaction from the
Corys, almost all of them went into formation and lined up to swim
against the current. They seemed to really like it! It is an absolute
joy to see a larger group of these little fish swimming together.
<I would agree, and am sure the catfish feel the same way.>
I haven't wormed them yet, I wanted to observe for a while first and I'm
still not sure whether I'm seeing a couple of unwell skinny fish, or
immature males that are naturally slimmer. It is good being able to look
down from above to see how fat they are! The ones that concern me are
almost tadpole shaped, instead of the tail tapering in a wedge shape, it
is
thin for much of it's length. Maybe it will just take time for them to
bulk up and recover? I have been feeding (not all at the same time!)
semi-crushed algae pellets(popular), sinking "tropical crisp" wafers
(popular but perhaps too big to handle), shrimp pellets for catfish
(ignored, which is odd because these are my sister's peppered Cory's
favourite), frozen bloodworm (popular), Microworms (popular and
generated some vigorous snuffling), frozen community food (popular but
again some pieces were too big to handle and this made the big mess that
I have had trouble cleaning up), flake (this just ended up stuck on the
sponge filters, not sure if palatable to Corys). Water changes every
couple of days, along with rinsing collected food particles off of the
sponges to avoid fouled up water. So far so good!
<Yes; while I would not be thrilled to receive underweight Corydoras, it
isn't uncommon. If, after two or three weeks, they're still underweight,
that's more alarming. For now, I'd go by activity level and things like
barbels and fins to see there's no sign of lethargy or physical damage.
If the fish are feeding, just give it time, "a little but often" being
the
optimal way to re-condition underweight fish, even four to six small
meals a day not being out of line. Fish cannot store food inside
themselves for long, and if you feed a lot, they poop out most of that
food without extracting much nutrition. They're naturally grazers who
would be consuming and digesting tiny amounts across the day/night.>
Worth worrying about worming yet do you think? I'm still cautious about
Camallanus after the last outbreak, it's possibly the same supplier that
send infested fish, and I have plenty of Levamisole/Prazi left, but not
sure what the correct dosage for Corydoras would be. I've got doses of
20mg (17mg base equivalent) Levamisol HCL and 4mg Praziquantel per
tablet. I've used 1 tablet per 10 litres dissolved directly into the
tank water in the past, for guppies/tetras which was very successful for
Camallanus treatment. I don't want to wait too long, if they're there,
I've seen what damage they can do! And I think it would be hard to spot
trailing worms on a bottom dwelling fish like a Corydoras anyway. I also
don't want to
overmedicate and damage these Corydoras since they're doing so well so
far.
Thoughts?
<Worming shouldn't cause undue harm, if used as directed by the
manufacturer. I don't have any unique insight here, and would go along
with what's stated on the packaging and in your own experience. I would
not hesitate just because the fish are thin or newly imported.>
Many thanks for your continuing assistance!
Bronwen
Australia
<Welcome. Neale.>
Please help my panda Cory!
11/14/15
Mature tank, 30 gallons, 5 panda Corys, 3 zebra Otos, an African dwarf frog, 7
mosquito Rasboras, some amano shrimp, Eco Complete gravel substrate,
<Ah, this might be the problem!>
planted tank, Aqueon 30 filter, TopFin 10 filter, 20% water changes weekly, 7.0
pH, Ammonia 0 ppm, Nitrite 0 ppm, Nitrate 2.0 ppm
In the past 2 days, one of my panda Corys' barbels have almost completely eroded
and today he has developed a white fuzzy cotton-looking patch on his head. He is
lethargic, not eating, and stays away from the other Corys.
I'm worried that this could be columnaris because I have noticed tiny white
things on the glass that sway with the current. Or do you think it might be a
bacterial infection that has also developed a fungal infection? The other 4
panda Corys are acting completely normally and look healthy. What should I do?!
I would hate to lose this little guy!
<How abrasive does the gravel feel to you? Here's the thing. Barbels erode
because of a combination of physical damage (caused by sharp substrates) and
subsequent bacterial infection (very similar to Finrot). Unfortunately for the
Amano 'Nature Aquarium' brigade, substrates that plants like are replicated
using quite abrasive materials, often byproducts from the
glassmaking industry. While not a problem for tetras, Otocinclus and shrimps,
anything that roots about in the substrate, like Corydoras, is going to be less
happy. Corydoras not only sift the substrate with their barbels, they like to
stick their heads right in and swallow the substrate, spewing it out of their
gills. It's adorable when they do it on a sandy substrate, but isn't going to
work on traditional gravel or sharp sand. So, in situations where Corydoras are
being kept, you're almost always better off keeping them on smooth lime-free
sand (smooth silica sand or pool filter sand work well, and cheaply) or else the
finest, smoothest pea gravel you can find. There's nothing to stop you using a
plant friendly substrate underneath a gravel tidy (basically a plastic mesh) and
then add 1 cm or so of the catfish-friendly substrate on top. Plants couldn't
care less. Might need to make a few holes in the gravel tidy for plants with
deep roots, but most plants will happily send their roots through the mesh in
time. Anyway, this would be my first line of thought: is the substrate at fault.
Try quarantining the suspect catfish in a tank with no substrate (8-10 gallons
is ample for one or a few Corydoras, temporarily at least)
and see if they recover (medicating as per Finrot). Make sense? Neale.>
Re: Please help my panda Cory!
Absolutely. I'll try that first.
<Cool. Neale.>
Series of Panda Corydoras deaths
2/24/11
Hello crew,
What a shame that I only contact you when things are going
wrong!! I still peruse the boards and FAQs with interest, so
thanks as always for the marvelous site.
<Thanks for the kind words.>
I started out wanting to query the reason for the steady demise
of first 2,then a 3rd, and finally a 4th panda Corydoras catfish.
Having typed out my set-up, water parameters and current stock
and maintenance practices, however, I suspect I know what's
happened (indeed from the FAQ's I certainly should). Even so,
I would really appreciate the benefit of your wisdom to avoid a
repeat performance, if that's alright. It's a bit lengthy
but if nothing else, it will provide a lesson to other FAQ
readers
<Indeed.>
Set-up is a 90 litre Fluval Roma 90 litre (20 US gallon)
freshwater tank with Fluval U2 internal filter, about 5 months
old - I cloned an existing mature filter at the time of setting
it up, so the new tank cycled quite quickly.
<All sounds fine.>
Water parameters generally stay at nil ammonia, nil nitrite, 5-
10 nitrate. Temp 25c/77F. Ph on the high side at 8, hardness 5
GH. I use mains tap water with usual de-chlorinator etc.
<Do understand 25 C is absolutely at the top end of what
almost all Corydoras find comfortable. Is that the cause of
death? No; but it's always wise to keep the vast majority of
Corydoras at 22-24 C, and to choose tankmates that appreciate the
same thing: Neons, Platies, Swordtails, Danios, most Barbs,
etc.>
Substrate is black sand (more of a fine gravel really), some
ornaments, a 6 inch bubble wand, lots of hideaways and plastic
plants, and it's about one quarter planted (with thick
Vallisneria spiralis).
<Black sand can be tricky with Corydoras because most of it is
a byproduct of glass manufacturer rather than sand, and it has a
rough, abrasive quality that plays havoc with their barbels and
underbelly. Again, unlikely the cause of death, but do check your
sand or gravel feels silky smooth rather than rough.>
I usually do 20% water changes and brief substrate vac weekly,
and do a better clean and filter rinse (in tank water obviously)
about once every 4-6 weeks. There is some moderate green algae
which grows as a fine fur on most surfaces - I clean it from the
glass and the lighter coloured plastic plants, but leave it
elsewhere for the fish to graze on. Lighting is on for 12 hrs per
day.
<Fine.>
I have 10 Neons, 9 dwarf Puntius gelius barbs, 2 small striata
and a yo-yo loach, 2 dwarf gouramis, a dwarf Bristlenose (2
inches long), 1 tiny bumble-bee goby, and 5 Amano shrimp. I feed
once per day - sometimes giving them a fasting day - a variety
(not all at the same time) of spirulina crisps, algae wafers,
flakes, sinking pellets, frozen peas, and a frozen mix of
bloodworm/brine shrimp/daphnia. They sometimes make the wafers
last, but otherwise all food is gone in 5-15 minutes.
<Again, all sounds okay.>
I did have two other yo-yo loaches up until 3 weeks ago, which I
re-homed as they grew enormous and were bullying everything in
the tank. I also had a mini-school of 5 panda Corys - and here is
the issue, as I find myself down to just one.
<Indeed, Yo-Yo loaches, and indeed loaches generally other
than Kuhli Loaches, make poor companions for Corydoras.>
Regrettably the maintenance of the tank fell apart a bit a few
weeks back (long story of boring personal crisis), and I confess
I did nothing with it for about 5 weeks (apart from feeding the
fish sparingly once per day). One of the larger panda's
started sitting on the top of the filter occasionally, under the
lights, but was otherwise acting fairly normally. I realised this
was likely to be down to poor water quality and kicked myself
into touch..I tackled the tank, and discovered that the panda
fond of sitting on the filter seemed to be struggling to swim. I
hoped that I hadn't left it too late, but sadly despite a
good clean and water change, and removing the 2 huge bullying
loaches, the panda was still suffering, upside down and unable to
swim properly after 48 hrs, so with huge regret I euthanised
him.
<Oh dear.>
And when I went to observe the other pandas to see how they were
doing by comparison, only then did I realise there were 2 missing
completely - I had assumed they were hiding away from the
bullying loaches (the more they bullied, the more hiding places I
introduced), and that's why I only ever saw 2 or 3 at a time.
Very poor observation on my part.
<Perhaps so.>
The 2 remaining pandas were very dark in colour, which my LFS
sternly informed me was down to the stress of a) the beastly
loaches and b) the water quality. I got my act together and have
been taking much better care of the two survivors..since shipping
out the loaches and giving it a careful clean, the entire
community is happier. The two panda's lightened in colour
over the course of a few days, and they were back to fluttering
around the tank with a pinkish hue quite happily again.
<Good.>
But after watching them swimming around and feeding normally a
couple of nights ago, I gave the tank one final glance before
going to bed, and saw one of the remaining pandas upside down in
the plants, gasping for breath. By the time I'd fetched a
small cup of iced water and the clove oil (I couldn't bear to
think of him suffering overnight needlessly), he was dead.
<You don't need the ice water with the clove oil. Indeed,
the thermal shock would defeat the object of using clove oil as a
sedative! Just take 1 litre of water from the tank, put into a
container, add 30 drops of clove oil, stir well, then immerse the
fish, making sure it can't rise to the surface to gulp air
(Corydoras can do this, and obviously the more the air they
breathe, the less they use their gills, and the less they absorb
the clove oil). After 10-15 minutes, you should find the fish has
passed away peacefully.>
I guess my rescue operation came too late for him, despite 3
weeks of apparent normality? Why did he go so suddenly?
<No idea.>
Incidentally, of the 4 I lost I inspected 2 of them, and there
was nothing obviously wrong with the bodies..no white marks, no
sores, swellings, blisters or wounds, barbels quite long and
intact. One was missing most of his tail fin, but I put that down
to the loaches snapping at him when he was unable to swim
away.
<Stress could easily be an issue, and water quality, hard to
say which it is. But either way, you might not see any physical
symptoms.>
I realise the last survivor needs more of his own species, but I
don't want to rush out and buy another 4 in case it was not
simple poor water quality that expedited their demise, but
something else more mysterious (i.e. not the fault of a crappy
fishkeeper).
<Indeed.>
Just before Neale tears several strips off me (if he hasn't
already, further up in this rambling text), is it safe to say I
caused this through lack of maintenance for a period of
weeks?
<Impossible to be sure. But all else being equal, if the tank
is now settled down and everyone seems happy, you could be
justified in putting your fatalities down to this.>
Should I wait to see how the lone ranger fares before getting him
some replacement tankmates, or just hurry up and get some?
<Yes, I'd wait; give it at least 3-4 weeks to make sure
the tank is stable.>
If anyone else is reading this whilst assuming that a few missed
water changes won't hurt, just spare a minute to think of the
species you have and whether or not they are hardy enough to
handle a spell of poor water quality. I suspect these cute little
catfish were not. :o(
<Corydoras panda are indeed towards the delicate end of the
Corydoras spectrum, at least when compared to Peppered or Bronze
catfish. But they're still quite hardy fish.>
Thank you for any insights, and perhaps forgiveness for my
confession.
Susie
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Series of Panda Corydoras deaths
2/24/11
Hi Neale,
<Susie,>
Thanks for the quick response....part of the reason for the long
email, as well as trying to pin down a reason for the loss of my
pandas, was to get an all-round expert opinion on my current tank
set up....and you have done that, so thank you!
<Cool.>
Re the temp.....dammit, stupid me....I recall reading something
about the Corydoras preferring a specific end of the spectrum,
but I incorrectly remembered it as being the WARMER end. I'll
notch the heater down a little (slowly) over the next few days to
see if I can make the last remaining panda more comfortable. A
little knowledge is a bad thing sometimes.
<Corydoras sterbai is about the only Corydoras species happy
at 24-28 C, hence it's reputation as the "Discus tank
Corydoras". All the others prefer cooler water because they
come from shallow, well-oxygenated streams. In fact I've kept
Corydoras paleatus outdoors during English summers, where they
did just fine.>
Re the black sand......I originally had quite a soft, grayish
mixture of smooth sand, but when I topped up the new tank I
bought a different brand which is indeed rather more glossy and
glass-like. Hence it looks like very fine gravel to me, although
it does feel smooth to the touch. Curses.....is it worth simply
mixing in more soft sand, or should I remove as much of the
glossy back stuff as I can without disturbing the plants, and
replace it? It's not terribly deep, maximum of 3cm where
planted and shallower elsewhere.
<If the Corydoras have long barbels with narrow, needle-like
tips, then the sand is fine. If the sand is sharp, you'll
find the barbels barely stick out a few mm from their mouths, and
the tips will be rounded. Smooth silver sand from the garden
centre is ideal, but fine gravel should work well too, just so
long as it has rounded, not jagged, edges.>
I'm always faintly concerned that the gravel vac, which I use
as I'm syphoning off water to change, is quite weak and only
sucks up a minimal amount of gunk from the sand surface (the
Bristlenose, small as he is, is an incredibly messy beast). The
rest gets stirred up and eventually taken up by the filter or
broken down by bacteria, I guess? I bought an air-pump driven vac
with a little bag, but the suction on that is really poor,
despite a pretty robust pump. The sand is disturbed/stirred when
I move the ornaments for cleaning, plus I have a few assassin
snails and possibly a few tiny tiny Malaysian trumpets under
there - does that sound like enough to keep it reasonably clean
and free of noxious gas pockets? I've considered pipetting up
visible waste and squirting it into a net manually, but that may
be getting a bit carried away.....??
<Yes, the sand will be fine. In fact sand tends to cause
problems when disturbed rather than left alone. If you have some
burrowing snails and/or plants, it'll be fine, and
effectively self-cleaning. The denser sand at the bottom helps to
remove nitrate. Do read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_7/volume_7_1/dsb.html
>
Re the suitability of the loaches, granted the LFS (M'head
Aquatics, fantastically helpful people) did warn me to keep an
eye out for the loaches bullying the Corys. They indicated,
however, that where there was plenty of food, reasonable space,
and refuge for the cats, it shouldn't be an issue.
<Indeed, but does depend on the Corydoras. Corydoras paleatus
for example should be bolshy enough to get by, but little C.
panda not so much.>
But these particular 2 loaches grew unusually large - I bought 3
but the 3rd remained quite small. Those I have left now were
quite passive.... until I moved out the big chiefs. Now I have a
new problem, with the 2 small striatas and the remaining yo-yo
now fighting one another quite frequently, and occasionally
having a go at other small fish.
<Yes, what they do. All the Botiine loaches have the potential
to be troublesome.>
If the LFS will have them, I'm prepared to give up on them
altogether...I got them for a bit of variety and to liven up the
tank, with the assurance of the LFS that things would work out
ok, but whilst fun to watch they appear to be total hooligans.
I've got two Neons with one eye apiece to remember them by,
even if I can't hold them directly responsible for the death
of my Corydoras.
<Maidenhead Aquatics will usually take back fish, so
shouldn't be an issue.>
Thanks for the tip on the kindest euthanasia method, I obviously
hadn't properly understood how the clove oil worked. I hope I
won't have to use it again anytime soon.
<Indeed.>
If the tank settles and I can move the last of the loaches out,
I'd like another little shoal of the Cory cats....perhaps a
different species, if the last panda makes it and will shoal with
them?? There's some Adolfoi's at the local LFS.....or
perhaps stick with bronze or peppered, given my chequered
history? :o)
<Oh, do try C. panda again, perhaps four of them, and four C.
adolfoi if you want. In any event, C. panda isn't delicate by
fish standards, so well worth trying again.>
Thanks again for the oversight, I do appreciate it. Now to chat
up Maidenhead to take the last of the loaches...
Susie
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Series of Panda Corydoras deaths
2/26/11
Thanks Neale, you're a legend as always.
<Be sure to tell my girlfriend. She needs reminding.>
A couple of days on and the lone panda Cory seems to be doing
okay. He's swimming actively (occasionally with the pygmy
barbs!),
<Yes, the do this; their instinct to school is very
strong.>
seems content enough out in the open, and appears to be feeding.
Pic attached.....sorry, I couldn't get a decent image of the
barbels, but following your description I had a good look.....I
can only see two pairs, the uppermost, longer and slender pair,
and the inner, thicker pair. The upper ones are about 3.5mm, the
inners 3mm.....but hard as I try, I couldnt honestly say they are
needle-like. Having looked at some online images of how the
barbels should be, it looks as though the very tips of the
needles of his have been worn off, so I guess that
"sand" is indeed too harsh.....I'd better switch it
out for something softer.
<As/when, yes, that'd be a good idea. Smooth silver sand
can be bought in garden centres and is very cheap, around £3
for 25 kilos from my local garden centre. It does have a bright
yellowy-brown colour though that not everyone likes (the fish
don't care) and while it does darken with time (algae and
bacteria coating the grains, presumably) some aquarists prefer to
use very fine pea gravel or coloured aquarium sand (e.g., black
sand). But as we've discussed before, some sand is too sharp,
e.g., Tahitian Moon Sand, so spend some time researching this.
Look for aquarium sands states as being "soft belly
safe" or words to that effect. The CaribSea web site for
example states whether this is true or not for all their
substrates, making selection easier.>
It's been a week since the last water change so I did some
pre-water change tests, just to see if anything is going on, or
if I need to up the changes for a while....but everything is
totally "normal" (0 ammonia, 0 nitrite, 10 nitrate), so
happy days.
<Cool.>
The loaches are a bit obnoxious towards the panda, but he
skitters away and comes right back out again so hopefully
he's not overly bothered.
<Hopefully not. On the whole the bigger Corydoras, like
Corydoras paleatus, handle themselves rather better with loaches
than the smaller species. The big Brochis species would be even
better.>
I notice the Bristlenose, which is getting rather large, can be a
bit spiteful towards him as well.
<Territorial, more than spiteful, I'm sure.>
Will a large enough number of Corydoras cope with that as a
group?
<Should do. Certainly, your Bristlenose poses no threat, and
will only shoo Corydoras away from its nest and/or bits of food
it wants for itself. Loaches are more of a gamble, as I've
said before.>
Thanks
Susie
<Cheers, Neale.>
|
|
Re: Series of Panda Corydoras deaths
3/1/11
Thanks again for all the help and advice.
Yesterday I cleared out about a third of the sharp black sand,
leaving the plants undisturbed, and covered what remained with
1.5 inches of much softer grade grayish sand, which I'd had
in a previous tank - I'd washed it until the water ran clear
prior to its previous use and got no residue, and washed it again
this time, but still it gave the aquarium water a grayish
hue?
<Silt, perhaps some diatoms and bacteria; will clear in
time.>
Wonder why its releasing a residue the 2nd time around, hope it
wont cause the fish a problem while the filter battles to clear
it? They all seem to be alright this morning.......
Anyway, the little panda Cory had an instant return to form and
was busy rummaging through the new sand as fast as I could add
it.
<Nice to know.>
I made a trip to Maidenhead Aquatics to get some additional
assassin snails, given the extra thickness of the sand, and now
have my eye on some of their current Corydoras stock. They have
some Julii, a peppered variety (Emerald??), plus Masked and
Adolfoi. The last two are really expensive. Can't find any
pandas, hope my last one will school with another species ok.
<Often do. Helps if similar in size, colouration.>
After studying the barbels of the fish in the store, my surviving
panda most definitely has very worn barbels. How upsetting.....I
guess this could have been the cause of their demise, if the
water quality was not as poor as I thought. Hopefully the new
sand will allow him to recover....do the barbels re-grow?
<Yes!>
He was happily scoffing a live bloodworm last night, so I take it
he's feeling alright despite being alone.
<Cool.>
Intrigued about territories, have been trying to work out the
dwarf gouramis captive areas.....
<Dwarf Gouramis favour patches about 20-30 cm square at the
surface among floating plants.>
Thanks again
<Glad to help.>
Susie
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Series of Panda Corydoras deaths
3/1/11
*groan*
Now you've gone and done it. I don't have any floating
plants, only a cluster of planted Vallisneria spiralis (a patch
about 8" x 8").
<These can work, once their leaves reach the surface. I do
find Vallisneria become hair algae traps sometimes, but your
Gourami couldn't care less.>
Now you've got me feverishly researching floating plants for
the gouramis.....Riccia fluitans or Sylvania
<Salvinia.>
natans are the favourites so far,
<Both are good plants, though Riccia can be difficult to
establish in tanks with strong currents. Salvinia natans is
widely traded. Be sure to use the right Latin name! Places like
Wildwoods routinely have it in stock.>
not that they appear very readily available apart from on
eBay.......and that has only given me ideas for a beautiful green
rug on the open area of substrate....
<My favourite is Indian Fern, a species Bob F. enjoys too. Few
plants are as pretty and as useful. It's an unruly species,
yes, but only because it's so vigorous!
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/plantedtkssubwebindex/ceratopteris.htm
>
Damn silly hobby, I'll probably kill the plants. The
Vallisneria simply got lucky. :o)
<Better to say Vallisneria is more adaptable than most of the
other plants traded, so it does well even if conditions don't
suit other species. There are a few other bullet-proof plants out
there: Java fern, Anubias, Cryptocoryne wendtii it's really a
question of researching your plants and matching them to the
conditions (light, temp., water chemistry) being offered.>
Susie
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Series of Panda Corydoras deaths
3/3/11
Hey Neale,
<Susie,>
I fully intended to liberate you from your torment and sign off
with a big THANKS, for all the help and the link to the plants
article, and you're dead right, the Vallisneria is indeed
coated with hair algae.
<Combination of bright light and poor water flow at the
surface causes this. Pull away "infected" leaves AT THE
BASE, and be sure not to bury the stem of the Vallisneria in the
substrate. Once the leaves are damaged at the base, the algae
hits, BIG TIME. None of the green or white part of Vallis should
be in the substrate, just the roots, the tops of which should be
just visible above the substrate.>
My final choices for floating plants are perhaps the Salvinia
(SALVINIA!) natans and maybe water lettuce.....will consider the
Indian fern later.
<Cool.>
However, sadly I have to report that the surviving panda Cory cat
is not doing so well......he seems to have taken a turn tonight.
:o( He is quite motionless - he's not distressed, or
breathing rapidly, he's just sitting still mostly, listing
slightly to one side, occasionally fluttering away from another
fish passing him. I fed some peas this evening and he drifted out
for a short time to rummage half heartedly through a few morsels,
then he drifted back to his spot under a plant.
<Oh dear.>
By way of a summary, he has been active and feeding for a few
days since his last companion died, and seemed to rally after a
change to the softer substrate two days ago. Water parameters
have been stable. If I lose him, he'll be the 5th Corydoras
to die over a period of about 5 weeks, yet none of my other five
species have shown any problems at all. Combined with the marked
wear of the barbels on this fish, I guess its safe to assume that
the others also had worn barbels (I just didnt realise, as I had
nothing to compare them with).....there was no damage to their
bellies, only the barbels. Does this mean they were unable to
feed properly?
<No, they can still feed. But the lack of barbels does imply
less than perfect conditions for Corydoras.>
Is it more likely that there was an underlying bacterial
infection which affected them all due to the damaged
barbels....perhaps due to the brief lack of water changes and
possibly grubby substrate?
<Possibly, but do remember, these catfish naturally plough
through mud and silt. So "grubby" isn't a problem
if the water is clean and the water current brisk.>
I wish there was something I could do for the panda.....could I
treat for an infection? Is it too late for him?
<Hard to say. Would wait and see what happens. Doing a water
change is rarely a bad idea, and it's well worth upping the
oxygen content of the water if you can. But beyond that, without
any clear idea of what the problem might be, medicating can be
counterproductive.>
Susie
<Cheers, Neale.> Re: Series of
Panda Corydoras deaths 3/3/11
Very interesting re the Vallisneria....the white parts are indeed
submerged, so I'll fix that.
<Quickest way to kill your Vallisneria! If all else fails,
just bury the tips of the roots in the substrate, and leave
everything else above the substrate.>
The fish seem happy to snack on the algae, it's not there to
huge excess, but the plants themselves could do with some
thinning out. Can leaves be cut back near the base?
<Yes, but trimming Vallisneria needs to be done carefully.
It's a bit like peeling a globe artichoke. Take the leaf off
right at the base, taking great care not to damage the other
leaves. Don't allow gravel or sand to get between the base of
healthy leaves and the "stem" part of the plant,
otherwise the leaf gets damaged and eventually dies. Plants
can't heal leave -- they shed them -- and Vallisneria is
notoriously finicky when manhandled. It's a plant that does
much, MUCH better left to its own devices with as little fuss as
possible. Given the right amount of light, and if planted
properly, it's perhaps the easiest rooted plant of them all
to grow, with only epiphytes like Anubias and Java fern being
noticeably easier.>
The panda Cory is holding on, so far. Observing him last night
and this morning, I'm wondering if he's simply starting
to suffer from the lack of same species company....but he is
feeding, so unless feeding is simply instinctive in fish,
hopefully this means he is not close to death at the moment.
There are none of his species at the LFS, I will have to look
further afield, although this could mean they'll have to
travel in a bag for over an hour, which isnt ideal.
<Oh, heavens, Corydoras will travel an hour without any fuss!
So long as they don't become too chilled, you're fine.
Remember, they're air-breathers and tolerate low-end tropical
conditions, and these two traits are why they quickly became
aquarium staples compared to other types of fish. Your only
problem is making sure their fins don't burst the bags, so be
sure not to pack too many per bag, and double bag them.>
It's true that the water movement is poor in this tank,
compared to my last tank which had a more basic filter but a
strong powerhead. The Fluval 2 does very little to move the water
around - there are some different settings, but none of them seem
to produce any decent current to speak of. The air flow setting
stopped working after the first water change.
<Time to add another filter, methinks. A decent external
canister filter -- ideally an Eheim if your budget runs to that,
in terms of long-term value for money -- will make all the
difference in the world. The Fluval externals are pretty good,
too. Canisters allow you to have the inlet at the bottom of one
end of the tank, and the outlet at the top at the other end of
the tank, the ideal arrangement for good water flow.
Alternatively, placing another internal filter at the other end
of the tank, perhaps deeper down the water, would help, but
internal canister filters are less good value for money in some
ways, and pretty unsightly.>
I do have a 6" air stone in the centre of the tank, which
provides a small amount of surface movement. I'm now
researching a powerhead of some description to increase the
current - but I'm confused as to what flow rate would be
appropriate for my small tank (90 litres, 45cm deep x 60cm wide),
particularly bearing in mind the Gouramis.
<A good rule of thumb for a mixed species tank would be 6
times the volume of the tank per hour, so in your case 6 x 90 =
540 litres/hour, which would be about as much as provided by an
Eheim 2215 on its own, or an Eheim 2213 alongside your little
Fluval. You could tweak the current down or up a bit using the
taps on the canister to get just the right amount. Spray bars are
super-helpful at spreading out current, so gentle swimmers like
Gouramis aren't pushed about.>
With the fish I have (Corydoras, loaches, pygmy barbs, neon
tetras, dwarf gouramis), should my aim be to increase the current
at lower and mid levels?
<Yes.>
Would a simple, one directional 1000 LPH powerhead be sufficient
for the catfish etc, if I position it at the bottom, but not too
much for the Gouramis at the upper levels?
<A powerhead will push water along the top, while sucking
water in at the bottom. If combined with an undergravel filter
this can work rather well, but by itself, I'd honestly
recommend at least another internal canister filter, simply so
you get some filtration alongside the water current.>
Might this additional movement be adequate to reduce the hair
algae around the tank a little, and lift up more of the waste
I'm battling with on the substrate?
<Oh yes! Algae thrives when plants don't, and Vallisneria
evolved to live in flowing water -- that's why their leaves
are so long and bendy. I'm sure that flowing water helps to
keep them clean to some degree.>
Would I still be able to maintain an area of floating plants with
the extra current?
<Yes, but the floating plants end up at one end. Quite nice in
some ways, as it divides your tank into two habitats, one shady
and the other bright and open.>
Thank you
Susie
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Series of Panda Corydoras deaths/possible
Flexibacter?? 3/10/11
Gruetzi Doc,
<Wie geht's?>
Okay, need to consider treatment of possible Flexibacter
then.
<Flexibacter columnaris, so-called Mouth Fungus.>
Miss Ancistrus has been out and about this evening and those tiny
cottony tufts are visible again - two flecks, one on each side,
perfectly symmetrical. So small that I have to really strain my
eyes to focus on them, and make sure it's not just some weird
trick of the light. Nope, definitely there, definitely white and
thready.
<Could be plain vanilla Fungus, rather than Mouth Fungus;
Mouth Fungus tends to be more grey and slimly looking than the
cottony threads of plain vanilla Fungus.>
So what's the best commercially available treatment?
<Methylene Blue is the standard anti-Fungus.>
I think I read about most "Fungus"/Finrot treatments
containing the right antibiotic somewhere, I'll go look
again.
<In the UK, a medication called eSHa 2000 treats Fungus,
Finrot, and Flexibacter columnaris (Mouth Fungus) all at the same
time. I've used it safely with catfish and puffers, so I
don't think it's especially toxic.>
The presence of bacteria must be down to poor water quality at
some stage.....perhaps going back to the 6 weeks neglect in
January, when I first started losing the Corys?
<Perhaps.>
Could it have caused the loss of the panda Corys, even with no
outward signs?
<Can do.>
A long shot, but can it be introduced by feeding live food...is
that a myth, that those little tubes of are infected with all
kinds of bacteria?
<Depends on the live food. Brine shrimp is completely safe,
Daphnia usually very safe. Bloodworms much less safe, and Tubifex
by far the most unsafe.>
Okay, thanks for the recommendation re my little community,
I'm honoured!! Happy to ship out the loaches and the Gouramis
(much as I like the two dwarf variety, the honeys less
so).....had a peek at Laetacara curviceps, yep, a Dwarf Cichlid
(maybe a pair?) would be tres cool.
<They are nice, shy dwarf cichlids. Colours change remarkably,
and look best (greens, blues) in dark, peaceful tanks with plenty
of overhead shade and no aggressive tankmates. Tend to be paler
(grey, yellowy) in bright tanks with few plants, no shade, and
aggressive tankmates.>
I have, however, often gazed adoringly at Mikrogeophagus ramirezi
when they have them at the LFS, the beautiful German Blue
Rams.....I have a sneaky feeling I've toyed with the idea of
these before, but was dissuaded for some reason.
<Near-useless species for casual aquarists. Needs very warm,
very soft, very acidic conditions; 28-30 C, 1-5 degrees dH, pH
5-6.5. Lifespan in most aquaria is less than six months. Very,
very prone to diseases including Mycobacteria and Hexamita. An
ample literature on this species.>
Not certain my water parameters were thought suitable. How about
one of the other more brightly coloured species of Dwarf
Cichlid?
<If you can find them, Mikrogeophagus altispinosus is quite
hardy and does well in moderately hard water. Apistogramma
cacatuoides is another reliable species. In hard, basic water,
Julidochromis ornatus is a dwarf Tanganyikan that works well in
community tanks because it is only aggressive towards other
cichlids; singletons or pairs will ignore midwater schooling fish
completely, though they may harass Corydoras if there isn't
enough space for both catfish and cichlids.>
I definitely rate MA.....there are two stores I frequent, Farnham
and Havant (wasn't that taken by Hickstead down near Gatwick,
but that was more to do with their general attitude than their
expertise). The manager at the Farnham branch always bowls me
over with his knowledge, I believe he keeps a Dwarf Cichlid which
he shows (there is such a thing as Cichlid Shows??)?
<Yes indeed.>
He told me once that he thoroughly defrosts and/or washes its
food before feeding and adds vitamins to it. That's proper
dedication.
<Quite so.>
Thanks as always - will go and do a fresh search on Flexibacter
on WWM to find suitable treatments, as I will no doubt be rushing
to get some before you have an opportunity to respond!
Susie
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Series of Panda Corydoras deaths/possible
Flexibacter?? 3/12/11
Hallo, bin Ich sehr guter dank Neale, wie über Sie?
<Also Ich bin sehr gut, danke. Und dein fische?>
It's been an expensive day. The eSHa 2000 has been duly
purchased to tackle possible fungus, along with a very small
hospital tank with its own sponge filter (which I am running in
the main tank as we speak/type)....but I now can't decide
whether to isolate the Bristlenose and treat only her, OR remove
the shrimp and snails (I know it says shrimp safe, but it does
contain 8mg copper sulphate) and treat the main tank.
<I would remove both shrimps and snails to the hospital tank
for now, and treat the fish in the main tank. Medications tend to
kill snails and shrimps. If you don't feed the shrimps and
snails, even a small tank without a filter should be adequate,
provided you change some of the water daily. Adding a little
sponge filter will improve things further.>
She's the only one with any signs of infection.....what would
be best?
<See above.>
If I do treat the main tank, the internal filter contains
poly/carbon pads.....however, it has been in use for 5 months, so
am I right in thinking that the carbon element can now be
considered inactive, so I can simply treat with that filter in
situ?
<Carbon will remove medications, but once carbon has been in
use for more than a few weeks, yes, it is largely inactive and
acts merely as a substrate for the filter bacteria. Still,
it's one more variable. I'd remove.>
MA did actually have a few Apistogramma cacatuoides in stock, but
I'm rather more taken by Mikrogeophagus altispinosus (the
Bolivian Ram Club has me sold on these fish) and I'm happy to
wait a while for the tank to settle. Will I have room for a pair
d'you think?
<Mikrogeophagus altispinosus is a superb species. It is a
trifle larger than the Common Ram, maybe 6 cm long when fully
grown, and its colours are a tad less brilliant, tending towards
grey-white with red, black and blue markings. But it is still a
colourful fish and by dwarf cichlid standards extremely robust
and easy to keep. It is probably the best dwarf cichlid in the
trade. If you get good specimens, and you keep nitrate levels
below 20 mg/l, you shouldn't have any problems with it. A
pair will be fine in a tank as small as 75 litres. They don't
damage plants, but like Mikrogeophagus ramirezi, the
"Mikrogeophagus" part of the name means "little
earth-eater" and they do like to sift sand and extract tiny
particles of food.>
By far my most exciting and extravagant purchase today, however,
was......*drum roll please*......a Fluval 205 external
filter.
<A good filter.>
I researched the Eheims you mentioned, and a number of other
reliable makes at good prices, but quickly discovered that
Fluval, with exceptional long-term marketing planning, have
designed the Fluval Roma 90 cabinet to accommodate very few other
makes of external filter other than, well, Fluval. Neat thinking,
huh?
<Or something>
I'd have gone for the more powerful 305, as it would have
just about fit, but MA convinced me this would be overkill for 90
litres.
<Could well be.>
They were also kind enough to give me a good deal (some of their
branches will price match if you ask politely and take some
evidence of an online offer).
<Indeed. Right now, it's a buyer's market in retail
generally.>
I'm dying to set it up right now, however, it definitely has
bags of active carbon amongst the supplied media, so I'd
better decide whether I'm treating the whole tank or just the
Ancistrus before I start up the new external.
<Would set aside the carbon for now. I like to use just plain
vanilla sponges or masses of ceramic hoops in Fluval filters. If
I recall correctly, these filters have a couple of sponges on one
side of the filter canister, and a couple of boxes on the other
side for filling with media. On my Fluval 104, I've got
ceramic hoops in those two boxes. You can also fill them with
filter floss if you want something cheap and cheerful. The
sponges will handle biological filtration, and the filter floss
will take care of silt, and if you replace the floss every month
or two, you should have crystal clear water.>
Having said all that.....the Ancistrus has come out to feed her
face with cucumber tonight, and surprise surprise, not a cottony
spot to be seen on her anywhere. I was alarmed to see a bright
white, even silvery spot on the face of one of the Dwarf Gouramis
though.....no bump or tuft, just a silvery spot. More like the
other male has pecked his face, perhaps? They do squabble a
bit.
<Yes, they do squabble.>
So now I'm in a quandary over whether to bother to treat at
all. I can't even supply pictures, the Ancistrus in
particular skitters away so fast.
<If the fish appear to be healing, then leave them to
it.>
Will gladly take your guidance on my next move....to treat or not
to treat, in the absence of reliable evidence of infection?
<Indeed.>
Oh.....but good news on the sickly Panda Cory. He is visibly
better. Swimming with the others, a little lighter in colour now,
regaining some of his former flutter and flexing his stumpy
barbels with more enthusiasm. Thanks for all the advice,
let's hope he continues to improve.
<Am hoping.>
Just as a parting question, changing the subject back to plants,
I'd like to spread the Vallisneria around the tank a bit more
ready for the Rams - it's all clumped in one front corner and
getting crowded. Can I gently lift it all out of the substrate,
separate the plants, and re-distribute/re-plant in a different
position (without burying the white parts this time)? Is that too
much disruption?
<Vallisneria handle this just fine. The only thing is to make
sure you don't get sand or gravel in between the leaves and
their attachments to the stem-like structure (called a
"crown"). Snap off baby plants by the runners, but
leave a bit of runner attached rather than risk breaking away
part of the crown by trimming too close. Then, so long as you
only put the roots in the sand or gravel, you should be fine, and
Vallisneria handles transplantation very well.>
Dank, hat ein gutes wochenende. I'm not German, merely
getting in some practice for a forthcoming trip to Zurich
<I see! Yes, I hope to have a good weekend indeed. Off shortly
into London for lunch in Chinatown. Cheers, Neale.>
Susie
Re: Series of Panda Corydoras
deaths/possible fungus/now a mini-cycle,
chatting 3/14/11
Mornin', hope London and Chinatown was good?
<Yes indeedy!>
Quick update.....I set up the new external on Saturday, seeding
it with a third of the media and a healthy blob of gunk from the
existing internal. Yesterday I carefully uprooted the clump of
Vallisneria Spiralis, trimmed off the many plantlets and
re-distributed around the tank with a little fertiliser in the
substrate.
<Cool. I have never found Vallisneria very demanding in terms
of fertilisers, though the odd fertiliser tablet in its roots
won't do any harm. But it really is a classic, low
maintenance plant that wants for very little.>
Tank now nicely laid out, less cluttered and much cleaner, ready
for a couple of Bolivian Rams in the next few weeks after the
Gouramis and loaches have moved out.
<Sounds good.>
And in doing all of this, I think I've kicked off a
mini-cycle. *slaps forehead*
<Perhaps, but plants can dramatically speed the cycling
process off, so don't be too disheartened. Apart from
absorbing ammonia directly, they also carry lots of "good
bacteria" that perform the biological cycle. It's
perfectly possible to create a tank that relies 100% on plants
for water quality -- in fact many ponds work exactly that
way!>
The ailing Panda Cory is very weak again, barely able to hold his
position in the water, and one of the Striata loaches doesnt look
too clever (pale and less active than usual).
<Don't feed for a couple days, at least.>
Even the Assassin snails have popped up out of the sand, and I
don't see them that often.
<Quite possibly pushed out of shape by digging up the
substrate. If they come up to the top of the tank to breathe,
that's a much worse sign.>
I tested the water this morning, and although Ammonia is 0,
Nitrite is indeed reading 0.05 and Nitrates are a fraction lower
than normal between 5-10.
<I see.>
If my understanding of the cycle is correct, this indicates that
it's almost over already? The rest of the community seems
fine. I'm thinking a water change to get the nitrite down,
then let nature take its course?
<Yes, would do nothing much more than wait and see. Don't
feed. Do an extra 25% water change every second day for this
week. Should be fine.>
Cheers...
Susie
<Tschuess! Neale.>
Re: Series of Panda Corydoras deaths/possible fungus/now a
gabby-mini-cycle 3/16/11
Hey Neale,
<Susie,>
Thanks for latest pointers. Tank is settling after a further 25%
water change, ammonia and nitrite both currently 0 - whole tank
is noticeably livelier and even the weak panda Corydoras has
improved.
<Cool.>
Thought it would amuse you to know that, to save bothering you
with any further insignificant questions veering off the original
topic, I would venture back to a popular fish forum. Not WWM
unfortunately, I can't seem to add a new post there even
though I'm member? Must be going blind.
<Odd. WWM does have a forum, and you should be able to post
there without problems. Do send a message to the forum moderators
if needs be. If still doesn't work, let me or Bob F.
know.>
After innocently enquiring as to why my neon tetras and pygmy
barbs might be swimming in impressive nose-down symmetry after
the upheaval of the weekend, I "learned" the following;
that the current is now too strong for the mid-water shoals, that
the tank is way over stocked (shouldnt have two shoals in a tank
so small), and that the pH of my tapwater is too high for most
species of tropical fish at 8. And of course that I shouldnt
bother getting any Mikrogeophagus altispinosus as they won't
handle a) the pH and b) the level of water movement.
<pH is actually less of an issue than many assume, but if you
do have a pH of 8, it's likely your water is hard and
alkaline, and that *is* bad for soft water fish. There are some
good options for hard water, including some tetras, but you'd
do well to avoid Neons; I've never found Neons do well in
"London Tap" compared to X-ray Tetras for example,
which tolerate hard water much, much better.>
The new current scarcely ripples the plants, for goodness sake,
even the Gourami's arent bothered. And my understanding from
WWM is that as long as the pH is constant, the fish aren't
overly fussed.
<To a degree, but do see above.>
The tank is indeed heavily stocked but I upgraded to an external
filter and anyway, I'm shipping out 8 fish to replace with 2.
I can't even be bothered to post a response, but I do
suddenly recall why I stopped bothering with fish forums and
deleted them all from my favourites.......
<Oh dear.>
Bet all the regurgitated opinion out there drives you barmy.
<Hmm>
TTFN
Susie
<Good luck! Neale.>
Re: Series of Panda Corydoras deaths/possible fungus/now
a mini-cycle 3/16/11
Hi,
<Salve,>
Okay, fair enough...it does seem that the tap water in our area
is slightly hard (never got to grips with that measurement with
my test kit, will get it done by MA again) and has a pH of
7-8.
<I see.>
I certainly had problems keeping guppies, but that was back in my
Fluval Edge days. I've had the neon tetras for almost a year,
and only lost one, and that was attacked by one of the large
loaches I no longer have - maybe they can acclimatise to the
harder conditions, I guess time will tell.
<Indeed.>
The only losses I've had were the Corydoras, and MA suggested
that a pH of 8 could be a tad high - will never know whether it
was this, poor water quality or presence of fungus that caused
their demise (or all 3). Again, if the latest batch don't
survive, perhaps its the water parameters not suiting them so I
won't try again.
<Corydoras generally aren't too fussy, but the tough
species are best here: Corydoras paleatus, Corydoras aeneus in
particular.>
Other than the Corydoras, I've not had problems with any fish
since the guppies. I thought I wasn't doing too badly, I read
of some people losing tank fulls of fish in one swoop!
<Quite so.>
I can try to buffer the water but going that route seems fraught
with even more problems.
<Yikes! Do avoid messing about with water chemistry. Changing
the pH directly is extremely hazardous. Do read about reducing
water hardness, e.g., mixing hard tap water with rain or RO
water.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fwh2oquality.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fwsoftness.htm
>
Will soldier on and see how it goes. Thanks again for all the
help, I'll try WWM forums again. <<TG>>
Susie
<Real good. Cheers, Neale.>
|
Itching Cory Catfish 7/10/10
Hello again,
<Hello Brian.>
You've been helpful in the past when I had questions about my first
aquarium and some stocking advice for my second, so thank you.
<Cool.>
I did want to ask something about 6 new Panda Cory Catfish I added a
couple weeks ago.
<A low to middling temperature fish; don't keep warmer than 25
C/75 F.>
They are the newest inhabitants to a ~4 month old cycled aquarium. They
share a 46 gallon with a school of 9 Harlequin Rasboras, 6 Cherry
Barbs, 3 Oto Catfish, and one last cycling Platy that's been tough
to net out.
<OK. These should all do well at 24-25 C/75-77 F. Any warmer will
stress the Platy, Otocinclus and Corydoras.>
Anyhow, as of yesterday morning I noticed one of the smaller Cory
catfish do a few quick darning motions in the gravel on his side while
scavenging for food. He only did it a couple times until the others
joined him to start eating the pellets I dropped for them. I looked at
the fish but didn't appear to have anything on his side, nor any
discoloration (nothing I can see), and he's been actively swimming
and searching for food as always. Then this afternoon, about an hour
after they finished eating any dropped pellets, I saw the same behavior
again; 2-3 quick darts in the gravel, and only in the gravel not on the
decorations where I normally feed the catfish. It is a normal aquarium
gravel, black, not sand nor a fine gravel that I've heard Cory
catfish like to dig into.
<Hmm... "like" is perhaps not the right word to use here.
Corydoras kept in tanks with gravel, especially sharp gravel, suffer
from abrasions, in particular to their whiskers. You can instantly spot
Corydoras kept in tanks with gravel because they have almost no
whiskers, whereas those on Corydoras kept in tanks with smooth silica
sand have whiskers that are very long, half an inch maybe. It's
quite striking. While the missing whiskers aren't fatal, they do
indicate that the fish are being damaged and vulnerable to secondary
infections, which is a warning sign that all is not well.>
I still cant see anything wrong with him nor any of the other fish,
including any of the other catfish. He still swims actively around and
all over the decorations/plants as usual looking for food, so he
doesn't appear sick.
<Flashing can be a variety of things, but the most common are
these:
ammonia/nitrite above zero; Velvet; and Ick, in that order. Just
because you can't see any other Velvet or Ick on the fish
doesn't mean there isn't any in the system. Both these
parasites go for the gills first.>
I guess I'm just curious if this is some kind of feeding behavior,
like trying to scare up any buried food particles,
<No, Corydoras don't do this. When feeding on sand they plough
their heads straight down, and spew the sand through their gills.
It's fun to watch, and no-one who has kept Corydoras with sand EVER
goes back the gravel. I'm not saying you can't keep them with
gravel, but it's far, FAR inferior in terms of fun, both for you
and the fish.>
or something of the sort and nothing to worry about, or if it's
some sign of a disease that just isn't visible?
<Likely so.>
Water conditions for the past few weeks before adding the Cory catfish,
and still...
pH ~7.5
ammonia 0ppm
nitrite 0 ppm
nitrate ~5ppm (weekly water changes)
<All fine.>
temp ~79F (extremely tough to keep any cooler in summer in Florida
w/out a chiller)
<Will cause problems if it stays this warm. Do increase evaporation
and try floating litre-sized blocks of ice in the aquarium.>
hardness ~200KH ~150GH normal for this area (but no problems with
Platies and Cory catfish in a different tank for over 1 year)
<Indeed, water chemistry isn't a major problem for Corydoras,
and Platies obviously prefer medium to very hard water.>
Thanks again,
Brian
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Question for the crew 08/26/09
Thanks so much, Neale, for your advice.
<Pleasure.>
I was thinking the spots were likely Lymphocystis, hence some extra
diligence on keeping a close eye on the water conditions, and more
frequent water changes.
<Very good. Lympho takes a while to get started, so if you have a
new fish, a fish that's been around in your tanks for only a couple
of weeks or a month, then it's entirely possible the stress came
from collection, shipping, handling, and maintenance at the retail
store. That said, the usual things apply: weekly water changes of
20-25%, 0 ammonia and 0 nitrite, and a steady pH will all help. A
varied diet is useful too, and do note that once packages of dried fish
food have been opened, their nutritional content diminishes over time,
and after 2-3 months, the vitamin content might not be terribly high. I
tend to recommend buying two or three small packages of fish food --
e.g., one micro pellet food, one standard flake, and one algae-based
flake food -- and then alternate between them through the week. This
way, you should be offering your fish a nice rounded diet.>
As for the holes, some sort of physical damage definitely makes more
sense than an infection, since he looks so good otherwise. I'll
pick up some Melafix as it is the one thing I do not have on hand, but
I put some Stress Coat in tonight in the meantime.
<A good idea.>
I turned off the air stone (1 inch in diameter with a pump appropriate
for the tank size) for now in case that is causing some trauma.
<Unlikely, and do watch to see if water quality drops or the fish
start breathing more heavily. While airstones rarely make or break
tanks with adequate filtration, in summer the extra water circulation
can be useful.>
It is in the center of the back wall of the tank and he passes through
it more than he passes near the intake area of the filter. He certainly
does not seem to enjoy it as much as my panda Corydoras do in our main
tank!
<Corydoras panda come from a habitat where the water is cool and
fast flowing, so they really do appreciate strong currents and extra
air bubbles. When the water temperature gets above 25 C/77 F, they
become stressed, and you'll see them swimming about most happily in
the places with strong water flow because that's where the oxygen
is. Ideally, you'd maintain them between 22-24 C/72-75 F.>
There are no other fish in the tank to cause damage (unless it could
have been caused by his prior tank-mates). I'll keep him in
quarantine until some sort of resolution to the problem is reached
(hopefully that will be resolution of the holes and not progression to
more serious illness).
<Makes sense.>
Again, thanks for your expertise and advice. The more I learn about
this hobby, the more I enjoy all the time and effort I put into it.
Regards,
Laura
<Good luck, Neale.>
Feeding (Corydoras, Botia)
5/30/2009
Hello Crew, Hope you are having a great day!! I have some questions on
feeding please. I currently have 6 panda Corys and plan on buying some
yoyo loaches and a Bristlenose catfish.
<Wouldn't keep Botia almorhae with Corydoras panda; the
differences in size, aggression at feeding time, and social behaviour
are just too acute.
Botia almorhae would work well with Ancistrus though, and similarly
Ancistrus and Corydoras get along fine. If you must have loaches with
Corydoras panda, look at either Pangio spp. or perhaps Yasuhikotakia
sidthimunki, though this latter species is delicate and does need to be
kept in a large group, so tank size will be an issue.>
First, I want to know if they will all get along or if the loaches will
bother the Corys.
<Yes they will bother the Corydoras.>
Also, when it comes to feeding how is that done since they all eat
mostly food off the bottom. Should I put their food in separate places
in the tank, or will it be OK to feed them all together?
<Botia species will simply learn to eat food from one corner first,
and then bully the Corydoras away from the food in the other corner
next. Does depend on the size of the tank of course, and in a 200
gallon system I'm sure they'd muddle through! But
realistically, not a combination I'd go for.>
I am worried about the loaches maybe picking on the Corys during
feeding time.
<Your concern is justified.>
Thank you for your help.
James
<Cheers, Neale.>
Dying Panda Cory Cats
05/21/09
Hello Crew, hope things are going well for you there. I have a problem
and hope you can help. I recently set up a 75 gallon freshwater tank.
For substrate I am using 3M color quartz sand which I have read about
others using with no adverse affects. Also, it was rinsed very, very
well. I am using driftwood I bought off E-bay from a reputable seller
which I also cleaned very well. I have 2 medium sized rocks I used
previously in a saltwater aquarium. (I think they are lava rock, I
bought them in a LFS. I have plastic plants except for a couple of java
ferns here and there. I decided to buy Corys for my first fish. I went
out and bought 6. They all seemed active and ate well. The next day I
noticed one was dead and
didn't think much of it since fish do die like people. That night I
was 2 of the Corys bullying another and not letting it escape from
their harassment. The next morning another was dead and I assumed it
was the one I saw being harassed. I have tested my water which showed
no ammonia or nitrite and very little nitrate (.15). Now each night
when I get home and check my tank I find one or 2 more Corys dead. Now
I only have 3 left. I have some sort of snails that may have come in on
the driftwood but they do not seem affected. I have been doing regular
water changes and keeping my power filters clean. Could you please help
me determine what might be causing these deaths please. I am at a loss
and your help would be greatly appreciated. Also, is there some way to
test the water to see if it is indeed poisonous to the fish? Thank you
for all you do.
<You have a great setup for Corys! I would not think that the
sediment could be the problem or the lava rock either. How long has
your tank been setup? Did you let it cycle for the four to six weeks
required? I am also worried that possibly they could have internal
parasites and along with being introduced into a new tank caused the
deaths for your Corys. You should cycle your tank longer if you did not
wait for the four to six weeks
required.>
James
<You are welcome! Merritt A.>
Proper Feeding of Cory Catfish 5-04-09
Hello all, hope things are going well for you. I have a question on
feeding, please. I currently have 6 panda Corys about medium size. I
have two different types of food for them. One are small shrimp
pellets
and some are wafers. Both of the packages suggest to feed enough for
the Corys to eat within several minutes. My Corys don't eat all at
once.
They may eat a while then swim around and come back later, etc. I am at
a loss to feed them the proper amount without depriving them or
overfeeding them. If you could make a suggestion I would really
appreciate it. Also, should they be fed every day? Thank you for your
help.
James
<Hello James, Merritt A. here today! First, I am assuming the Corys
are the only fish you have in the tank. Since your Corys are not eating
them all at once, then you know they are not starving and both types,
wafers and shrimp pellets, are great foods for Corys. Since you have
been watching your Corys, about how long does it take them to consume
the food, 30 min.s, 1 hour, 2 hours? I would suggest feeding them a few
pellets in the morning (one for at least every Cory) and two or three
wafers. If this quantity takes them longer than 30 min.s, then reduce
the amounts. Feeding your fish depends on your observations, just keep
watching them (are they getting fat or slimming down) and change the
amounts accordingly. You are welcome,
Merritt A.>
Re: Proper Feeding of Cory Catfish 5/7/09
Thanks for your advice. Please tell me the proper way to feed the Corys
along with other fish when I add them. I plan on getting 6 angels and I
have heard that they are very aggressive eaters. How can I feed them
and at the same time keep them from getting the Corys food as well?
Thank you again.
James
<Since Corydoras are nocturnal by preference (though they certainly
are active by day in aquaria) the easiest way to make sure everyone
gets enough to eat is to offer some food at night-time when the
day-active fish won't compete. The Corydoras will find this food
and eat their fill! Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Proper Feeding of Cory Catfish Part II 5-7-09
Thank you Merritt, later I plan on adding about 6 angels. I know they
will eat a different food, but how can I prevent them from eating the
Cory's food? Feed them both at the same in different parts of the
tank? Thank you again.
<Hello again! When I have other fish with my Corys, I feed them all
at once. I feed the aggressive fish at one side of the tank and put the
Cory food at the other side. This prevents the aggressive fish from
eating all of the Corys food. Have a great evening! Merritt
A.>
Odd panda Cory behaviour
5/21/08 Hi there, WWM's seen me through some
tough times, and some pretty good ones too. So, thanks. <You
are welcome.> I've been looking for info on panda Cory
behaviour but I haven't had much luck. <Shouldn't be
much different to any other Corydoras spp.> Here's my
inquiry (w. specs below): I just picked up two panda Corys to
join two I already had in my tank. <Four specimens does not a
school of catfish make! Try keeping six or more. Trust me, the
bigger the group, the happier your Corydoras will be.> They
seemed to adjust rather quickly, schooling and what not. But for
the last two hours or so, one of the Corys, a new guy I'm
pretty sure, has been hanging onto the side of the glass at the
water line occasionally moving to keep in one spot. <Can be
one of two things. Corydoras will "gasp" at the surface
when stressed in some way. Corydoras are obligate air breathers,
meaning they *must* come to the surface and gulp air every couple
of minutes, which is why they have to be kept in shallow water.
But if the water is bad somehow, or the catfish are sick, they
will come to the surface a lot more often. The second possibility
is spawning behaviour. Corydoras will often form small groups
(typically trios) consisting of a ripe female plus attendant
males. These groups (in my tank anyway) flutter up the glass,
laying eggs a few at a time.> when I look into to check on him
he darts away. however, in the last few check ups he more
listlessly tried to move away. <Not a good sign.> He was
swimming normally, hanging around the bottom and scavenging when
he first moved in, so I'm doubting swim bladder issues.
<'Swim bladder disease' is pretty uncommon, and
usually the name is applied to symptoms caused by other problems,
such as constipation and bacterial infections.> Otherwise he
appears healthy. no discolouration, spots, growths, and he's
not gasping for air. The other Cory's are all fine and
content along the bottom without him. Is he just being quirky? Or
should I be worried. I'm worried. <I'd certainly
observe. Routine water quality checks would be useful too: make
sure the pH is stable for example. Corydoras are fine between pH
6 and 8, but what they don't like is the pH to be moving
about all the time.> Specs: 20g Filter: Fluval 3+ submerged
700 l/hr 78 degrees F NH3 0.1 ppm <If you have this much
ammonia, you have a problem. Ammonia at any level other than zero
is a potential stress factor. Do check you are not overfeeding,
that the tank isn't overstocked, and the filter is correctly
maintained. This would be the first thing I'd suggest as the
reason the Corydoras are unhappy.> pH 7.0 Weekly water changes
at 20% with a few more recently to bring my pH back to normal
(>5.0 several weeks ago) and ammonia down after a period of
lax care I won't soon repeat. <Indeed, you do want to
ensure stable conditions.> tank mates: a couple ferns, 2
swordtails, 4 Corys, 3 platys, 3 guppies, 1 dwarf frog, and 3
baby clown loaches which are leaving ASAP since the tank's
too small. <Nothing seems terribly likely to harm your
Corydoras in there. Though I will make the point Swordtails are
far too big and active for a 20 gallon tank, so I'd move them
with the loaches.> Any help would be greatly appreciated!
Cheers and thanks, Adam <Cheers, Neale.> Re: Odd
panda Cory behaviour 05/21/2008 Thanks for the great
reply. <Happy to help.> FYI He's seemed to have cleared
himself up. <Great!> As the night progressed he had more
and more difficulty swimming and would list, be unable to swim
horizontally, and was constantly floating upwards. I was
convinced he had swim bladder disease since he was having such
difficulty swimming and staying upright. Either way, this morning
he was on the bottom of the tank scavenging with the others, as
panda as could be. <Could easily be constipation. Constipation
somehow makes it difficult for fish to swim properly. Not sure
whether the blockage distorts the swim bladder, changes the
centre of gravity, or what. But constipation and poor swimming
ability often go together. In any case, once the blockage is
cleared, normal swimming ability returns.> A 25% water change
helped to bring down the ammonia as well to >0.1ppm. I'll
continue to monitor him and my water conditions. <Very good.
Low levels of ammonia are the "silent killer" in
aquaria, nibbling away at the immune system of the fish, allowing
opportunistic infections to get established. So while not fatal
in the short term, in the long term it's a headache you
don't want to deal with.> Thanks again, Adam <Cheers,
Neale.> Re: Odd panda Cory behaviour 05/22/08
Hi again Neale, I'd really love to give back to the community
that's helped me so much. I'm not much in the way of an
aquaria expert but I am an accomplished copy editor and
journalist. It'd be great to lend a hand polishing up
articles and what not. Who might I contact to express such an
interest? Cheers, Adam <Hello Adam. Kind of you to offer to
help. I'm sure Bob Fenner, the Obermeister of this site,
would be happy to hear from you. Quite possibly you'll
be able to help out with our "e-zine" or similar.
Cheers, Neale.>
|
Discoloured panda Cory 3/23/08 Dear WWM,
<Melissa> I have a 15 gallon freshwater tank that's
been running for about six months. It contains: live plants; some
snails (unplanned, but nothing near an infestation); 1 platy; 3
guppies; 4 albino Corys; 1 panda Cory (I realise I need more of
these, but my LFS has not had them shipped in for awhile) and
about 8 or 9 platy fry which I am not making any particular
efforts to keep alive. The substrate is sand. Water changes are
done 25% weekly. <Good> About two days ago I noticed that
the panda Cory has lost all its colour. It is pretty small, about
1.5 inches long. It is almost completely white - the black
markings around its eyes and near its tail are barely visible
anymore. <Unusual> What do you think this could be? Other
than appearance, it is acting fine; no changes in activity level
or appetite. There are also no physical growths or lesions on him
that I can see. <Stress... from something...> I have a
cycled 5 gallon quarantine tank with sand substrate; should I put
the Cory in there just to be safe? Thanks. -Melissa <I would
not... likely more stressful... Perhaps this one fish is changing
color to "match" the albino congeners... Bob
Fenner>
Re: Discoloured panda Cory 3/23/08 Hi Bob,
Should I just leave the Cory be, then? -Melissa <Yes, I would.
B>
|
Help! My
panda Cory is dying! 1/27/08 Hello, <Ave,> I have tried
searching for this specific answer on the website and could not
find. I don't have test kits here at my office (I left them
all at home) but I know what the problem is, my 10 gallon had an
ammonia spike. <Easy enough to fix, at least.> 5 days ago I
bought 6 dwarf Corys and one of them got sucked in the filter and
I didn't notice till 2 days after. Its whole body was in the
filter where sponge is. <Hmm... usually when fish get
"stuck" in filters, the fish was dead and merely sucked
into the thing. Healthy fish, even things as small as Guppy fry,
have no problems avoiding the suction from a filter. So when you
find a dead fish in a filter, the question is *why* the fish died
in the first place, not *what's it doing in the filter?*.>
On that same day, 2 of my neon tetras and 1 more dwarf Cory died.
I took the sponge filter out (bits of dead fish caught underneath
it), gently swished around the sponge in aquarium water (in a
bowl and then threw that water out) put the filter back, and did
a 50% water change. <Does sound like a bigger underlying
problem rather than one dead fish.> It has been 3 days now.
For each of those days I have been doing about %50 water changes
twice a day because now my other panda and another dwarf Cory
have been showing very rapid gilling for 3 days. <Do need to
know how much stuff is in this tank, and when you set it up. A
10-gallon tank is too small for most Corydoras, and certainly
Corydoras panda, so assuming you have the essential school of at
least four specimens, you're already overstocked with them.
(And only a very cruel person would keep fewer than four
Corydoras of each species -- they're schooling fish that need
company.) Likewise, Neons need to be in groups of six or more,
and while they're acceptable inmates for a 10-gallon tank,
together with other fish you may well be over the limit. If you
set this tank up recently, you may well also have an immature
filter, and if you're overfeeding the fish, things go from
bad to worse. Have a read of this (February's) TFH -- I have
an article all about 10-gallon tanks, and you'll find it
useful. Stocking such small tanks is difficult, and keeping them
healthy even more difficult, which is why experienced fishkeepers
universally recommend beginners start with 20-gallon or larger
tanks. The size/price difference is trivial, but the ease of care
is dramatically better.> I'm so worried because I
don't know what's going on, I thought that water changes
would provide immediate relief? <Up to a point yes, but
it's like wiping your nose when you have a cold: helpful, but
doesn't actually make you better. If the water quality is
poor because the tank is poorly set up or maintained, then your
issues run deeper than anything water changes alone can fix.>
Today I put in another bag of Zeolite into my AquaClear filter,
added some bacterial cycle stuff (we don't get BioSpira in
Canada) and added a .25 teaspoon of aquarium salt. Is this ok?
<Most of the "Cycle" type products are of
questionable value (to be polite). Only the ones with live
bacteria in them have any beneficial impact. Those that simply
say they "promote" bacterial filters are really not
doing much of anything except channeling cash from your pocket
into the manufacturer's bank account. Aquarium salt can help
relieve the symptoms of nitrite poisoning -- in the short term.
As a long term fix, it isn't one.> Am I changing out too
much water? <No. If the ammonia/nitrite levels aren't
zero, then a water change is indeed appropriate.> I know I
have not tested the water yet (will do tomorrow) but I thought
that large water changes would fix the problem even if the
parameters were too high? <Nope. Doesn't work this
way.> Why are the Corys not showing signs of relief yet? They
seem to be getting worse. <I bet. They'll keep getting
worse until conditions in the tank improve, and that can mean you
will need to give more time, remove some fish, feed less food,
use a bigger filter, or all of the above, depending on the
precise situation.> 10 gallon <Too small.> temp is 76F
<Fine.> ph 7.0 (out of tap 6.8) <Fine.> but I have
gravel in there that brings it up <Eh? Gravel doesn't have
any impact on water chemistry, unless you've been sold a
calcareous substrate such as crushed coral or coral sand, neither
of which is appropriate for a South American community tank.>
established 3 months (the pandas have been in there for the
entire 3 months and were happy till a few days ago) 6 neon tetras
(1 inch size) 2 honey dwarf gouramis (1 inch in size each) 2
panda Corys (1 panda in distress) 3 dwarf Corys (all about 0.5
inches in size, 1 dwarf in distress) <Whoa... too many fish
for a 10 gallon tank, especially one just 3 months old. Six Neons
and four Dwarf Corydoras would be about right for this tank.
Everything else is just a succession of straws breaking the back
of the proverbial camel.> ammonia, nitrate, nitrite, not sure
yet as I will be testing tomorrow. <Good. The only critical
one is Nitrite, the others are nice to know, so if you can afford
just one test kit, buy a Nitrite test.> Should I be doing
anything else? help!! <Reading, learning, taking fish
back/buying bigger tank. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: help! My panda Cory is dying! 1/29/08 Hi there thanks
Neale for your wisdom! <No problem.> This message is for
Neale please since he responded originally to my issues. Yes I
know the whole thing about having 2 pandas (less than 4) but
where I am located we don't get fish in very often and I live
in the north so we hardly get pandas, and dwarf Corys, they
usually die/and or get stressed from shipping so far, so
hopefully I can get my pandas some friends soon. Also I know you
think my tank is overstocked, but I do regular weekly water
changes and do not overfeed my tank I am very careful to monitor
them everyday and all of them are just babies not full grown yet.
<OK, I take your point, but please understand that [a] fish
don't stay small forever; and [b] the smaller the tank, the
smaller your odds of success.> I will make my questions short,
here is the situation: One of my pandas was affected by an
ammonia spike from a dead fish getting stuck way up in the filter
(see below). Distress symptoms first exhibited 5 days ago. Days
1-2 severe distress, lethargic did %50 water changes twice a day
for both days Day 3-4 rapid gilling, severe distress, lethargic
%50 water change twice a day, added 1.5 tsp salt/10 gallons,
added an airstone (tested water, amm=0, nitrite=0.1, nitrate=5)
and replaced accordingly to amount of H2O removed. Day 5
(yesterday) gilling improved, but slight shimmying exhibited. 1x
%50 water change with salt (nitrite=0) Day 6 (today) no
shimmying, rapid gilling again! What is going on...... <The
problem with ammonia (and water quality problems generally) is
that you don't see a one-to-one relationship between the
problem and the symptoms. It's kind of like food poisoning in
humans -- it can cause anything from vomiting to fatigue to
hallucinations. So it depends on a range of things. At best,
experience tells us that poor water quality causes a whole bunch
of problems, and if things aren't turned around
tout-de-suite, you end up with dead fish. All I can say here is
that so long as you don't get zero ammonia, you're going
to keep having stressed/dead fish.> this morning I did a 50%
water change and cant figure out if I should add salt or not? (
my other baby Corys don't like it as they don't move much
when salt in tank), <Small amounts of salt are harmless to
Corydoras, especially compared with ammonia. I 100% do not
recommend using salt as a standard additive, but in the short
term, under these circumstances, a small amount can help.> How
long should I add salt for as I see no improvement in my
panda's condition? <Once the ammonia is at zero, drop the
salt.> I don't see anything else wrong with her, but her
rapid gilling is worrying me. Where I live they do not sell
antibiotics, only fungal medication. Should I remove my panda
into a quarantine and keep treating with salt? I'm worried
that the stress of moving her will kill her. Please help!!!!
<If your fish doesn't have Fungus, then don't treat
for it. Simple as that. Concentrate on turning around the water
quality right now. Review your feeding, your water changes, and
the size/type of filter being used. Ask yourself if the filter is
being used efficiently. In a small filter, carbon is a waste of
space, and there are "deluxe" filter media like Siporax
that offer more ammonia/nitrite removal per cubic centimetre than
standard issue floss or sponge. Are you maintaining the filter
properly? Washing filter media in anything other than aquarium
water risks killing the bacteria. So there are little things you
can do. Also check your tap water -- does it have ammonia? Is it
treated with Chloramine? Both of these things are sometimes
present, and if they are, you need specific types of
dechlorinator to remove them.> thanks so much for your prompt
reply:) <Good luck, Neale.>
Re: help! My panda Cory is dying! -01/30/08 Thanks so
much Neale, <Terri,> I feel much better knowing that since
I'm not sure what is wrong with her (she is breathing so
hard, not sure if she has a bacterial infection or not ) all I
can do is keep the water clean while she is sick. <Indeed.>
Just one more question though: if say I can find some antibiotic
treatment online or something, should I just treat her with an
antibiotic in a quarantine tank, knowing that maybe she has
caught something secondary from the ammonia spike stress? <If
she isn't showing symptoms, there's no real need to
treat. Maracyn (an antibiotic) is harmless enough, so if you want
to use that as a precaution, then go ahead. Won't do any harm
to her or the other fish. But standard antibacterials contain
copper and formalin and other stuff that is more or less toxic to
fish, so should be used as rarely as possible. Do look out for
the early signs of Finrot, as this is the most likely follow-on
from ammonia; typically the fins turn pink as the blood vessels
therein become irritated. Only afterwards do the fins actually
rot. So spotting the pinkness is a good signal.> Thanks so
much for your knowledge. I really hope she recovers... <So do
I.> Cheers Terri <Cheers, Neale.>
Re: help! My panda Cory is dying!
2/21/08 This is a message for Neale, <He's
here!> I just wanted to say thanks so much for your
informative response, I wrote several weeks ago in regards to
help with a dying panda Cory. What happened was an
ammonia/nitrite spike from a dead dwarf Cory (died from too much
stress as they were new fish that were shipped long distances in
very cold weather -40C!) rotting in my filter for about 2 days
before I realised that it died and got sucked up into my filter.
<Ah, the plot thinnens...> After your advice and 1 week of
2x 50% water changes/day, followed by 1 week of 1x 50% water
changes/day with added 1 teaspoon of salt to 10 gallons, my
little Cory was finally recovering. I was so happy that I did not
have to medicate my panda and the water changes and salt helped
so much. <Don't keep adding the salt indefinitely though.
Once the fish are healthy, you can stop adding it. Salt
doesn't do anything useful in a properly run freshwater
aquarium, and some have argued it likely causes problems in the
long run.> She was well for about 1 week with renewed appetite
and I was so happy, but like you said Finrot started to set in
and I monitored it carefully since she seemed well by last
Friday. Now I left work (this is my office tank) for the weekend
and all of a sudden on Monday my panda looked so bad, not moving
I'm not sure what happened. All of the other fish in the tank
are fine. Today alas she is dying I can tell that its the end of
the road for her because she has gone very pale, lying on one
side and pupils dilated, gasping for breath. I'm so sad
because she was my first fish. <Oh dear.> Aside from going
over the details again on my history (I believe my previous
emails were already posted on WetWeb) my question is do you know
what happened over the weekend? <Impossible to say, but as
ever the two things you should check at once are nitrite and pH.
These will give you a snapshot of the aquarium conditions. If
there's any nitrite, that means there's a filtration
problem; and if there's a big difference in pH relative to
the normal value, then it's water chemistry that needs
looking at. This said, Finrot can spread into the body, and once
that happens, you're dealing with Septicaemia. If you
don't treat Finrot quickly enough, this is what happens.>
Her back fin was a little bit gone from the Finrot but just last
week she seemed fine, what could have caused her to die so
quickly when she was just recovering? <Difficult to say.>
Just if anyone is wondering, from my experience now panda Corys
are extremely sensitive to water conditions, as when the spike
occurred nitrite levels were 0.1 ppm, where all my other fish
were ok (as I understand 0.3 ppm and over fish normally begin to
show signs). <Er, no. Any nitrite... ANY NITRITE is
potentially dangerous, whatever the fish. There's no
"safe level" other than ZERO. Yes, some fishes
sometimes tolerate more than other fishes, but there are no
guarantees. Panda Corydoras are relatively hardy in mature tanks,
but I'd concur with your opinion that they aren't
bullet-proof. Or put another way, if you're looking for a
Corydoras for a new aquarium or aren't 100% sure about your
fishkeeping skills, then there are other species to keep instead,
for example Peppered Corydoras or Bronze Corydoras.> I will be
burying her tonight: ( <Dust thou art, and unto dust shalt
thou return.> Thanks Neale Cheers <Cheers,
Neale.>
|
Sick Small Panda Cory - 02/09/2007 Hi, in my
fish tank, I have originally one panda Cory, which is 1 in long,
probably. Yesterday, I introduced two more panda Corys, but
they are tiny, less than half the size of the original one.
<Good to have in groups though... this and most all Corydoras are
very social animals> One of tiny panda Corys doesn't eat, and it
is quite inactive. It does swim around sometimes, but it
only swims to follow the other panda Corys or hide. It's breathing
a little more rapidly than the other Corys. My tank water
quality seems fine. Any ideas how I may help this little
guy? -David <Do try a bit of either live or frozen/defrosted
black worms here... these are almost irresistible to Callichthyid
catfishes. Bob Fenner>
Salt tolerance of Cory Cats 5/28/06 Hello Crew!
<<Hi, Jasmine. Tom here.>> I understand that the salt
tolerance of catfish in general is very poor. <<It's true
that Catfish don't have a tolerance for salt at levels that other
fish can tolerate quite well.>> I have some Otos, Bronze Corys
and Panda Corys. <<I love these guys, Jasmine. The Pandas tend to
be a little less "robust" than other Corydoras varieties but
they're sure cute. :)>> For future reference when the
situation eventuates, how much aquarium salt would you recommend for
these fish for a) prevention of nitrite poisoning and b) disease
treatment. <<Regarding (a), don't let this situation
"eventuate". In a cycled tank, with proper maintenance, it
simply shouldn't occur. As to (b), this isn't, unfortunately,
an option because of the dosages necessary to be effective. The
"cure" would be as bad as the disease, in a manner of
speaking. Even with all of the benefits to be derived from the addition
of aquarium salt, in your case, I'm reluctant to advise this.
Neither of the instances you cite would lead me to recommend its use
given that there are alternatives should the occasion arise. I hope it
never does, though. ;)>> Thanks for your help! Jasmine
<<Happy to, Jasmine. Tom>>
Hungry panda
Cory! 2/26/06 Hi there, <Helloooooo!> I've
had my 20 litre tank (sorry, don't know US sizes - I'm in the
UK!) <A liter/re is a bit more than a quart, there are four U.S.
quarts in a gallon... your system is about five Yank gallons> for a
month, and have 6 zebra Danios, 5 black neon tetras and two panda
catfish. The zebras are doing great, but take all the food - I've
tried a mix of flake food to distract them with and granulated food to
sink to the bottom for the tetras and catfish, but the zebras totally
take over the tank and eat it all! I've just lost a catfish, which
I think was sick from when I bought it as it didn't last a week,
but now the second one looks in trouble. It's incredibly listless,
not responding to food even though I've sectioned it off in the
tank with some food. I bought another panda today which is really
active and seems fine - could it be that the listless one and the one
that died were ill from the start? <A possibility, yes> There are
no obvious symptoms, other than not being interested in eating and
trying to swim up to the top and then falling back down, which I
thought was cute until I read somewhere that this was not a good sign!
Your website is great - any advice you could give me would be so
appreciated, as I'm afraid as of tomorrow morning I'll be back
to one panda again! Thanks, Laura <Do check your water... it may be
that its quality is unsuitable... This Corydoras likes warm, soft,
acidic water... no ammonia, no nitrite... Try some high/er protein
sinking wafer type foods... Bob Fenner>
Mysterious Corydoras
deaths...one by one 7/12/06 Hey Crew. <<Hello,
Justin. Tom>> I've had a series of mysterious deaths in my
planted 20 gallon tank. I awoke this morning to find another fish very
near death (it had seemed to be ill for a couple of days) so now
I'm looking for advice. Here's all the data on my tank: 20
gallon with live plants, filtration is 150 gph, HOB filter. I use an
airstone as well. Temperature is usually 23-24c, though with recent hot
weather, it's gone as high as 26c. Livestock is as follows: three
bronze Corydoras, two three-line Corydoras (one of which is near
death), and two dwarf Otos. The tank is cycled, ammonia and nitrite are
0, and always have been. Nitrate is consistently around the 20 mark. pH
is higher than I'd like it to be; but stable at around 8.0.
I've decided to leave that as it is rather than monkey with it.
I've tried that before with no success. I do a weekly water change
of 5 gallons, using dechlorinated water. <<With the exception of
the unfortunate demise of your pets, I see nothing wrong here, Justin.
As you suggest, your pH is, frankly, quite a bit higher than Corys
would prefer but I commend you for not playing around with it. Better
to leave it "stable".>> The trouble started about six
weeks ago...in the span of approx. 2 weeks, I lost three panda Corys
and a three-line Cory. Two of these fish displayed no specific symptoms
before they passed, they just became listless for a couple of days,
eventually became unable to right themselves when swimming, and died.
My current sick three-line is showing basically the same symptoms,
though it's gills have been quite pink while it's been sick.
One panda Cory died from what appeared to be dropsy, another came down
with what appeared to be a fairly minor case of fin rot, and was dead
24 hrs later. At the time, the fish that died were all fairly new (all
were quarantined before adding to the main tank) and while they did not
appear to be sick when I purchased them, they weren't exactly top
quality specimens either. I dismissed this as a run of bad luck, and
bad stock. Having no more trouble for a month confirmed this for me.
But finding another sick fish, one that I've had for nearly a year,
is the final straw...but I can't imagine what's going wrong in
this tank. <<Having had no personal success with Panda Corys, I
can appreciate your frustration but haven't got much to offer as
far as an explanation goes. I knew they were among the least, if not
the least, robust of the species when I tried my hand with them and did
everything I could think of with no luck whatsoever. To this day, I
don't have a clue. On the flip side, I've got Leopard and
Emerald Green Corys - which are really Brochis - that are doing
famously. Admittedly, my pH is considerably lower (7.0) and this makes
me suspicious of this parameter in your case.>> I feed these fish
a varied diet of Hikari sinking tablets, algae wafers, peas, and
several meaty foods, both frozen and dried. There's also a colony
of pond snails in this tank, which I occasionally crush by hand and
leave for the Corys to gobble up. So what could possibly be the problem
here? Is it the recent temperature increase? <<I'm not too
keen on the idea of the snails for these fish but I've no knowledge
of them being either good or bad as a food source for Corys. The
temperature increase seems to be an unlikely candidate as the problem
to me. An increase due to weather conditions is going to be relatively
slow and not problematic. I'd be more suspicious of a sudden drop
in temperature.>> The high pH finally taking a toll? <<Of
the conditions that you've thoughtfully/carefully described, this
is the one that I'd be most inclined to suspect, especially in the
case of the Pandas.>> Are the snails bad for them? Am I cursed?
<<Well, I don't believe in "curses" so I'd
write that one off. :) Myself? I'd discontinue the snail regimen.
They won't miss them and it will eliminate a possibility.>> I
have a flotilla of aquarium meds I'd use in a heartbeat if there
appeared to be a specific disease afoot. What do you suggest?
<<Justin, there doesn't seem to be anything
"consistent" in the specifics surrounding the deaths of your
pets other than the fact that they're dying. One showed signs of
"Dropsy". Another, fin rot (possibly) while two others simply
grew listless and died. Since we're dealing with something that
appears to be "obscure", I'm going to suggest something
equally obscure. If you've got a heater in your tank, you may want
to test for a stray electrical current in the water. Uncommon but
definitely not unheard of. If nothing else, it might get rid of another
possible cause for the problems you're experiencing.>> Thanks
in advance for your help. JM <<I'm afraid my usual
two-cents-worth may only be worth about half of that in your case,
Justin, but, other than the pH issue, you don't describe anything
that doesn't sound spot-on to me. Tom>>
Salt tolerance of Cory Cats 5/28/06 Hello
Crew! <<Hi, Jasmine. Tom here.>> I understand that the salt
tolerance of catfish in general is very poor. <<It's true
that Catfish don't have a tolerance for salt at levels that other
fish can tolerate quite well.>> I have some Otos, Bronze Corys
and Panda Corys. <<I love these guys, Jasmine. The Pandas tend to
be a little less "robust" than other Corydoras varieties but
they're sure cute. :)>> For future reference when the
situation eventuates, how much aquarium salt would you recommend for
these fish for a) prevention of nitrite poisoning and b) disease
treatment. <<Regarding (a), don't let this situation
"eventuate". In a cycled tank, with proper maintenance, it
simply shouldn't occur. As to (b), this isn't, unfortunately,
an option because of the dosages necessary to be effective. The
"cure" would be as bad as the disease, in a manner of
speaking. Even with all of the benefits to be derived from the addition
of aquarium salt, in your case, I'm reluctant to advise this.
Neither of the instances you cite would lead me to recommend its use
given that there are alternatives should the occasion arise. I hope it
never does, though. ;)>> Thanks for your help! Jasmine
<<Happy to, Jasmine. Tom>>
Corydoras panda are losing their eyes! 1/26/06 I
hope someone can help. Recently I noticed 4 of my young
pandas have lost their eyes. 2 have died so
far. After they lose their eyes they start to loss
their color and turn whitish. They still feed and act
silly. I've had pandas for a few years and have managed
to breed them very successfully. I love my little guys and
take good care. Could this be a disease? <Not likely>
or is someone attacking them? <Yes> The only
"new" addition is a very young Kribensis Cichlid (about the
same size as the pandas). I have a 60 gallon tank with
mostly tetra (cardinals and hatchets), 5 Platies, 2 small angelfish, 2
yoyo loaches and 2 Plecos. <I suspect the Kribensis or loaches...
but could be an angel... only close observation or systematic removal
will reveal the culprit. Bob Fenner> Help me please -
Sabiha
Cory Quarantine Query (Now say it 5
times fast!) 12/26/05 Hello~ <Hi.> A newbie in the
field, but have been gleaning a lot of info from this site-very
appreciative of all the knowledge that is accessible. <Outstanding,
glad to hear we have been helpful.> I have a 12 gal going for about
3 months...all is fine, but spotted a few panda Corys that I would like
to buy and QT- and all that I have running besides the 12gal
is a 2 gal...would this be big enough <Enough.> for the Pandas
(3) to spend about 2-3 weeks in before putting them in the larger tank?
<2 gallons is pretty small, and I would be a lot more comfortable
with something in at least the 5 gallon range. However of you plan to
go ahead with it, the tank would need to be well filtered and have good
surface area. Daily water changes of 30 to 50% would be a must.>
Thank You Very Much, <Quite welcome.> Merry Christmas,
<Ditto.> Judy <Adam J.>
Panda Cory with Milky Film 10/13/05 Hello,
<Good morning. Sabrina with you.> This is my first fish
tank and your website has been tremendously valuable. I keep
making mistakes, though, and lost 4 panda Corys. Just when I
think I've figured out what I'm doing wrong, another
panda gets sick. <Yikes. Starting out, most folks make
mistakes, so do not beat yourself up on this. It is how we are
prompted to learn.> I now have two pandas. One seems healthy
and active, but the other has milky white clumps on one side of
his body. They started about 2 weeks ago and are spreading.
I'm attaching two photos...I hope you can open them. I
don't know if it's a fungus or bacterial infection. <A
tough question. I, personally, think this is Columnaris or some
other (severe) bacterial infection. Good photo, BTW.> I've
been treating the tank with Maracyn for 8 days now. Initially,
there was a small red spot in the white patch that's gone
now. The Cory hides but eats actively (sinking wafers and shrimp
pellets) and his breathing seems normal. Both seem to tolerate
the Maracyn. <I don't think Maracyn (Erythromycin) will
treat Columnaris; even if this is something else bacterial, I
doubt that Erythromycin is the way to go; it only treats
gram-positive bacteria (that's bacteria that have a cell
wall); there are few gram-positive bacteria responsible for
illness in fish.> <<This is incorrect: The difference
between "gram positive" bacteria and "gram
negative" bacteria has to do with how they take up (or
don't) a type of violet stain (re: peptidoglycan w/in cell
walls) . Try Googling, or view here
Marina>>
|
|
My tank and mistakes: -- 7 gal, power filter with
venturi tube, sponge filter, heater, light, live plants,
driftwood. -- 1 male Betta, 2 panda Corys (at most 4). -- temp
80F, ph 7.0, total ammonia < 0.1ppm (was zero before Maracyn),
nitrites 0ppm, nitrates 5ppm, dGH 2, dKH 2. -- 30-40% water
change and gravel vac every other day, Amquel, Nutrafin Cycle
every other change. Temp change 1-2 degrees after change.
<This is too much maintenance, once the tank's cycled.>
-- mistakes: --didn't cycle properly and overfed; lost 2
Corys due to high ammonia. --problems keeping temp and pH stable;
okay now. --initially fed Betta live tube worms <Tubifex
worms, perhaps? Try to avoid these; Blackworms are safer (as in,
less prone to passing along disease to your fish).> and now
some are living in the gravel. I vacuum but can't seem to get
rid of them. Maybe the substrate wasn't clean enough.
<This is okay. The worms in the substrate aren't of
significant concern unless they are very numerous.> --Two
other Corys gradually got sick. <Ammonia again? Or this
illness?> --one died after one dose of Maroxy; did quick water
change and stopped. --another died after one dose of Maracyn II,
same. I feel terrible about losing these fish. Is there anything
I can do if the Maracyn doesn't work? <I've shown this
to Bob, as well.... his recommendation is to treat with aquarium
salt and a furan compound.... might read here for more: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/furancpdfaqs.htm
.> I don't want to add another chemical or medicine that
might do more harm than good. <The Maracyn likely will not be
of help here.> I won't add new fish. Through all this, my
Betta has been very active, eating heartily, and seemingly
oblivious. <I would remove him from this system immediately,
lest he contract the illness as well. Normally I would recommend
the opposite, removing the infected fish to a separate
quarantine/hospital system, but I would be fearful for the Betta
right now.> Thanks for your expertise! --Anita <Wishing you
the best, -Sabrina>
|
Panda Cory with Milky Film - II -
10/21/2005 Hello Sabrina again, <Aloha.> Thank you for
your advice on treating my panda Cory with the bacterial
infection. I set up a small 2.5 gal tank with power filter,
heater, new gravel, two new live plants, and some decorations,
then moved my Betta into it. Since the tank isn't cycled (I
didn't use gravel from my main tank, due to the infection), I
am monitoring the ammonia and doing 50% water changes every other
day. He is settled and healthy, his normal self, though a bit
cramped. <All sounds good for now.> I am relieved he's
safe. In my 7 gal main tank with the two panda Corys, I added
aquarium salt (dissolved in water) and began treatment with Furan
2 (two courses for 8 days). Today is the last day. The tank
parameters are still: temp 80F, pH 7.0, total ammonia 0ppm,
nitrites 0ppm, nitrates 5ppm. I have good news and bad news, plus
more questions if you can help. <Alright! Let's get
started.> First the good: Both Corys tolerated the treatment.
The healthy one looks the same with no sign of infection. The
sick one still has energy, eats a lot, and swims around. He has
actually grown bigger in the three weeks since the white patches
appeared. <Wow.> (He is the only Cory that developed these
white patches.) Both seem to be breathing normally with no
redness around the gills. Now the bad: The white patches
don't seem to have reduced in size or thickness. It's
difficult to tell if they've spread, but there might be a new
patch on his right side. The past few days, I've noticed he
darts and jerks more when he swims and hides more often. I looked
at a close-up photo and was astonished to find that his left
pectoral fin is gone! It was definitely there 5 days ago.
|
Panda before Furan2
treatment.
|
Panda
post-Furan2.
|
<Did you start medicating with a Furan
compound yet?> I am attaching photos. Since this infection
started, his left side seemed to swell and bulge around the
pectoral fin. Since he's grown bigger, it's hard to tell
if there's still a bulge. I plan to do a partial water change
and put back the carbon filter as recommended on the Furan 2
package. <Mm, you should remove the carbon when you start
treating with the Furan 2.> Should I keep the aquarium salt in
the water or gradually remove it with water changes? <Fine to
leave the salt in, as long as it is no more than 1 tablespoon per
five or ten gallons.... less is better with Corys.> Is there
another treatment I can try? <Have you started the Furan 2
yet? I would give it a second go, if you're already done with
the first round.> Can his fin grow back? <Possibly, but
also possibly not. Not to worry, though, he can live without a
pectoral fin if it does not grow back.> Is it possible he can
make it or does this mean he will slowly get worse and suffer
more? What is the best and kindest thing I can do for him now?
<In all honesty, I don't know his chances. It's a
pretty bad infection. However, if he's still eating, I think
there's still hope. I would give it a second round with the
Furan 2, and if that still fails, I would consider going to
something "stronger", perhaps Oxytetracycline....>
Thanks for your help, --Anita <All the best to you and your
fish, -Sabrina>
Panda Cory with Milky Film - III -
10/22/2005 Hello Sabrina, <Ahoy thar, matey!>
<<Hey.. talk like a pirate day was last
week!>> Thanks so much for your quick reply! <Sure
thing.> To clarify, I ended 8 days of treatment with Furan 2
yesterday. (The package says to use it for 4 days, then you may
repeat if necessary, which I did. <Ah, I see.> I cut open
the capsules to get the right dosage for my 7 gal tank. I
don't know if there's a better way. <Mm, probably that
was right to do.> <<Please note: this stuff can stain
clothes permanently. MH>> I washed my hands
immediately afterwards.) Three days after starting the Furan 2, I
took a photo that shows the pectoral fin. Five days after that,
another photo showed the fin was gone. (Without the photos,
it's hard to compare how he's doing since he moves so
fast.) <At least he's still acting well!> I removed the
carbon during the treatment and just put it back yesterday. Today
the water is clear again instead of greenish from the Furan 2. Is
it okay to continue the Furan for another 4 days (for 12 total
days)? <Actually, I would not.> It's hard to tell if it
made a difference (except he's still here!). Do you have a
recommendation for an Oxytetracycline product? I'll look for
some today. <Having discussed this with Bob, I wish to
recommend that you use Acriflavine in the water, instead....
Methylene Blue if you can't find Acriflavine. In addition to
this, a food medicated with Oxytetracycline is a really, really
good idea. Here is one place to purchase such a product: http://flguppiesplus.safeshopper.com/29/cat29.htm?264
. Otherwise, you can make this yourself, if you can find
Oxytetracycline.... or could use tetracycline.... or other
antibiotic.... This article contains a passage about preparing
your own medicated foods: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/PondSubWebIndex/holedispd.htm
.> Thank you! -Anita <Sure thing. Wishing you well,
-Sabrina>
|
Panda Corys Hi. Are panda Corys compatible with other Corys
species? I have read they are sociable and like to be in a group. I
have one remaining panda having 6 that died. I want the panda to have
company but I do not like the fish store where I got the pandas from
and can't find pandas where I want to purchase...so I'm looking
at getting other Corydoras species. You think? Thanks Marty <Hey
Marty, they will do fine together. Corydoras are one of my
favorite fish. In my experience, I have noticed that
although they do not bother each other, they do stick with their
own. My Albino Corys hang out with the other Albinos, and
the Peppered Corys hang out with the other Peppered
Corys. What is interesting is the Albino Corys do not hang
out with the Bronze Corys even though they are both Corydoras Aeneus,
go figure. One thing you may want to look into is why the
other 6 died, that is not a good sign. fishbase.org is great for
information regarding water parameters and what not, the link below is
a fun Cory site. -Gage http://www.nettaigyo.com/corydoras/encyc/index-e.html
>
Panda Corys Thank you so much Gage. I will check out the info you
sent me. The fish store where I bought the pandas is not someplace I
want to frequent any longer. Their Corys had no barbels to speak of,
and the Corys were very little. I watched the guy catch them and it
looked like a slaughter rather than a netting. Marty <Good plan, no
barbels is a very bad sign. -Gage>
Pandas and Barbs Incompatible? Hi! I have a 10 gallon tank
with 2 striped barbs and 2 long-finned Danios. All 4 fish are about
1" in size. Tank has been cycled and water tested. They
have been living together for a few months now and get along great. I
do a 20-30% water change every week. The other day I added 2
small panda Corys. Right away, one striped barb started
chasing one of the Corys. This went on for a few days. Every
time the panda tried to rest, the barb would seek him out and chase
him. It only happened with one barb and one
panda. Also, the barbs were hogging all the food, so we
tried a sinking pellet for the pandas, but the barbs found that too and
devoured it! Needless to say, when I got home from work one
night, both pandas were dead. I took them out and did a water change
and the 4 original fish are back to normal. Will this happen
with any new fish I add or was there some incompatibility with the
panda and the barb? I feel like the barb harassed the pandas
to death!! < Some fish do get territorial and some barbs have been
known to become fin nippers. Next time do a water change and rearrange
the tank just before adding any new fish. This may help. Or you could
try to add numerous fish at the same time to help disperse the
aggression of the barbs.-Chuck> Thanks, Frances
Re: Freshwater planted setup Howdy once again, In regards to
the sump for the 55 gallon live plant fish tank. I would appreciate
your comments on the sump design (drawing attached). I'm kind of
new at this fish stuff but have been doing a lot of research for the
last six months and want my system set up right the first time. Thanks
for your previous input and thanks for your input on this aspect in
advance. <missed the attachment, bud> As to your first response
on adding more Corydoras cats-Should I add more Panda Cory's or can
I add the same amount of another Cory species (from what I read their
all compatible, given water parameters are within reason). <I'm
inclined towards shoals of the same species and the panda specifically
for warmer waters if you need that. Anthony>
Will Epsom Salt hurt Panda Corydoras? Thanks,
Chuck, but you didn't answer my main question. Would Epsom salt
hurt panda Cory cats? < Corydoras come from very soft acidic water
with no salt in it at all. Depending on how much salt you add with have
an affect on the amount of irritation and discomfort you cats will be
subjected too. If you fish are wild then I would not recommend adding
any salt to their water at all. Domesticated or tank raised fish are
more tolerant to salt being raised in confined conditions so a little
can probably be tolerated.-Chuck>
|
|