FAQs on Ropefish Health
Related Articles: Bichirs
& Ropefish, Family Polypteridae,
Related FAQs: Ropefish
1, Ropefish 2, & Ropefish ID, Ropefish Behavior, Ropefish Compatibility, Ropefish Selection, Ropefish Systems, Ropefish Feeding, Ropefish Reproduction, & FAQs on:
Bichirs 1, & Bichir Identification, Bichir Behavior, Bichir Compatibility, Bichir Selection, Bichir Systems, Bichir Feeding, Bichir Disease, Bichir Reproduction,
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Please need your help about rope fish
11/11/17
Hello WetWebMedia team.
<Hello!>
I have a rope fish for about 3 years in my 270 liters tank. She lives alone.
Recently I have noticed the problem with her eye, it seems blush and a bit of
blur and bluish.
<Possibly physical damage, e.g., from scratching against a rock or gravel.
Physical damage usually heals on its own, assuming good water quality.>
I change 1/3 of the water every 1.5 weeks. The food: fish tilapia, shrimps,
blood worms.
<Sounds fine.>
1 month ago I did one stupid thing, i found grass worms near to my apartment,
but i did not realise that they could not be dirty because my apartment was
located near to the big road, so maybe worms was polluted.
<It is possible, yes.>
In that time i had 2 fishes alive. They felt bad after i fed them worms, fishes
tried to jump and leave the tank, was hanging on the top of water and their
bodies was reddish. One of them unfortunately left the tank at night and died.
<This does not sound like a problem with the worms. The redness of the body
sounds more like a bacterial infection, or possibly exposure to a toxin in the
water or poor water quality.>
Unfortunately i also discovered that net secure of tank also was not safe
:(
<Ropefish are notorious for escaping. This is natural behaviour, unfortunately.
A good idea is to keep the tank only half-filled with water.
Ropefish only need 20 cm/8 inches water depth.>
During this month, the remaining fish seemed to feel better (i put coal in
tank),
<Do you mean carbon? That will certainly help remove poisons from the water. Big
water changes are useful, too -- but of course keep water chemistry and
temperature the same. Ropefish may benefit from a small amount of salt in the
water. Non-iodised cooking salt is fine. Something like 3-4 grams per litre will
work nicely.>
before last week when i discovered this clouding. Please help me. I realize that
her health is now very weak after poisoning. What can i do to make her feel
better?
<Time will help, and of course good water quality. Warm, humid air is also
important. I would certainly use salt as described above, for at least until the
cloudy eye clears up.>
Changing water more often could help?
<See above.>
Irina
<Cheers, Neale.>
|
Re: please need your help about rope fish
11/15/17
Thank you so much for your advice and help, Neale, all the best regards to
you and WetWebMedia
Irina
<Most welcome and good luck! Neale.>
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Sick Ropefish... hlth. 2/4/17
Hello,
My smallest Ropefish was all roly-poly, sort of speak, this morning,
<? Turning about randomly? Not good>
now he's just lying at the bottom, like he wants to float upright but
cant, then floats to the bottom again.
<Yikes; do you have another system to move this animal to? I would, now>
His tail fin is white now, it wasn't this morning, we've been treating
the tank with bacteria and parasite stuff
<Brand, ingredients please. Ropefish and their kin, Bichirs, are
sensitive to chemical burning>
bc we did a 50 per.
<?>
Water clean last night to balance out our chem.s, but the
nitrites were .5-1.0 high
<Deadly toxic. READ here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fwno2faqs.htm then ACT!>
and the Alk was low, like 40
<Units?>
low. Could that be the cause of this?
<The former; yes>
Our other 2 Ropefish who are several inches bigger, don't seem to be as
effected, though when I got home, I found 1 of our bigger ones laying on
his back, barely breathing... The 3rd still looks like he can swim
normal, but so did the other big dude before I left for work. And before
we woke up this morning, the 2 bigger ones had their eyes bulging out
lil yesterday, hence why we cleaned the tank. What should I do with the
2 sick ones?
<As stated above; move them to another established system; if not
possible, READ and correct the NO2>
Was it us who caused it? Or could it have been the mealworms or
bloodworms we feed them?
<Can't tell from the information provided; but environment is definitely
a factor here. Bob Fenner>
I just want them to be ok...
Re: Sick Ropefish 2/5/17
2 of them died.. One left, and it looks like his scales are dying? I
don't know..
<Uhh, did you read where I referred you? ..... B>
Re: Sick Ropefish.... and Koi mixed in?
2/6/17
Thank you Bob, but sadly our smallest Ropefish passed yesterday, and one
of the bigger ones died the night before, we still cant get the
nitrites and Alk to be what it should,
<? STOP: DID you read where I referred you?>
and my friend informed me that the koi may be the cause
<Koi? Are there carp in this system? They're not tropicals.... are NOT
compatible>
of high nitrites because their poop contain high levels of ammonia, now
were are down to our last Ropefish, and he doesn't seem to have the same
symptoms as the others, his butt is swollen and red, patches of his
scales are dying, i don't know how to help him. We have Fluval brand
water conditioning stuff, and Fluval cycle bio booster to help with
ammonia and nitrites, but it doesn't seem to be helping him, we set up
another tank yesterday, how many days should i wait to move him? Is he
going to die anyway?
<....... You need to read>
Also, i don't know the units for alkalinity, it was on the ph bottle we
got, it just says 40 is low and 120 to 140 is ideal. The ammonia
levels were pretty high unfortunately.
<.... the issue here is and has been environmental; and
apparently mis-stocking. You'd do well to study ahead of your actions.
BobF>
Our other tank has been running for about 24 hours with a carbon based
filter and all the levels are normal..
Re: Sick Ropefish 2/7/17
This is what the last one looks like now, and his butts all swollen.. Cant swim
well.. I don't think he's going to make it. :c Was it a disease ?
<Have already stated... killed by poor environment>
Or from the water conditions? I wanna know how to prevent this if i want more
fishies..
<Sorry; can't help you if you won't read. B>
|
Yes; a koi... |
Re: Sick Ropefish... child; inexperienced
2/7/17
The Ropefish were presents from my mom, it was kinda trial and error.
<My young friend.... these are life; not inanimate objects to play with; see "if
they'll make it" or no>
I've never had a fish before, i didn't know what the little guys were when she
brought them home..
<Ahh! Wish you had stated so earlier...>
I know i need to learn more, thank you for your time though, i really appreciate
it..
<PLEASE read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/polypterids.htm
and the linked files above. Better; PLEASE have a look at Neale's
suggested beginner books HERE:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/bksfwbrneale.htm
Most of these are available free at local libraries.>
And i did read the link you sent me, i got what i needed for my incubation tank
but i guess i still need to let it cycle,
<Yes!>
the nitrites and nitrates are better now, all 0, ammonia is 0 too but the ph is
off the scales...
And the tank he's in now, still have a lil bit of nitrites in it, .25, if that,
and maybe about .25 of ammonia, we cant keep them down.
<Stop feeding period.... Cheers, Bob Fenner>
|
Rope fishes health problems 6/11/16
Hello. I have 2 rope fishes in 270 liters tank. Recently i have noticed
that face of one of them became a bit darker, also there are some dark
sports on his spine. And today i just saw the tale of other fish all
covered with dark spots. Please, could you tell me what it possibly is?
<Hello! Black spots on Bichirs and Ropefish are not uncommon. There's
some debate about what causes them. Some type of parasite seems most
likely, given these are wild-caught animals. Likely a flatworm of some
sort. They do not, usually, cause any specific health issues provided
the Ropefish or Bichir is otherwise healthy. Given Ropefish are
salt-tolerant (they do occur in slightly brackish habitats) using 2-3
gram salt/litre would be one thing to try. But if this didn't help after
a few weeks of trying, you could try an anti-helminth medication such as
PraziPro. I'd also suggest you visit (and join) a forum like Monster
Fishkeepers that specialises in predatory fish. You'll see *many*
threads on Bichirs with these black spots, as well as ideas about their
cause and treatment. Bottom line, don't worry over much so long as your
Ropefish is otherwise happy. Indeed, there's some evidence fish can
"fight off" parasites provided they're healthy and receiving a
vitamin-rich diet. Avoid the use of things like crustaceans (shrimps,
prawns, mussels) or cyprinids (carp for example) that contain
thiaminase. Instead provide plenty of earthworms (from a safe source!)
and small pieces of white fish, cockles and squid. Cheers, Neale.>
|
Neale; I'd like to relate a meeting w/ a Nigerian collector of Ropes et
al... they're corralled in reeds, circled by a net and poisoned... some sets
more than others; with consequent deaths and these dark spotting. RMF |
Re: Rope fishes health problems
6/13/16
Thanks so much Neale, i will try on your advices and will look info in that
forum! Best regards!
<Most welcome and good luck, Neale.>
|
Rope fish health problem, please help me
9/8/15
Hello WetWebMedia team. I have 2 rope fishes. Their sizes are about 25-30 cm
long, living with me for about 10 months in 270 liters tank, with external
filter 1800 l/per hour. I change about 20% of water every week and regularly do
tests (nitrites =0, ammonia = 0, nitrates 5-10 mg/l). Usually my fishes eat
blood worms
<I'd leave these off the menu. See WWM re these sewer worm/fly larvae.
Implicated too much in disease. Read here re food/feeding of Ropes:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/RopefishFdgF.htm
and snails (snails are from the same aquarium). Earth worms they didn't like to
eat. Unfortunately i do not regularly give vitamins to my fishes and suddenly i
decided to fix it. I have put 5 drops of ESHa Minaroll on blood worms and forgot
about it, then gave food to my fishes after about 4 hours((( After couple of
days i started to notice all bad results of my doings. Fishes are having red
faces, quaking when swimming, shaking their heads, yawning and constantly
open-and-closing their mouths, but most frightening symptom is that they are
trying to jump out from the tank with the crazy speed and then going down and
clashing by the bottom and repeat again many times. I'm so sad and really afraid
of their health mind now, please could you give any advice what is going on with
them now, how can i help them and really i did so much harm?
<Water change... like half; NOW. And addition of activated carbon to your
filter, water flow path>
(I've read that ESHa Minaroll contains copper, maybe it's poisoning effect). Or
if overdosing vitamins is not such dangerous the maybe the reason is that
something happened with the water or filter system?
<Perhaps a bit of all>
I would be very thankful for any help, because in my place there is nobody who
can tell anything about my problem.
<Act NOW. Bob Fenner>
Rope Fish /RMF try
8/19/15
Hello, I've been having some problems and I'm left stumped. A few months ago I
was at my local aquarium shop when I came across a rope fish. I fell in love. I
spoke to the owner about them and then brought one home. Later that day I did so
much reading on these guys. I went out and bought all the food I read that this
site recommended, and I started looking for a bigger tank. I was told my 10
gallon tank was fine for it. After reading here I learned that wasn't the case.
<Correct... need at least twice, thrice this>
The day after I got my rope fish, I noticed a white spot on one of the spikes on
its back. I freaked.
<Mmm; careful here... though most likely a "reaction zone" from some simple
physical bump>
I brought a sample of water to the aquarium store. Ammonia was 0, nitrates 0,
nitrites were good (I can't remember, but
I was told it wasn't my water quality as it was all excellent). PH 7.0, and my
temperature was around 77. I do weekly water changes of 15-20% and use Prime. I
kept all feeding on a schedule, and I never had any issues.
I purchased the medication that was recommended to me (again it was months ago
so I really can't remember it). I started the treatment after I performed a 15%
water change. I removed the filter as the instructions suggested.
I woke the next morning to find the little spot had grown. It had grown to about
an inch going down on the sides.
<Real trouble.... the death of many Ropes... consequent from collection
practice>
I freaked again. My rope fish seemed to have difficulty swimming and just seemed
to float. He died with in 24 hours of me noticing the spot. I cried. I will
admit it. In the tank with him there was a Kuhli loach, 3 danios, a Pleco, and 4
ghost shrimp. My
loach ended up dying from the same thing the next day. They were the only ones
affected.
Fast forward to now. I have a 40 gallon with an external canister filter with a
UV sterilizer. It is a planted aquarium, with a oxygen pump. Again, water was
the same as above when tested. So I went back to the aquarium store and
purchased the 2 rope fish he had. One of the rope fish was still there from the
other I had purchased that passed.
Later that night I see a light spot on one of the spikes on his back..
(this is from the same stock as the first one). It wasn't white, it just
appeared to be a different color only slightly. The next morning the spot was
white. I about lost it.
I moved him to a hospital tank. All I had was a 10 gallon that had been running
since the last time I had issues. No other inhabitants. I thought I was
prepared. Water showed zero across the board, 7.6 PH, and 77 for the
temperature.
After reading online here, I saw salt is pretty amazing. So, before I placed him
in the tank I did a 20% water change to be safe, and added in aquarium salt that
was recommended. I turned the temperature to 82. With fingers crossed I kept
checking in on him. He seemed to be doing great.
The next morning, the white spot grew the same as before only not as big.
I did a water change, and added Melafix (I know it's not everyone's favorite,
and I kept seeing different opinions). My options on medications were limited by
the time I got off of work. But I couldn't find that much information that
seemed to match up with my issues. This problem is only affecting this family of
fish.
I did forget to mention, on Saturday, the day after I got the rope fish, I
noticed a white algae on one of my plants.
<Not algae; likely a mix of decomposers... Monerans, Protists>
No idea where it came from,
<The air; water... and some source of nutrients/food in the water>
never seen it before, but I removed it and did a 30% change of water and added
some aquarium salt. Last night I saw something on the back of the glass. It's
kinda clear, and I've never come across it. Nothing new has been added to the
tank, except some water from when I got the fish accidentally spilled into my
tank during acclimation.
So back to the rope fish, the problem seemed to take longer this time.
Instead of 24 hours it took 48. I even tried to stimulate him (with clean
fingers). I did not want to give up. But all my efforts failed. Whatever it is
that he had had moved to his gills. There was no darting and swimming fast, but
I did see him kinda bite it once. The white, which was a transparent kind had
moved to his face.
<.... Perhaps something resultant from the Tea mix/API... The Mela (non) fix>
I'm heart broken. I thought I followed all the rules. I know I must have done
something wrong somewhere. I did all the reading I could that this site had
listed.
<Go back, read on WWM re these and Bichirs (same family) disease, the use of
Oxolinic acid with these fishes>
I don't understand how he was fine in the store for a few months, but like the
last one he did the same thing.
<Some thing/s about their water is/are different likely. Ask the shop what they
do in terms of prep. and filtering. Large/r semi-open recirculated systems often
have much lower overall microbial "levels" (and their consequences)>
Even though they were purchased months apart, they came from the same shipment.
The one that came from a different shipment doesn't have any issues. But I have
gone ahead and kept salt in with her, just not as much. So I am at a loss. I
can't figure this out. Is there something in my tank that I don't know about?
<Almost assuredly>
She needs companions asap, but I'm almost too afraid.
<Take your time; isolate any newcomer for a few weeks>
I don't know if she will get it as well. Because this is only happening to this
family of fish, because again, those same fish from before are not affected.
Thank you, and I'm sorry this was so long.
Kelsie
<Again, read all we have archived re Ropes/Bichirs. Bob Fenner>
Rope Fish /Neale's Go 8/19/15
Hello, I've been having some problems and I'm left stumped. A few months ago I
was at my local aquarium shop when I came across a rope fish. I fell in love. I
spoke to the owner about them and then brought one home.
<Are happier in groups...>
Later that day I did so much reading on these guys. I went out and bought all
the food I read that this site recommended, and I started looking for a bigger
tank. I was told my 10 gallon tank was fine for it.
<Nope.>
After reading here I learned that wasn't the case.
<Indeed.>
The day after I got my rope fish, I noticed a white spot on one of the spikes on
its back. I freaked.
<No need to be. The salt/heat method works very well with these fish.>
I brought a sample of water to the aquarium store. Ammonia was 0, nitrates 0,
nitrites were good (I can't remember, but I was told it wasn't my water quality
as it was all excellent). PH 7.0, and my temperature was around 77.
I do weekly water changes of 15-20% and use Prime. I kept all feeding on a
schedule, and I never had any issues. I purchased the medication that was
recommended to me (again it was months ago so I really can't remember it).
I started the treatment after I performed a 15% water change. I removed the
filter as the instructions suggested.
I woke the next morning to find the little spot had grown. It had grown to about
an inch going down on the sides. I freaked again. My rope fish seemed to have
difficulty swimming and just seemed to float. He died with in 24 hours of me
noticing the spot. I cried. I will admit it. In the tank with him there was a
Kuhli loach, 3 danios, a Pleco, and 4 ghost shrimp. My loach ended up dying from
the same thing the next day. They were the only ones affected.
<Curious.>
Fast forward to now. I have a 40 gallon with an external canister filter with a
UV sterilizer.
<Do bear in mind these have very limited use. They don't prevent diseases other
than those with mobile larval stages (specifically: Whitespot and Velvet) and
they don't treat any diseases once established. The UV tubes need replacing
every 6 months of use. Easiest/best approach in freshwater tanks is run them for
a couple weeks after introducing new livestock but otherwise switch off, remove,
and thoroughly clean (if the glass inside is dirty they can't work).>
It is a planted aquarium, with a oxygen pump. Again, water was the same as above
when tested. So I went back to the aquarium store and purchased the 2 rope fish
he had. One of the rope fish was still there from the other I had purchased that
passed. Later that night I see a light spot on one of the spikes on his back..
(this is from the same stock as the first one). It
wasn't white, it just appeared to be a different color only slightly. The next
morning the spot was white. I about lost it.
<Understandable.>
I moved him to a hospital tank. All I had was a 10 gallon that had been running
since the last time I had issues. No other inhabitants. I thought I was
prepared. Water showed zero across the board, 7.6 PH, and 77 for the
temperature. After reading online here, I saw salt is pretty amazing. So, before
I placed him in the tank I did a 20% water change to be safe, and added in
aquarium salt that was recommended. I turned the temperature to 82.
<Is this the salt/heat treatment?
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/SaltUseFWArtNeale.htm
Ropefish are reasonably salt tolerant, so you can safely up the salinity a bit
to maybe twice the stated dose if the infection is severe. Similarly, you can
keep using the salt for weeks or months if the Ropefish aren't recovering as
quickly as you'd like.>
With fingers crossed I kept checking in on him. He seemed to be doing great. The
next morning, the white spot grew the same as before only not as big. I did a
water change, and added Melafix (I know it's not everyone's favorite, and I kept
seeing different opinions).
<Melafix is an unreliable medication, but one of the problems is that it's often
used when people don't know what the problem is, and unsurprisingly, a lot of
the time it's not what was needed. So even though Bob F. and others find it
unreliable, it's "cure all" reputation is way overblown and an invitation to
disappointment.>
My options on medications were limited by the time I got off of work. But I
couldn't find that much information that seemed to match up with my issues.
This problem is only affecting this family of fish.
<We'll get to what Ropefish need in a moment.>
I did forget to mention, on Saturday, the day after I got the rope fish, I
noticed a white algae on one of my plants.
<Likely bacteria. Indicates some fundamental problem with the tank.>
No idea where it came from, never seen it before, but I removed it and did a 30%
change of water and added some aquarium salt. Last night I saw something on the
back of the glass. It's kinda clear, and I've never come across it. Nothing new
has been added to the tank, except some water from when I got the fish
accidentally spilled into my tank during acclimation.
So back to the rope fish, the problem seemed to take longer this time.
Instead of 24 hours it took 48. I even tried to stimulate him (with clean
fingers). I did not want to give up. But all my efforts failed. Whatever it is
that he had had moved to his gills. There was no darting and swimming fast, but
I did see him kinda bite it once. The white, which was a transparent kind had
moved to his face.
<Curious.>
I'm heart broken. I thought I followed all the rules. I know I must have done
something wrong somewhere. I did all the reading I could that this site had
listed. I don't understand how he was fine in the store for a few months, but
like the last one he did the same thing. Even though they were purchased months
apart, they came from the same shipment. The one that
came from a different shipment doesn't have any issues. But I have gone ahead
and kept salt in with her, just not as much. So I am at a loss. I can't figure
this out. Is there something in my tank that I don't know about? She needs
companions asap, but I'm almost too afraid. I don't know if she will get it as
well. Because this is only happening to this family of fish, because again,
those same fish from before are not affected.
Thank you, and I'm sorry this was so long.
Kelsie
<Right Kelsie, let's recap some basics. Ropefish are basically hardy animals,
but they have a couple weakness. The first is escaping from open tanks. If they
can get out, they will. The second is a sensitive to copper and formalin. Never
use medications in tanks with these fish unless rated as safe for loaches,
stingrays, etc. I mention this because the retailer might have used such
medications. Now, because they've got armoured bodies and don't move quickly,
they're easy targets for scraping or nippy fish. Puffers and aggressive cichlids
for a start, but even things like Otocinclus and Plecs can cause problems when
they latch onto their bodies and try to scrape away at the mucous. Another issue
with them is they are
benthic fish and consequently sensitive to conditions down there. Scratchy sand
is a common problem (Tahitian Moon Sand for example) and once damaged, their
wounds can take a while to clear up (though again, salt helps).
Finally, they're finicky feeders, and malnutrition can lead to all sorts of
problems. Bloodworms aren't enough. They need a mixed diet, with those old
standbys, mussels and prawns, in the minority. Mussels and prawns contain
Thiaminase, and this leads to vitamin B1 deficiency. Earthworms are better, or
cockles, or strips of white fish fillet. In short, I can't pin down the
exact problem, and to some degree you may be suffering from bad care on the part
of the retailer, I think you can optimise aquarium conditions ahead of next
time. One last thing, Ropefish aren't the easiest Bichirs to keep, and
Polypterus palmas or (the slightly bigger) Polypterus senegalus are very similar
in nature, only slightly more predatory (they will Neon-sized
tankmates), and being less eel-like, they're less likely to escape from small
holes. I like them a lot. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Rope Fish; hlth 8/20/15
Thank you so much for the responses. I had made sure to prevent any possible
escape attempts buy purchasing lids that completely cover the tank and still
allow for breathing. Nothing is sprayed around the tanks to prevent chemicals in
the air as best I can.
I never considered sand being a possible problem. What sand is best, or should I
start using soft river rocks with grass type plants?
<Optimal is smooth silver sand, sometimes called smooth silica sand or pool
filter sand. It's bright yellowy-gold in colour initially, but in the aquarium
darkens up after a few months. It feels silky smooth rather than gritty when you
handle it. Garden centres in the UK sell it cheaply, alongside sharp silver sand
which is what you don't want, so don't confuse them!>
I don't just feed them bloodworms and shrimp. I did buy beef heart, earthworms,
and fish. But sadly they seem to get sick before what I have ever becomes an
issue or possibility.
<Understood.>
I had applied the salt/heat method and it didn't work for him.
<Assuming done correctly, that rules out Whitespot and Velvet, though Costia is
somewhat more salt tolerant, and may take some weeks to shift this way and/or
use of a higher salinity; say, 3-4 gram/litre salt rather than the standard 2
gram/litre.>
I do know that I purchased them from a tank that housed semi-aggressive fish.
<Oh dear.>
But I still don't know how they are fine in the store, but immediately get sick
when I bring them home.
<Worrying; is quarantining an option for you?>
No other fish has had this issue.
<Because Ropefish are such primitive and specialised fish, they can become
damaged or poisoned by certain chemicals while other fish are fine. On the other
hand, they're not particularly delicate fish, so you shouldn't be afraid of
keeping them, and if the other fish are fine, there might be a more serious
problem at the retailer or wholesaler.>
I have read the recommended links that were provided. I came across someone else
explaining a white spot turning to a saddle back type of problem. I believe it
was said to be a somewhat common problem with wild caught, but with them being
kept so long prior to me buying them, I'm more lost.
<Bichirs generally (of which Ropefish are a kind) are mostly wild-caught, though
some are farmed in increasing numbers. Anyway, because they're wild-caught,
naturally occurring parasites are characteristic of the group.
Commonly, small black flatworm-looking things on their heads and flanks.
Having said this, such parasites rarely seem to cause serious harm unless the
fish have become stressed somehow.>
If it is something I have somehow already had with in my tank, then what should
be my best options to ensure that I rid the tank of any possible containments,
bacteria, toxins, you name it. I am willing to do whatever you recommend.
<I would not do anything as serious as this. It may be a bad batch of
Ropefish, in which case pass over them for now, or else, wait a month
or two and then buy whatever (apparently healthy!) specimens remain. Let the
retailer take the risk. Since the other fish are fine, there's no point adding
chemicals. Put another way: most infections are opportunistic, and
occur when fish are stressed, even if only by being moved from one tank to
another. Once settled in their immune system takes over and fish diseases aren't
a major threat. Almost always, once fish are settled in for a few weeks they
never become sick unless we do something silly (skip water changes for a few
months) or allow a problem (such as fighting) to occur unchallenged. Fish are
actually astonishingly resistant to disease; if you think about it, a tropical
aquarium is basically a Petri dish ideal for culturing bacteria: it's wet, warm,
and full of dissolved organic nutrients. Yet mostly fish thrive in conditions
that land animals (living in relatively sterile air) could never survive.>
As for the UV I only turn it on during cleanings and when I brought them home. I
was hoping it would help considering you're right in which I didn't know what
happened the first time. So I had my fingers crossed. Since I didn't seem to
have much luck with the salt method, is there anything else you'd recommend to
combat this problem.
<Since the salt didn't work, probably ruling out Costia, I'd recommend treating
as per flatworms, using something like PraziPro. Treat the Ropefish in a
quarantine tank if you can, but if not, treat alongside the regular fish.
Deworming won't harm them. Couple relevant threads over at MFK that might be
informative, here:
http://www.monsterfishkeepers.com/forums/threads/worms-on-bichirs.155783/
http://www.monsterfishkeepers.com/forums/threads/ornate-bichir-16-has-pale-white-patches-bleeding-pics-disease-bruise.551781/
You can also use PraziPro alongside salt/heat safely. Cheers, Neale.>
re: Rope Fish; sys. 8/21/15
Thank you so much. I double checked my sand and I do have the other type, so I
will make sure to replace it.
<Wise. Sharp sands are fine with midwater fish like tetras, just not with
anything that puts its belly on the bottom.>
I am able to replace it and wait it out since I have multiple tanks.
<Cool.>
I never allow my tanks to go with out water changes weekly (I think it's mean to
allow fish to live in a dirty environment). I will pick up the medication for
worms. And I am able to keep any new comers separated in a different tank before
placement into mine.
<Wise. Deworming new wild-caught fish is a pretty sensible thing to do.>
I am so glad you mentioned the sand though. I never thought the type I had was a
potential problem.
<It isn't always, but it's a factor and one to think about.>
Although it wasn't the problem at this time, I bet it would be in the future.
Also, I have a axolotl coming in tomorrow in its own tank, and I will remove the
sand from there and replace it as well.
<Oh my yes; Axolotls have rather delicate skin (like most amphibians) and many
people keep them in tanks with bare glass bottoms.>
I am so glad I found this site. The information provided is priceless, and I'm
glad I found a trusted site that can help me better maintain the health of my
aquariums with out having to second guess what I am reading.
<Glad to help.>
I will also make sure the store uses the proper netting method when grabbing the
rope fish, and I'm so glad I read that. I also only did the 2 gram ratio for the
salt treatment, and if things happen again I will definitely see about a
stronger ratio.
<Indeed yes; Ropefish naturally occur in slightly brackish water as well as
freshwater, so they have a built-in ability to put up with salt for longer and
at higher concentrations than most tropical fish. I wouldn't stick them in a
brackish aquarium as such, but at these low salinities, 2, 3 or 4 gram/litre,
you have plenty of flexibility.>
Thank you guys again. I have definitely bookmarked this site, and I read it
daily.
<Most welcome. Neale.>
Re: Rope Fish 9/3/15
Hello again. I figured I'd give you an update on my rope... (Jupiter). For a
week it was touch and go. She developed a sore that was a nasty shade of red on
her under belly, she kept floating, and wouldn't eat.
<Oh dear.>
I kept the air stone in the tank, applied 4 grams of aquarium salt per liter and
kept it at 82°f. I checked my water again, and everything was reading as before.
Ammonia 0, nitrate 0, nitrite 0, PH 7.
<All sounds fine.>
I had ordered PraziPro, and had to wait for that to come in since it wasn't
available in my area.
<Understood.>
I called a every shop around town and I was told to put her down because once
she stopped eating for a few days she would never recover. Well, that didn't
make me happy one bit. So, I took a chance. I decided to try colloidal silver. I
tried to find information on it and the problems it can cause to invertebrates.
All I found was conflicting information.
<Not a medication I'm familiar with.>
I know it was careless of me. But I noticed how intelligent she was, and I
noticed many more things about her. She would swim to the glass where my finger
was on the other side and she would try to rub her head against it. For
comfort...I don't really know.
<Indeed.>
I placed 6 drops in the tank. I removed the carbon, and my biological media went
into cycled tank that currently is empty. She ate the next day. She took a few
bites for me, and I did my triumphant dance. PraziPro came in along with Furan
2. I treated her with Furan 2 first. After that was done I did the PraziPro. Her
spot is now healing. I know I took a risk with the silver. But I didn't have any
other options available to me at the moment. But I believe that it saved her
life.
<Agreed. Or at least, hardly matters now if she's getting better.>
I also changed my sand to the softer sand you recommended. It took me forever,
but it was worth it. It looks way better.
<Quite so.>
I have a tank that has a black ghost knife, 3 Cory cats, a Pleco, and 8 ghost
shrimp (I don't use them for food, I really like them). Can I use PraziPro in
that tank with the Ghost Knife? I'd rather double check and be safe from now on.
<Should be safe.>
I am planning on getting 2 more ropes in about a month.
<Nice.>
They will be the only inhabitants of the tank. I plan on asking my retailer if
he can keep them in a separate tank and call me the minute they arrive. I am
looking for a softer net, and plan on bringing it in case the netting had
something to do with my problems.
<Sounds wise.>
Thank you again for everything. This site and you were a lifesaver.
<Glad this story has had a happy outcome, and thanks for sharing! Neale.>
Hi sick rope fish /RMF 12/14/14
Hi I have had 3 rope fish for about a year and the one died after 3
months and I never knew why and I put it down to just one of those fish
that don't make it but now around 4 months after a second rope fish is
going the same way. The symptoms are Not eating, losing weight fast,
lying on it's side panting and staying in its house. Curling up tight.
Please help. My tank
is 75gal UK or 350l water changes every week 25% ammonia etc. 0 and low
nitrates always.
<Foods, feeding? Other life present? Mmmm; will have Neale Monks look at
your msg. In the meanwhile read here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/RopefishDisF.htm
and the linked files above. Bob Fenner>
Hi sick rope fish /Neale 12/14/14
Hi I have had 3 rope fish for about a year and the one died after 3
months and I never knew why and I put it down to just one of those fish
that don't make it but now around 4 months after a second rope fish is
going the same way. The symptoms are Not eating, losing weight fast,
lying on it's side panting and staying in its house. Curling up tight.
Please help. My tank is 75gal UK or 350l water changes every week 25%
ammonia etc. 0 and low nitrates always.
<Well, there's really nothing about your tank or water quality that
stands out as problematic. So let's review the basics. First, water
chemistry. Some latitude here, but the addition of a little salt is
often helpful with Ropefish (2-3 gram/litre). This is unlike Bichirs,
which are generally hardier than Ropefish but don't like salt. Secondly,
as air breathers, they need easy access to humid air, and of course you
must avoid any sort of airborne toxins such as spray cleaners, paint
fumes, cigarette smoke, etc. Make sure the water level isn't too high,
and that there aren't any midwater fish that harass them on their way to
the surface. Thirdly, diet. Like all carnivores they're easily
prone to malnutrition. Why? Because while they'll eat things like
shrimps and bloodworms, they need a much bigger diversity to get all the
vitamins they need. Earthworms, cockles, strips of white fish
fillet should all be regular items. Earthworms (or gut-loaded river
shrimp) are useful for getting "greens" into them via the diet of these
prey animals. Alternatively, the use of marine aquarium vitamin
supplements can make life easier. What you must avoid (minimise, anyway)
are mussels, shrimps and prawns. These contain Thiaminase. Read up on
this issue elsewhere on WWM.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_6/volume_6_1/thiaminase.htm
Finally, as with all wild-caught fish, there's the risk of bringing
internal parasites into the tank. Hexamita is the classic example, but
by no means the only one. Some are harmless in themselves, but if the
fish becomes stressed (e.g., by a vitamin-deficient diet) the parasites
multiple and become troublesome. Many medications can be toxic to
Ropefish (copper and formalin specifically) so choose medications with
care. In the US, a combination approach of Metronidazole alongside an
antibiotic is often good for dealing with protozoan parasites, but in
the UK you can only obtain Metronidazole through a vet. But you might be
able to use eSHa HEXAMITA with good results. It's not as good as
Metronidazole, but it's cheap (around £5) and sold by many aquarium
shops. Don't forget to remove carbon when medicating. Do keep a close
eye out for external infections as well, whether Whitespot, Velvet,
Fungus or Finrot. Various medications for these, but again, the eSHa
products (EXIT, 2000) seem to be less toxic to sensitive fish than many
of the others. Salt should shift Whitespot and usually Velvet though,
without the need for medications, and frequently inhibits fungal
infections to some degree as well. Cheers, Neale.>
re: Hi sick rope fish /Neale 12/14/14
Hi salt is a no go I have Cory cats.
<A myth. At therapeutic doses of 2 gram/litre, salt is much, MUCH safer
than commercial Whitespot medications containing copper or formalin.
Salt at this level could be beneficial to the Ropefish and will do the
catfish no harm. The idea salt is a poison to catfish is not only
erroneous but (a) bad science, confusing osmoregulation with toxicity;
and (b) has meant many
aquarists have used copper and formalin for treating Whitespot,
poisoning their catfish, loaches, eels and other "sensitive" species.
Might surprise you to know a close relative of Corydoras, Hoplosternum,
occurs in brackish water in the wild and actually grows better in such
conditions than soft water, and at least two families of catfish are
actually marine!>
But I feed them supermarket frozen prawns and muscle and pellets once a
day.
<Right, I think we have a clue here. Mussels and prawns are treats. Once
a week. Pellets are not usually taken by Ropefish, but if yours take
them, great. Otherwise, look to Thiaminase-free foods: earthworms,
cockles, squid, white fish fillet (tilapia for example). Thiamin
deficiency causes all sorts of rather generic problems -- wasting, lack
of vigour, odd behaviours, infertility -- so could easily account for
what you've seen.>
They have no problem getting air there is nothing that bullies them I
fact they are quite high up in the hierarchy. They share with clown
loach that have the same diet so I'm surprised to here it may be food.
<Loaches take pellets more eagerly, so Thiaminase in a portion of their
diet is less of an immediate hazard.>
The reason I feed this food is because I also have Ctenopoma in the tank
also leopard and Kingsleyae. My tank is peaceful. My other fish are
between 6-8 years old and some Synodontis nigriventris that are 10+ so
I'm all on same diet the rope fish are fairly new but how can I feed
them different to the others when they love prawns so much I just
remembered that I feed the frozen prawns as its the only thing I could
get them to eat including blood worms and earth worms feed on composted
veg.
<Do persist with appropriate foods.>
I was thinking something internal but I have no clue what treatment to
try.
<Diet, or use of marine aquarium vitamins.>
Also I do have sea shells in for a small amount of salt and minerals
they been in 10 years plus also most thinner than paper now so it's not
those if you wondered.
<Seashells don't contain salt. They are made of calcium carbonate. Will
raise hardness. They dissolve slowly, as you've seen.>
My filtration is massive 1 internal 2 external equaling the one external
is for tanks up to 1000l internal tanks up to 400l with loads of
mechanical and biological media. I can't think of any more info. But
have one other question is the diet bad for my other fish. I use catfish
and cichlid pellets to but the only the one reed fish eats them the one
that's not ill.
<Bingo! Pellets contain vitamins, including thiamin. If your fish only
eats mussels and prawns, it will slowly sicken and die. Must get a
better/balanced diet.>
I can send video or photo of the sick fish if this might help.
<No need. I think we know what's happening here. Your move now. Good
luck, Neale.>
re: Hi sick rope fish /Neale 12/14/14
Should the white fish be cooked or raw?
<Raw. Cooking damages/destroys all sorts of important nutrients. Tilapia
is often cheap and easy to get, but haddock, Pollack/coley, and cod are
all viable choices. Oily fish such as raw salmon are sometimes taken
enthusiastically because of their strong smell, but are messy, so use
very sparingly.>
And the salt definitely killed my Corys.
<In all honesty, it didn't. Done this many times with Corydoras,
Cardinal Tetras, Angelfish and all sorts of other soft water fish.
Indeed, it's about the only option for Clown Loaches, Stingrays,
Mormyrids and various other sensitive species that make your Corydoras
catfish look like junkyard dogs when it comes to hardiness! Unless you
used too much, but then too
much salt will kill saltwater fish too. But I trust you to know how to
weight salt in grams and to understand what the aquarium capacity is in
litres. Let's be crystal clear about this. 2 gram of salt per litre of
water is a trivial dose compared to the 35g/litre needed to make
seawater, or even 5-6g needed for brackish water. Salt used correctly is
much, MUCH
less toxic to Corydoras catfish than copper and formalin based
medications.
Again, you're only using the salt/heat combination for 10 days or so.
It's not a full time addition to the aquarium -- something if you read
elsewhere on WWM you will see I'm dead against. What to suggest... do
read some fish health books, perhaps find out about how osmoregulation
works. A little science will help you understand fish healthcare much
more deeply, and that in turn will help prevent some of the problems
you're facing. Cheers, Neale.>
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Sick Rope Fish! and to NealeM
9/10/14
<Can't open your too-large files here in Bali... see our instructions re
writing us>
Hello,
As of recently, we are having trouble with our two rope fish :( They are
about 9 years old and have been always been healthy and active.
We have always fed them blood worms,
<Poor: see WWM re these sewer fly larvae>
but recently we bought them some feeder fish from PetCo (this is
probably where we went wrong), and now it seems they have some
sort of skin infection?
<Possibly>
I have included some photos (sorry they're not the greatest)- This guy
looks so bad :( They are very lethargic and the infection is getting
worse. We did also recently move, so we are not on well water anymore,
but we have checked the nitrite, ammonia, and nitrate levels as well as
pH, and everything looks normal. Is there anything we can do to help
these guys? Any insight would be GREATLY
appreciated.
Many thanks!
Lindsey.
<Uhh... need more info. Let's just have you read:
http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/RopefishDisF.htm
And the linked files above. In the meanwhile, successive water changes,
and possibly the use of Furan compound/s.
Bob Fenner>
Sick Rope Fish!
9/10/14
Hello,
As of recently, we are having trouble with our two rope fish :( They are
about 9 years old and have been always been healthy and active. We have
always fed them blood worms, but recently we bought them some feeder
fish from PetCo (this is probably where we went wrong),
<Agreed. There are no problems in the hobby for which store-bought
feeder fish are the solution. None. You may as well invite Typhoid Mary
to cater your Sunday lunch. Seriously. Problem is that we simply don't
know what problems these feeders brought into the tank. I agree with Bob
that bloodworms aren't a good staple, though irradiated frozen ones
(such as the Gamma brand) should at least be sterile, which makes them
safer/better than live ones. Ropefish feed on all sorts of foods, with
cockles, stripes of white fish fillet, and (in smaller amounts) pieces
of mussel and shrimp all being readily accepted. So far as live foods
go, earthworms are safe and nutritious.>
and now it seems they have some sort of skin infection?
<Might be a symptom of a systemic bacterial infection, but if this is
just a few days after you used the feeder fish, a skin parasite cannot
be ruled out. Since Ropefish have a good tolerance for salt, the old
salt/heat method (2 g salt/litre + raising water a couple degrees in
temp.) could help if Velvet or Whitespot was to blame. But Costia is
another possibility, and salt isn't a reliable/sole treatment here,
though seawater dips can be useful alongside proper treatment. I find
seawater dips (2-20 min.s in salinity of 35 g/litre, remove as/when the
fish becomes seriously distressed, e.g., rolls over) clears up the
mucous extremely quickly, but you will probably need to medicate as
well. Salt at 3-5 g/litre can work on its own, but will take a couple
weeks, and ideally you'd keep the aquarium pitch-black as well (the
Costia parasite has a photosynthetic stage in its life cycle). Ropefish
should tolerate this salinity okay if acclimated slowly (they do enter
brackish water in the wild) but these fish are pretty hammered already,
so start at 3 g/l and see if they settle okay like that for a day or two
before raising the salinity further. Consult with your local retailer
for medications for Costia (also known as Ichthyobodo and Slime
Disease). Unfortunately the two commonest med.s., Copper and Formalin,
are both quite toxic to Ropefish. Acriflavine is safer.>
I have included some photos (sorry they're not the greatest)- This guy
looks so bad :( They are very lethargic and the infection is getting
worse.
We did also recently move, so we are not on well water anymore, but we
have checked the nitrite, ammonia, and nitrate levels as well as pH, and
everything looks normal. Is there anything we can do to help these guys?
Any insight would be GREATLY
appreciated.
Many thanks!
Lindsey.
<Hope this helps. Have cc'ed RMF if he wants to add anything. Cheers,
Neale.>
Re Sick Rope Fish!
9/11/14
Thank you Neale. I'd responded ahead of you; thinking this was a bit of
an emergency, and placed the query in your in-box for your response in
return. Cheers, BobF
|
|
Re: Sick Rope Fish! 10/7/14
Many thanks to both of you for your input. Both of our rope fish are
still alive, but seem to be recovering slowly. We did increase the
salinity and continue with frequent (weekly) water changes.
<But do keep salinity low, 2-3 gram/litre is ample, 5 g/l absolute tops.
Ropefish aren't really brackish water fish in the sense of adapting to a
broad salinity range. But they do inhabit river deltas and vaguely
saline swamps, so do tolerate some small amount of salt very well.
Useful for treating Whitespot, Velvet, and to some degree issues such as
Costia.>
We did also treat with "copper power" (1.26% copper sulfate).
<Use with great caution here. Ropefish are not known to be tolerant of
copper.>
We have tried to feed them a few earthworms, and they seem only mildly
interested,
<Let them go hungry. They *will* eat them. They are an excellent food.>
but they are eating their Tubifex worms eagerly.
<Not the safest food! Frozen are just about defensible, but live Tubifex
shouldn't be used.>
We will try and get them some whitefish in the future. Again, many
thanks for your help with this. We truly thought we were getting them a
"treat" with the feeder fish as they seem to gobble up any other small
fish we put
in the tank (neons, tetras, etc...). Live and learn I guess :/
<Indeed. Good luck, Neale.>
|
Ropefish health problems /RMF
1/8/14
Greetings, all! Several of you, Mr. Monks especially, helped me
with a Ropefish problem about 2.5 years ago. They were
panting/gulping, not eating, etc. It turned out to be mostly an
environmental toxin: I’d purchased a tank ornament that was labeled for
fish, but I discovered it had been coated with some antimicrobial
substance for reptiles. Of the three Ropes, one died and two
recovered. I later got a few more Ropes, and they had all been
fine for over two years.
<Thank you for this summation>
Unfortunately, we’re having trouble again. I’m afraid this is a
very long message – I’m trying to provide all the information that might
be relevant. I did use the WWM Index and search tool, but I did
not succeed in finding answers that I thought applied well to my
situation.
First, the particulars of the tank: 55 gallons, with 2 AquaClear 70s
(600 gallons per hour filtration, approximately 10 times the aquarium
volume); I have two filters because they break down once in a while, and
I like to keep at least one running while I fix the other.
I use mechanical (sponge) and biological (ceramic beads/BioMax) filter
media, but I don’t usually bother with carbon, since I rarely have a
need for it. The only additive I use is Prime, when I do water
changes.
<Ok>
Ammonia 0; nitrites 0, nitrates 0-20, chlorine 0, chloramine
0, pH 6.8-7.4 (usually around 7); GH 75 ppm; KH 72 ppm. Temp 76-77
F.
<All fine>
Side note about the water chemistry: the GH and KH are the same as my
tap water. The fluctuation in pH seems related to water changes;
that is, my tap water pH is 7.4, so the tank pH rises a bit when I
change water, then gradually drops down to about 7. I’ve wondered
if increasing my KH and/or GH
would help the pH resist those fluctuations, but I’m not sure it’s wise
to fiddle with the chemistry, since the fish seem to tolerate these
values.
<You are wise here. I would not fiddle>
I used to do a 25% water change every week, but I noticed my fish seemed
happier and less stressed when I did it every other week.
<A good clue. I would store your change out water for a/the week ahead
of use.>
I feed sparingly, and chemistry generally remains very stable between
water changes.
Ten days ago, I had four Ropefish, four Pristella Tetras, two Angelfish,
and one Pleco – Hypancistrus L333 or L066; I can’t tell which, but it’s
pretty! The Ropefish used to eat primarily krill and tilapia bits,
but they developed a taste for cichlid pellets, so I’ve mostly fed those
for the past year. Local fish store says the pellets are better
for them since they’re more “balanced,” but I’m not sure I believe that.
Anyway, all the fish seemed healthy, and I hadn’t
had problems or any deaths in a long time.
The store where I buy my livestock has a policy of quarantining incoming
fish for several weeks.
<Excellent; kudos to/for them>
They treat for any detectable illnesses and prophylactically for
parasites before the fish are moved to the sales floor. This does
matter, as I’ll explain below.
Nine days ago, I purchased a fifth Ropefish
<Your 55 is too full of this species already>
and 8 Diamond Head Neon Tetras. I thought maybe the Ropefish
wouldn’t eat the Neons, since the new Rope is so small and the old Ropes
have been eating the pellets. Wrong! Between the Ropefish
and the Angelfish, the Neons disappeared very quickly. This is why
I think it matters that the fish store quarantines their livestock: the
Neons were healthy, at least in theory. I gave the Angelfish to my
friend. I then had five Ropes, four Pristella Tetras, and the one
Pleco.
Six days ago, I got eight Denison’s Barbs (Sahyadria Denisonii).
Five are very small, maybe 1.5 inches, and
three are bigger, about 2 inches.
<I hope you have added aeration here>
Four days ago, I gave the tank a deep cleaning: scraped algae, scrubbed
lid (with plain water), picked out snails, changed about 25% of the
sand, 30% water change. Fish stayed in the tank. I
also gave my plants and decorations a hydrogen peroxide dip (5 parts
water, 1 part 3% H2O2).
<.... Mmmm, some times H2O2 prep. uses have unseen circumstances>
After the dip, I rinsed them thoroughly in tap water, then soaked them
in de-chlorinated water. The H2O2 dip was meant to kill algae.
I don’t have tons of it, but it’s ugly, and I try to keep it to a
minimum. During this process, I protected my filter media by
keeping it in a bucket of tank water until everything was finished.
Three days ago, I got 12 Danios. That brought my inventory to 12
Danios, 8 Denison’s Barbs, 5 Ropefish, 4 Pristella Tetras, and one
Pleco. The Tetras, the Pleco, and all of the new fish (Danios,
Barbs, one Ropefish) are doing great.
Yesterday, I woke up to some very sick Ropefish. All of my “old”
Ropes (all but the new one, I mean) were affected to varying degrees:
wobbly, lethargic, and, mostly alarmingly, bulging eyes! I
immediately removed them from the main tank and started setting up the
hospital/quarantine/treatment tank. All of the Ropes went into the
treatment tank, even the still-healthy new one, since my LFS recommended
I assume the whole species was infected. I changed 25% of the
water in the main tank immediately after moving the Ropes to quarantine.
I’m treating the quarantine tank with antibiotics (Kanamycin) and Epsom
salts (the salts per this article by Neale Monks,
http://www.fishchannel.com/fish-health/disease-prevention/popeye.aspx).
No Melafix or similar nonsense.
<Good>
Two of them died within an hour.
<Something environmental here... not pathogenic/biological at
work. Somehow these animals were poisoned>
A third looked so bad that I euthanized it later in the day – its eyes
were bulging horribly, and its body started to swell so much that its
scales were looking like a pinecone. After 12 hours, I put the
still-healthy-looking new Ropefish back in the main tank because I
didn’t want it to be in the treatment tank with the sick one if the sick
one died during the night. The main tank still looks great, and
the water parameters have remained stable at the values mentioned above.
I’m testing twice per day.
So there’s one Ropefish remaining in the treatment tank. This one
didn’t look nearly as bad as the others; in fact, I probably wouldn’t
have noticed it was ill right away if the others hadn’t been so obvious.
Its condition, while not terrific, has not deteriorated either.
I’m torn between hoping it will recover and worrying that I’m allowing
it to suffer pointlessly.
What do you think might be the cause of this disaster?
<My best guess is that some toxic chain reaction was brought on via the
peroxide exposure... I would be reading, doing what you can to discount
the algal issue in other ways. See WWM re>
Disease brought in by the new Ropefish, like an asymptomatic carrier?
<Not considering such rapid onset, losses; no>
Ingestion of Neon Tetras? Weak immune systems pushed over the edge
by stress? I think I made too many changes in too short a time.
This is the first time I’ve tinkered with the tank for at least a year,
probably longer.
The gentleman I usually work with at the local fish store said I’m the
only person he’s every helped with Ropefish problems, which could mean
one of two things: either nobody else has problems with them, or nobody
else bothers to ask for help if/when they do have trouble. He went
on to say that whenever he loses 3-4
of a particular species, he stops trying to keep those and moves on to
something else. Considering the issues I’ve had, do you think I
should call it a day and give up on having Ropefish?
<Mmm, up to you>
I thought 2.5 years without any losses meant I was doing ok with them, but
as much as I love them, I don’t want to persist if I’m not doing a good
job and the fish are paying the price.
As always, I appreciate your time and your assistance.
Regards,
Jane
<Let's have you read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwmaintindex.htm
scroll down to the "Algae Matters" tray... you'll find that some algae
are very troublesome , can bring on symptoms, losses as yours here. Bob
Fenner>
Ropefish health problems /Neale
1/8/14
Greetings, all!
<Hello Jane,>
Several of you, Mr. Monks especially, helped me with a Ropefish problem
about 2.5 years ago. They were panting/gulping, not eating, etc.
It turned out to be mostly an environmental toxin: I’d purchased a tank
ornament that was labeled for fish, but I discovered it had been coated
with some antimicrobial substance for reptiles. Of the three
Ropes, one died and two recovered. I later got a few more Ropes,
and they had all been fine for over two years.
<Good.>
Unfortunately, we’re having trouble again. I’m afraid this is a
very long message – I’m trying to provide all the information that might
be relevant. I did use the WWM Index and search tool, but I did
not succeed in finding answers that I thought applied well to my
situation.
<I see.>
First, the particulars of the tank: 55 gallons, with 2 AquaClear 70s
(600 gallons per hour filtration, approximately 10 times the aquarium
volume); I have two filters because they break down once in a while, and
I like to keep at least one running while I fix the other. I use
mechanical (sponge) and biological (ceramic beads/BioMax) filter media,
but I don’t usually bother with carbon, since I rarely have a need for
it. The only additive I use is Prime, when I do water changes.
Ammonia 0; nitrites 0, nitrates 0-20, chlorine 0, chloramine 0, pH
6.8-7.4 (usually around 7); GH 75 ppm; KH 72 ppm. Temp 76-77 F.
<Sounds good.>
Side note about the water chemistry: the GH and KH are the same as my
tap water. The fluctuation in pH seems related to water changes;
that is, my tap water pH is 7.4, so the tank pH rises a bit when I
change water, then gradually drops down to about 7. I’ve wondered
if increasing my KH and/or GH would help the pH resist those
fluctuations, but I’m not sure it’s wise to fiddle with the chemistry,
since the fish seem to tolerate these values.
<Likely so. Doing frequent, small water changes may be the best thing
here. Yes, fish can adapt to small changes in pH. Going from 7.4 to 7
isn't going to cause any serious stress to most fish.>
I used to do a 25% water change every week, but I noticed my fish seemed
happier and less stressed when I did it every other week. I feed
sparingly, and chemistry generally remains very stable between water
changes.
<Good.>
Ten days ago, I had four Ropefish, four Pristella Tetras, two Angelfish,
and one Pleco – Hypancistrus L333 or L066; I can’t tell which, but it’s
pretty! The Ropefish used to eat primarily krill and tilapia bits,
but they developed a taste for cichlid pellets, so I’ve mostly fed those
for the past year.
<Sounds ideal.>
Local fish store says the pellets are better for them since they’re more
“balanced,” but I’m not sure I believe that.
<Some truth to this, certainly as far as nutrients go. Pellets lack
fibre, which whole krill will provide, so a mix of both is useful.>
Anyway, all the fish seemed healthy, and I hadn’t had problems or any
deaths in a long time.
<Good.>
The store where I buy my livestock has a policy of quarantining incoming
fish for several weeks. They treat for any detectable illnesses
and prophylactically for parasites before the fish are moved to the
sales floor. This does matter, as I’ll explain below.
<Okay.>
Nine days ago, I purchased a fifth Ropefish and 8 Diamond Head Neon
Tetras. I thought maybe the Ropefish wouldn’t eat the Neons, since
the new Rope is so small and the old Ropes have been eating the pellets.
Wrong!
<Indeed!>
Between the Ropefish and the Angelfish, the Neons disappeared very
quickly.
<Yes. Neons are dozy at the best of times, and they also sleep/rest at
the bottom of the tank, making them especially easy prey for nocturnal
hunters. To some degree, more active fish of similar size seem less
prone to being eaten.>
This is why I think it matters that the fish store quarantines their
livestock: the Neons were healthy, at least in theory. I gave the
Angelfish to my friend. I then had five Ropes, four Pristella
Tetras, and the one Pleco.
Six days ago, I got eight Denison’s Barbs (Sahyadria Denisonii).
Five are very small, maybe 1.5 inches, and three are bigger, about 2
inches.
<Somewhat risky, and also these fish do need fairly cool water, so I'd
approach with caution when keeping in a mixed community.>
Four days ago, I gave the tank a deep cleaning: scraped algae, scrubbed
lid (with plain water), picked out snails, changed about 25% of the
sand, 30% water change. Fish stayed in the tank. I also gave
my plants and decorations a hydrogen peroxide dip (5 parts water, 1 part
3% H2O2). After the dip, I rinsed them thoroughly in tap water,
then soaked them in de-chlorinated water. The H2O2 dip was meant
to kill algae. I don’t have tons of it, but it’s ugly, and I try
to keep it to a minimum. During this process, I protected my
filter media by keeping it in a bucket of tank water until everything
was finished.
<Sounds fine.>
Three days ago, I got 12 Danios. That brought my inventory to 12
Danios, 8 Denison’s Barbs, 5 Ropefish, 4 Pristella Tetras, and one
Pleco. The Tetras, the Pleco, and all of the new fish (Danios,
Barbs, one Ropefish) are doing great.
<Good.>
Yesterday, I woke up to some very sick Ropefish. All of my “old”
Ropes (all but the new one, I mean) were affected to varying degrees:
wobbly, lethargic, and, mostly alarmingly, bulging eyes! I
immediately removed them from the main tank and started setting up the
hospital/quarantine/treatment tank. All of the Ropes went into the
treatment tank, even the still-healthy new one, since my LFS recommended
I assume the whole species was infected.
<Or at least stressed in the same way.>
I changed 25% of the water in the main tank immediately after moving the
Ropes to quarantine. I’m treating the quarantine tank with
antibiotics (Kanamycin) and Epsom salts (the salts per this article by
Neale Monks,
http://www.fishchannel.com/fish-health/disease-prevention/popeye.aspx).
No Melafix or similar nonsense.
<Good.>
Two of them died within an hour. A third looked so bad that I
euthanised it later in the day – its eyes were bulging horribly, and its
body started to swell so much that its scales were looking like a
pinecone. After 12 hours, I put the still-healthy-looking new
Ropefish back in the main tank because I didn’t want it to be in the
treatment tank with the sick one if the sick one died during the night.
The main tank still looks great, and the water parameters have remained
stable at the values mentioned above. I’m testing twice per day.
<Good.>
So there’s one Ropefish remaining in the treatment tank. This one
didn’t look nearly as bad as the others; in fact, I probably wouldn’t
have noticed it was ill right away if the others hadn’t been so obvious.
Its condition, while not terrific, has not deteriorated either.
I’m torn between hoping it will recover and worrying that I’m allowing
it to suffer pointlessly.
What do you think might be the cause of this disaster?
<This sounds to me like exposure to some sort of toxin rather
than a disease. Copper or formalin, for example. The Neons
might have been recently treated with copper and carrying copper with
them, but I'm not sure how quickly fish metabolise copper out of their
system after exposure. More likely is something got in during the water
change, perhaps a cleaning agent of some sort. This sort of instant,
deadly change in the condition of a large number of fish is very rare as
a disease, but very common after exposure to a poison. Failing that, a
sudden dramatic change in pH could cause a problem, or exposure to
something else, perhaps in the new sand or gravel adding to the tank.
Hard to say for sure, but I'd be thinking about exposure to an
environmental factor rather than a disease or parasite.>
Disease brought in by the new Ropefish, like an asymptomatic carrier?
Ingestion of Neon Tetras? Weak immune systems pushed over the edge
by stress? I think I made too many changes in too short a time.
This is the first time I’ve tinkered with the tank for at least a year,
probably longer.
<Ah, yes, often best to avoid "deep cleaning" tanks even if it sounds
like a good idea. If you must do this, do so over a few weekends, doing
the filter one weekend, the substrate the next, and so on, each time
minimising other sorts of changes. I'm a big fan of benign neglect with
aquaria, preferring to understock and over-plant (with floating plants
that are easy to crop) so that the tank has some degree of ecological
balance, like a garden pond.>
The gentleman I usually work with at the local fish store said I’m the
only person he’s every helped with Ropefish problems, which could mean
one of two things: either nobody else has problems with them, or nobody
else bothers to ask for help if/when they do have trouble.
<I do suspect the latter to some degree. With oddballs there are a few
people who keep them for years, but lots of people who keep them for a
few weeks or months. So we have a skewed perception of their needs. Some
think they're easy, some impossible, while the truth is something
between the two.>
He went on to say that whenever he loses 3-4 of a particular species, he
stops trying to keep those and moves on to something else.
<A wise approach in many cases, and there's much to be said for only
keeping fish you find easy to keep!>
Considering the issues I’ve had, do you think I should call it a day and
give up on having Ropefish?
<I would not, but you might think about a singleton Bichir instead.
They're similar, but you don't need a group, and they aren't quite so
tricky to keep in some ways. Definitely benign neglect is the way to
keep all of these swamp-dwelling air-breathers. Moderate feeding,
regular water changes, but otherwise leave them alone so far as
practical. Have kept Bichirs this way for many years.>
I thought 2.5 years without any losses meant I was doing ok with them,
<True.>
but as much as I love them, I don’t want to persist if I’m not doing a
good job and the fish are paying the price.
<Do think you were unlucky somehow here. Do also remember mortality in
the wild is huge -- often these fish would survive only one or two
summers (dry seasons) so yours were doing very well. Better you buy them
and offer them a fair chance of survival than someone with no clue at
all how to keep them.>
As always, I appreciate your time and your assistance.
Regards,
Jane
<Most welcome, Neale.>
Re: Ropefish health problems ((Bob, couple paras you'll want to reply
to)<<>> 1/9/14
Bob, Neale: thank you so much for your prompt and helpful responses!
I appreciate it tremendously.
<Welcome.>
Bob, when you mentioned aeration for the Denison’s Barbs, were you
thinking airstone/bubbler? I have increased the filter turbulence,
but I’m happy to add an airstone or something similar if it would
benefit them.
<Bob?><<Yes to whatever means of aeration and circulation here. This
system is crowded... the cooler water barbs will need. B>>
Neale, when you said my addition of the Barbs was “somewhat risky,” did
you mean risky for the Barbs, or risky for the other fish in the tank?
<For the Barbs.>
I read their water temperature preference was 65-79 F,
<Just seen this number in Wikipedia; is rubbish. Denisonii Barbs are
typical subtropical barbs, and you're aiming for (in American numbers)
high 60s, low 70s F. Anything above 25 C/77 F is going to stress them,
and you don't really want to keep them above 22 C/72 F. This is one
reason this species is perceived as short-lived in some quarters --
they're too often kept excessively warm.>
and I thought 76-77 F might be a happy medium that would work for all of
the fish in the tank. I was actually concerned with their needs in
terms of hardness more than temperature.
To be clear, the Ropefish started looking sick almost 2.5 days after the
big cleaning project that may have introduced a toxin/poison. Does
that time frame make sense to you?
<Hard to say really. But possible even though I agree, the timing seems
a little off.>
The Neons were consumed in the 3-4 days leading up to the cleaning
project, and I would only be guessing whether the culprit is more likely
the earlier exposure (Neons) or the later exposure (cleaning). I wish I
could figure out the source of the toxin!
<Something outside the tank? Paint fumes maybe? Insecticide? As
air-breathers, they're that bit more sensitive to airborne toxins than
regular fish.>
I would like to ensure this never happens again. I am careful to
net new livestock out of their carrying bags once they’re acclimated
instead of dumping the bag water into the tank with the fish. I
put a new (artificial) aquarium plant in the tank the night before they
got sick, but as always, I rinsed it thoroughly before putting it in, so
I hadn’t considered it as a possible cause.
<Good.>
There is one other factor that just occurred to me: two days before the
fish got sick, I added an Acurel brand “Ammonia Reducer Infused Media
Pad”
(http://www.acurel.com/index.php?option=com_k2&view=item&layout=item&id=7&Itemid=68
)
to one of the filters.
<Should be safe. I don't bother with Zeolite though.>
I did this because my LFS tested a water sample from my tank and thought
there were traces of ammonia, even though all my tests were negative.
I bought a fresh ammonia test kit, went back home, and it was still
negative. I called the store again, and we concluded that the
sample must have been contaminated in the carrying container. (At no
point did the carrying container come in contact with the tank – I used
my designated tank cup to scoop out a sample – and I certainly didn't
pour the sample back into the tank.) Subsequent water tests at
home and at the store were negative.
<I see.>
Any theories as to why only one species was sickened, and only four out
of five?
<Not really, but see comment above about air breathing.>
What would you recommend I do next? I’m considering a series of
10-25% water changes in main tank, once or twice per day for the next
few days, to flush out any remaining toxin. Would it help to run
carbon?
<Yes, fresh carbon. Remove/replace after a few days though to prevent
whatever was collected being leached back into the water.><<Agreed>>
Would you suggest continuing to treat the sick Ropefish in the hospital
tank for a bit longer, or returning it to main tank? I hesitate to
put it back because I’ll be out of town Saturday – Monday, and I dread
the thought of such a large fish dying and contaminating the tank while
I’m gone. But if this isn't an infection, it seems pointless to
continue with antibiotics. It’s also hard to control the ammonia
in the hospital tank without an established biofilter in there, and I
wind up doing daily water changes and using Prime frequently.
<Okay.>
About biological filtration in hospital tanks: I don’t have the space or
the inclination to keep it running (and therefore cycled) all the time.
Should I keep an extra filter running on the main tank, then move it to
the hospital tank when needed?
<Is worthwhile, or at least, choose a backup filter that can accommodate
media from the main tank. Since mature filters can donate (some of
their) live media without problems, this way you'll be able to set up a
new mature filter at a moment's notice.>
Obviously I would use fresh filter media when returning it to the main
tank. Is there something easier or simpler that you’d recommend?
I will search for an article on Wet Web Media, but I thought it might be
worth asking.
Thanks the “Algae Matters” link, I will go read that right now.
Bob, are you thinking the algae itself may have been a source of poison?
<<Yes. RMF>>
<Again, will let Bob comment here.>
Off to read. Thanks again!
Regards,
Jane
RE: Ropefish health problems (Bob, couple paras you'll want
to reply to)
1/10/14
Again, thank you both for your replies.
<Welcome Jane>
Bob: you said the system is crowded. After all the changes, I
currently have the following in a 55 gallon tank: 8 Denison’s Barbs (5
of those are very small), 10 GloFish (Danios), 4 Pristella Tetras, 1
L333, and 1 very small Ropefish (the new one, who still looks healthy).
A second Ropefish is still in the treatment tank.
What would you recommend I change, in order to maximize the health of
all the animals?
<These will be fine... Thought you had five Ropes>
About algae: I am working my through the “Algae Matters” section.
Lots of material! So far it’s talked about what causes it, how to
control it, and given some overviews of different types. I’ve yet
to come across any details about
toxicity, but I will keep reading until I get through the whole section.
<Mmm yes; an interesting citation on Advanced Aquarist (.com) re algal
toxicity study in Fiji currently. There are several (as in the Middle
English meaning many) types of toxic algae, fresh and marine... some are
real trouble at times to aquarists. Best to keep all at a minimum
through regular maint.>
A few days before the Ropefish fell ill, I scraped a bunch of algae off
the glass.
It was the common-looking green stuff.
It had been there a long time, not because it was spreading, but because
I’d never bothered to remove it before.
I waited a few minutes for the scrapings to settle on the sand, then
vacuumed up everything I could see. Now
I’m wondering if the bits I missed had some kind of harmful impact after
being liberated from the glass?
<Perhaps... some unleash powerful chemicals...>
The filters
were turned off while I did this maintenance.
<And take up a good deal of diss. O2. B>
RE: Ropefish health problems (Bob, couple paras you'll want to reply to)
1/10/14
Again, thank you both for your replies.
<Welcome.>
Bob: you said the system is crowded. After all the changes, I
currently have the following in a 55 gallon tank: 8 Denison’s Barbs (5
of those are very small), 10 GloFish (Danios), 4 Pristella Tetras, 1
L333, and 1 very small Ropefish (the new one, who still looks healthy).
A second Ropefish is still in the treatment tank. What would you
recommend I change, in order to maximize the health of all the animals?
<From my perspective, I'd say the Denison Barbs are probably the ones
ill-suited to this aquarium. They do get quite big, around 10 cm/4
inches, so while a 55-gallon aquarium should offer 48 inches of swimming
length, that's the absolute minimum for this species. Another factor is
the L333 catfish; this is a Rio Xingu species of Hypancistrus, so
actually prefers somewhat warm conditions, traditionally 26-28 C/77-82 F
being recommended for Rio Xingu fish. That's well outside the comfort
zone of Denison Barbs (and to some degree, the Danios and the Pristella
Tetras, though the tetras will probably be fine). Ropefish are unfussy
about temperature, and aquarium specimens never seem to exceed 40 cm in
length, despite the 90 cm length quoted in many older aquarium books. So
a couple specimens in a 55-gallon tank isn't unreasonable given these
are slender fish.>
About algae: I am working my through the “Algae Matters” section.
Lots of material! So far it’s talked about what causes it, how to
control it, and given some overviews of different types. I’ve yet
to come across any details about toxicity, but I will keep reading until
I get through the whole section.
<Unlike Bob, I don't really subscribe to the "algae is toxic" school of
thought, at least so far as freshwater aquaria go. For sure there are
numerous toxic marine algae particularly among the planktonic kinds
(Dinoflagellates for example commonly are) and because of the intense
competition and predation pressures in the marine realm, marine algae
often contain lots of nasty chemicals that if not poisons as such, are
certainly unpleasant to eat. But freshwater algae seem to be less
offensive, presumably because freshwater habitats are so different (more
nutrients for the algae to consume, shallow water = more light, fewer
herbivores). So my take on algae toxicity in freshwater tanks isn't that
algae themselves are toxic, but that certain algae prosper in
environments that have already become toxic. Cyanobacteria are the
classic examples, and while often accused of poisoning fish, by
interpretation is that they're symptoms of an aquarium that's become
hostile to fish, so when the fish dies, it's not the algae but the tank
that killed it. Do also understand that when a lot of algae dies at
once, e.g., following use of algicides, all that decay can remove oxygen
from the water, stressing the fish. This is actually one reason algae
blooms cause problems in the wild, let alone volumes of water as small
as fish tanks.>
A few days before the Ropefish fell ill, I scraped a bunch of algae off
the glass. It was the common-looking green stuff. It had
been there a long time, not because it was spreading, but because I’d
never bothered to remove it before. I waited a few minutes for the
scrapings to settle on the sand, then vacuumed up everything I could
see. Now I’m wondering if the bits I missed had some kind of
harmful impact after being liberated from the glass? The filters
were turned off while I did this maintenance.
<Which is not a problem if you're quick. Simply switching off a filter
for 20-30 minutes should do any serious harm, and for longer periods,
open the filter up and lay the filter media out flat in some shallow
water so they keep wet but aren't far from the air, letting oxygen get
in.>
Neale: Is there a temperature that you think would be cool enough for
the Barbs, but warm enough for the others?
<25 C/77 F is about the best you can hope for. Longer term, yes, you
might want to think about whether you're going to keep them all in the
one tank and hope for the best (and certainly extra aeration and
circulation can help) but with the understanding the barbs may "live
fast, die young" in warmer water, or else you might over the next year
or two sort out your different fishes into tanks better suited to their
long-term needs. To be sure many people keep Denison Barbs in warmer
water, or for that matter L333 in water that's cooler than the wild --
and these people keep them for many happy years. But do read up about
the needs of their species, so you have a better idea of what to look
for if things start to turn sour.>
It sounds like I need to get a separate tank for the Barbs (how big?),
but in the meantime, where would you recommend setting the temperature?
<See above.>
Regarding poisons: no paint, no pesticides, and no cleaning chemicals –
the tank is in my living room, and the only cleaning I do in there is
dusting and vacuuming. HOWEVER! Yesterday my little girl
alerted me to a different possible source of toxicity. She
informed me that she’d given the Ropefish a “present” before they got
sick, but “it melted.” (She’s three years old.) Apparently
she put some little bits of play-doh in the tank, which must have
dissolved, although I can’t imagine the Ropefish ate it. The
play-doh website states the following:
“The exact ingredients of PLAY-DOH compound are proprietary, so we
cannot share them with you. We can tell you that it is primarily a
mixture of water, salt and flour. It does NOT contain peanuts, peanut
oil, or any milk byproducts. It DOES contain wheat. PLAY-DOH compound is
not a food item and is not intended to be eaten. PLAY-DOH compound is
non-toxic, non-irritating & non-allergenic except as noted: Children who
are allergic to wheat gluten may have an allergic reaction to this
product. Also, due to the high salt content in PLAY-DOH compound, the
product can be harmful to pets if ingested.”
<Ah well, that might make sense. Ropefish actually occur in slightly
brackish water, so in itself adding salt to the aquarium (for example to
treat Whitespot) isn't a problem. But any fish swallowing chunks of
Play-doh could have problems.>
I’m not sure which elements might be harmful. Maybe the food
coloring? I doubt the salt would be problematic, at least for the
Ropefish. Needless to say, she and I had a long talk about not
putting ANYTHING in the tank.
<Good idea! Pennies are another common "addition", with the copper in
them being acutely toxic to many fish.>
Fresh carbon is running, and I’ll change it out for another fresh batch
in a couple of days.
<Wise. But if everyone looks fine now, it may well be that the trouble
has been-and-gone.>
While I was at the store buying the carbon, I noticed that their
Ropefish were a much darker brown than the newest one in my tank (this
is the one who hasn’t appeared sick at all). Mine is much more
yellow. I confirmed that those brown ones were part of the same
batch that mine came from. It’s interesting, because mine looked
the same as its tankmates when I bought it about ten days ago. I
didn’t think their color varied quite that much. Could it be a
difference in lighting?
<Perhaps, but there's much variation in the species.>
The Ropefish is behaving as though it feels fine. It’s very
active, and this morning it ate a Danio. (Neale, you had commented
that “to some degree, more active fish of similar size seem less prone
to being eaten [than the Neons].” Would you consider Danios to be
in this category/less likely to be eaten? They are not
disappearing as quickly as the Neons – two Danios were eaten in 5 days,
as opposed to eight Neons in 3 days. But they are expensive
(GloFish), and I’d rather not feed my Ropefish live food on purpose.
<Quite so. Basically, anything small and torpedo shape will be fair
game; the best tankmates are deep-bodied things about the size and shape
of Bleeding Heart Tetras upwards if that makes sense. Adult Denison
Barbs should be fine, but bite-sized ones could be expensive meals too.>
I was thinking I could either give them to my friend, or transfer them
to another tank until the new Ropefish is well-fed on other foods and
perhaps starting to like the Cichlid pellets. Then again, maybe
the little fish would be appetising no matter how well-fed it was.
At the very least, I’ve learned that I don’t have to chop up their food
anywhere near as small as I have been!)
<To a degree predatory fish will become lazy, just like cats do, but as
with the well-fed cat that occasionally brings home a mouse, even the
best fed Ropefish will have a snap at a sleepy tetra that comes within
range.>
Thanks (thank you, thank you!),
Jane
<Most welcome, Neale.>
RE: Ropefish health problems (Again Bob, dip in if
warranted; especially the algae section where I disagree!)
1/12/14
Neale, Bob: I do so appreciate your continued responses. Your site
really is an incredible resource.
<Thanks for the kind words.>
When it rains, it pours, I suppose; at least with aquariums. I
haven’t had problems very often, but when they do occur, they seem to
come in clusters. Sadly, but not surprisingly, the last sick
Ropefish died in the treatment tank yesterday. The new-ish one,
who never had symptoms, was still doing fine – eating, swimming, etc. –
until this morning.
<Oh dear.>
The second wave of problems started last night, when I noticed my
Denison Barbs were flashing, flicking their bodies against the sand.
I’d never seen any of my fish doing this before (and I KNOW it’s a new
symptom, since I’ve had my face glued to the tank for a solid week), but
it didn’t look right, and when I called the local store they said it was
likely a parasite.
<Certainly one of two things, one of which is a parasite irritating the
gills or skin, most commonly Whitespot and/or Velvet. But the other
cause can be something irritating in the water, most commonly ammonia or
nitrite, but potentially could be other things I suppose, even sudden pH
changes.>
Per their recommendation, I started treating (the main tank) with a
Metronidazole/Praziquantel combo.
<Fair enough. Mightn't have done that myself (prefer the salt/heat
method for Whitespot) but if this combination works on Whitespot and
Velvet, it should be useful. Metronidazole is a general purpose
anti-protozoan and anti-bacteria medication; Praziquantel is used to
treat worms, but do note it has no impact on things we call worms but
aren't, such as Anchor Worm.>
This meant I had to remove the carbon for now, and I also raised the
heat to 80 F; you weren’t kidding about the L333 liking the warm water,
its having a PARTY! I’ve never seen it behaving so gregariously.
Obviously it’s not a good temperature for the Barbs, but it’s short
term, so I hope it doesn’t make things worse for them.
<Short term, no, provided there's ample oxygen, which will be useful for
the Hypancistrus too.>
Twelve hours after the Barbs started flashing, the new-ish Ropefish –
now my only Ropefish! – began showing signs that seem like they might be
consistent with parasites: it was huffing/puffing, and periodically
flaring its gills open as wide as it could while thrashing its head
against the sand. Like it itches. Its body looks a little
puffy, too, like it’s a bit swollen.
<Indeed.>
Would you think that these are signs of the (theoretical) parasite
that’s affecting the Denison, something caused by the medication I added
to the tank, or something entirely different?
<Well, there's some anecdotal evidence that fish can have "safe"
infections of Whitespot and Velvet without becoming sick, which is why
these parasites sometimes appear out of the blue years after the last
fish was added to the tank. Basically, their immune system keeps the
parasites at a very low level. Only when stressed somehow do the
parasites then become a problem.>
In your comments a couple of years ago, you said, “When one fish gets
sick, it can be a one-off. When several fish of a single species get
sick, then it's likely a species-specific disease. But if several fish
across several species get sick, the environment is usually at fault.”
I’m suspicious that ALL of these problems, from the dying Ropes to the
flashing Barbs, have a common cause.
<Indeed. But the common cause, e.g., a poison getting into the tank,
could manifest itself in various ways, such as outright poisoning
through to parasites being able to become serious problems.>
When I did that big cleaning project eight days ago (2.5 days before the
Ropes got sick), I knew that I needed to keep my filter’s Biomax beads
wet, but I hadn’t considered the oxygen factor. The beads were in
a deep bowl of tank water. The entire project took several hours,
and I started worrying that the bacteria might be getting too cold, but
now I think they may have been compromised by lack of oxygen.
<Conceivably. Temperature isn't something to worry about much (after
all, they're fine in coldwater tanks) provided any changes are gradual.>
This would explain why my water parameters have been consistent and
stable, except when I feed: then I get traces of ammonia, do a water
change, and it disappears. Now I’m just not feeding at all.
<Does sound like the filter is "touchy". Consider all the usual factors.
Is it big enough? Have you chosen the right variety of media? Should you
increase the amount of biological media? Would a finer media be better
than you have now, to support more bacteria? How do you clean the media?
Is there ammonia in your tap water anyway? Do you treat the water for
Chloramine? Does your test kit give false positives? (This latter can
happen if you have Chloramine and treat accordingly.)>
The rest of the fish look fine (for now!), and the Barbs really don’t
look sick or distressed outside of the flashing. I really hope my
Ropefish recovers. If it dies, I think I will try one more time to
keep this species. Once the tank and all fish are healthy and
stable, how long would you suggest waiting before getting either a
companion for the current Ropefish (if it lives), or a new pair (if it
dies)? Two weeks, a month, two months?
<Certainly weeks rather than days, with 4-6 weeks being sensible. But if
you have a quarantine tank, you may want to get healthy Ropefish as/when
you see them, to minimise any problems that come from their long-term
maintenance in tropical fish shops (such as lack of food) depending on
what your retailers are like.>
I can’t help but wonder if the new-ish Ropefish caused or contributed to
this series of disasters, and whether getting a second one (or a
replacement pair) would destabilise the tank again.
<This being the case, quarantining makes even more sense. If the
Ropefish are healthy in the QT tank for, say, 4 weeks, then they're
unlikely to cause problems in the main tank.>
I care quite a bit about my fish and their health, and therefore I do
make an effort to know the specific needs of each species before making
a purchase. I wish the information that’s widely available on the
Denison were more accurate; I would not have acquired these fish if I’d
known how different their temperature requirements were from the other
occupants of the tank.
<Do get to know the SeriouslyFish.com website; it's probably the best
for modern perspectives on tropical fish requirements. A lot of the "old
favourites" like About.com tend to rehash stuff that's been around for
years, and in some cases isn't up to date with latest research. What I
like about SeriouslyFish.com is its written by a fish collector as well
as a hobbyist, so there's a lot more focus on what a given fish
experiences in the wild. While not all fish do best kept in aquaria how
they live in the wild, particularly with things like Goldfish, Mollies
and Guppies that have been much bred away from their wild ancestors,
it's a very good general rule to follow on the whole.>
As always, I thank you sincerely!
Regards,
Jane
<Welcome, Neale.>
RE: Ropefish health problems (Update)
1/18/14
Hello all,
<Jane,>
The situation with my Ropefish and my tank has not yet resolved one way
or the other, but there have been some developments.
The white spots that are the classic sign of an Ich infection showed up
a full four days after the Barbs started flashing. Now I'm reading
up on Ich (never had this before). Does that time frame - four
days between the start of the flashing and the appearance of spots -
seem odd to you?
<Not really, no. You see, with Velvet especially, but sometimes
Whitespot, the parasites attack the gills first. That causes irritation
including "flashing". It may be one or two more generation of parasites
before you can actually see the cysts on the fish's skin.>
I can only see spots on the Ropefish, the L333, and one of the Danios.
I can't find any spots on the Barbs.
<Indeed. Some fish are more resistant than others, and some more prone.
Clown Loaches are classic fish for picking up Whitespot before anything
else, whereas fish with very slimy skins are often resistant. Plus, fish
develop a degree of immunity. In short, there are lots of reasons why
fish develop symptoms of Whitespot at different rates.>
When the spots appeared, I changed water to discontinue and dilute the
Metronidazole/Praziquantel and Kanamycin (which I'd added at my store's
recommendation), raised the heat a couple more degrees (it's at 84 F
now, so I've added quite a lot of aeration), added one tablespoon of
salt per 5 gallons of water (I think that's 150 grams in a 208 litre
tank), and added
"Super Ick Cure," which is a Malachite Green/Nitrofurazone combination.
<Do wonder if these are appropriate to Velvet; see below.>
I don't care about the staining, but I can't get a straight answer from
Google about whether the Malachite Green is going to harm my live plants
(I have a great Anubias "forest") or my biological filter.
Thoughts?
<It shouldn't.>
My Assassin Snails definitely don't like the medications, or the salt, I
think.
<Salt won't harm them at this concentration; but other medications are
dicey with snails, yes.>
Neale, you had said that a poison may have either caused all of these
issues, or stressed the fish enough that a parasite had an opportunity
to become a problem. In absence of a good candidate for poisoning
or toxicity, and now with the appearance of Ich, my retailer believes
that perhaps Ich has been the problem all along, but with an atypical
presentation. (The owner/manager is now handling this case
personally, so I don't have to worry about different clerks' varying
opinions). Does that sound like a possibility to you?
<Yes.>
I'm still researching the subject; have you ever heard of Ich as an
internal infection, or the heavy breathing leading to swelling?
<See above; laboured breathing and flashing are both symptoms of Ick and
especially Velvet parasites on the gills, which is absolutely something
that sometimes appears without the cysts being visible elsewhere on the
fish. Will make the observation Velvet is tougher to treat; the
salt/heat treatment can work for Velvet, but often requires longer
exposure to salt/heat and ideally higher concentrations of salt.
Likewise with Malachite Green, which certainly does work against Velvet,
but may require longer or repeated treatments.>
My one remaining Rope seems to be hanging in there -- still active, no
panting, no swelling, just itchy and miserable. There is one thing
that's worrying me a bit: although I haven't seen the Rope eat in a week
(the tiny amounts I've fed were gobbled up in seconds by the Barbs, so I
don't think it's been eating when I'm not looking) it has what looks
like a typical "food lump" in its belly, and the lump isn't moving or
shrinking. This is likely wishful thinking, but I hope its
digestion has simply slowed way down while it's not feeling well.
It does get excited when I put food in the tank, but it doesn't exactly
appear to be seeking the food, at least not the way my Ropes normally
do.
<Indeed.>
My filter is still very touchy, so I can't put in so much food that it
sits there until the Rope finds it. I can only change water every
2-3 days because of the medications.
<Indeed.>
Regarding my filtration system: I think it's big enough, I'm running two
AquaClear 70s on a 55 gallon tank, which is supposed to be a combined
600 gallons per hour. I have a block of coarse sponge/floss for
mechanical filtration, and a large net/bag of "BioMax" ceramic beads in
each filter for biological filtration. I recently added a third
net/bag of BioMax, both to boost the filter and to supply seasoned media
to a hospital tank when necessary. To clean the media, I rinse out
the floss in a bucket of tank water, and occasionally I'll replace one
of the floss blocks, but only one at a time. Rarely, I'll shake
out the BioMax beads in a bucket of tank water to remove gunk and
debris, but I never, ever replace them. No ammonia in my tap
water. I don't think there's chloramine either, but my water
conditioner (Prime) treats for chloramine anyway.
<Good.>
I'm absolutely open to suggestions; what can I do to improve this
system?
I'm wouldn't mind adding a third filter (canister, maybe?), but I'll
definitely keep the AquaClears; I like the flexibility of customizing
the media simply by opening up the box. It's very easy to add and
subtract things like biological filter beads, carbon, Poly-Filter pads,
etc. My impression of canisters is that they have very specific
compartments for filter media.
<Sort of. Old school filters like the Eheim 2217 filter are basically
big buckets usually sold without media, and you then fill them with a
stack of Eheim sponge discs or else fill them with whatever bags of
media you want, such as ceramic "noodles". (In the UK at least, often
these filters are sold in special offer bundles alongside useful media,
so it's worth shopping around.) In any case, old school fishkeepers like
me love these filters because we already have a ton of media kicking
around and like to use cheap or specialist media as the situation
demands without being forced to use something sold under a fancy label.
Others, like the modern Fluval filters, have spaces for both (supplied)
sponges and compartments into which you can stuff smaller amounts of
whatever media you want. Generally, external canister filters are very
flexible, and internal canisters
somewhat flexible, though often including proprietary sponges. Internal
canisters score highly in terms of being easy to use and pretty much
idiot-proof when it comes to servicing, so a lot of folks prefer them
over external canister filters that can look tricky to set up without
flooding the floor! Really, if you follow the instructions this isn't
much of a risk, but I can 100% understand why some folks just don't want
to deal with all the wires and pipes.>
I like your idea of collecting healthy Ropefish as they become available
and housing them in the quarantine tank. I will do this as soon as
I think the media for the quarantine tank is sufficiently seasoned.
Is there anything I can do to the media to avoid spreading the Ich to
the quarantine tank, but without damaging the bacteria?
<Ideally, set up a with new media, mature using a fishless method for
4-6 weeks, and then maintain in strict isolation. Alternatively, run a
full treatment of a reliable anti parasite medication on the tank before
add the new fish.>
Thanks for the tip on SeriouslyFish.com. I love that site.
<So do I.>
I will keep you posted on the progress and the outcome.
Thanks,
Jane
<Most welcome, Neale.>
Re: Ropefish health problems - another update
2/25/14
Hi all!
You may recall the problems that started in early January with my
Ropefish:
they were panting, then swelling, and some of them had bulging eyes.
<I do recall>
Four out of the five Ropes died almost immediately; the new one (which I
believe introduced the problem) survived.
<Not an unusual scenario>
Later in the week my Denisonii barbs started flashing, and Ich spots
appeared four days after that.
<What have you learned re the value of quarantine?>
I treated the Ich with heat, some salt, and a Malachite
Green/Nitrofurazone combination. It was a very stubborn case of
Ich; when it wasn't gone after a week, my retailer gave me some of their
pure Malachite Green, which finally did the trick.
Here's what's happened since: not 24 hours after the Ich infestation was
finally cleared, my Denisonii came down with a bacterial infection: red
streaks/splotches in the body, ragged fins with white edges. The
owner/manager of my LFS actually came out to my house with her husband,
who runs the wholesale side of their business.
<Impressive service; kudos to them>
They diagnosed the infection and instructed me to treat with a cocktail
of Kanamycin, Metronidazole, and Tetracycline.
It worked, and all of my fish survived. My bio-filter, sadly, did
not.
<Ah no... You TREATED the main tank? Almost always a mistake>
For 5-6 days I battled ammonia and nitrites. The nitrites were
actually much harder to control than the ammonia, and at one point the
nitrites were up to 5.0 ppm. I lost track of how many water
changes I did to dilute it.
<There are other means... did you search WWM?>
I tried some of those bacteria-in-a-bottle products, but they were
not helpful at all.
<A few are real... the others... ALL covered on WWM>
My L333 Pleco nearly died. Then my owner/manager down at the LFS
gave me an infusion of poop from one of her shrimp tanks.
<Ahh!>
It worked like a miracle -- my nitrites were dropping within hours, and
all the parameters were perfect the next day.
I decided to celebrate the end of this trifecta of misery by upgrading
from a 55 gallon to a 125 gallon tank. Per your comments on
canisters, I equipped it with two of the Eheim "Classic 600" (model
#2217, I believe).
<Oh! I have a couple of these as well. Good units>
I have two Cobalt "Neo-Therm" heaters, 150 watts and 200 watts,
respectively. I also got a 300 watt Hydor in-line heater to attach
to one of the Eheim filters. Between the three heaters and the two
filters, I have very precise control over the temperature, which is
nice. The Eheims came filled with media: ceramic rings, then
coarse sponge, then "Substrat" balls, then a fine sponge, then a thin
carbon pad.
Do you think this is adequate filtration?
<I might add a third... A hang on power filter... for many reasons>
I might be able to find room for more, but the flow/current in the tank
is already pretty strong. The Denisonii seem to be enjoying that.
I got 7 new ropes (that's a total of 8, including my sole survivor) and
put them in a quarantine tank.
<Yay!>
Good thing, since I saw Ich spots on them by the end of the day (the spots
were not visible to me in the store). LFS manager made
another house call and brought me 14 days worth of medication in
pre-measured, labeled containers.
<Excellent technique>
She used a Metronidazole/quinine combination, which I'd never heard of
before. I also raised the heat and added salt. It took about
7 days for the Ich to clear up, but it did finally work. They're
still in the quarantine tank; I plan to acclimate and move them to the
big tank in another 2-3 days.
Looking at seriouslyfish.com, it appears that keeping the temperature at
75 degrees F should accommodate all the species I'm hoping to keep (I
made a chart with the pH and temperature ranges for each fish).
Here's how I'd like to stock the tank: 1 L333 Pleco, 2 Siamese Algae
Eaters, 12 Ropes, and 14 Denisonii. I'd also like to add
1-3 Electric Blue Jack Dempseys. Does this seem appropriate?
<Mmm; no. I would leave out any large Neotropical Cichlids.
There are many better, less aggressive/agonistic choices>
Any adjustments to the number of each kind? If I need to scale back,
I'd prefer to get fewer Ropes and Denisoni; I already have the L333
Pleco, 8 Ropes, 8 Denisonii, and I have my heart set on the Siamese
Algae Eaters and at least one Electric Blue Jack Dempsey. Please
let me know what you think!
A thousand thanks, as always--
Jane
<The SAEs may be predated by the Ropes; definitely by the EBJDs... Bob
Fenner>
Re: Ropefish health problems - another update.
Neale's addenda 2/25/14
<<I would second Bob's point: JDs are not community fish, and never have
been. The Electric Blue Jack Dempseys do seem marginally less aggressive
(perhaps the inbreeding has helped) but they're still potentially nasty
fish, as well as opportunistic predators. I have seen even mild cichlids
(Yellow Labs) strip the fins of Bichirs, let alone Ropefish, so I would
never trust either Bichirs or Ropefish with anything other than the most
peaceful cichlids (Angels, Kribs, etc). Denisonii Barbs are subtropical
fish, and while you can push your luck with them up to about 25 C/77 F
if water turnover rate and oxygenation are excellent, the warmer they're
kept, the shorter their lives will be. Much better to choose appropriate
subtropical or low-end tropical tankmates -- many of the barbs, almost
all Corydoras, numerous L-numbers, many loaches, pretty much all the
Danios and Minnows... pretty much anything that'll fit into the 18-22
C/64-72 F bracket that suits Denisonii Barbs best. Cheers, Neale.>>
Re: Ropefish health problems - another update 2/25/14
Hello Bob, thanks for your reply!
<Ah welcome Jane>
> <What have you learned re the value of quarantine?>
Quite a bit. I didn't quarantine in the past because I had a
sponge filter for that tank, and I couldn't figure out how to seed the
sponge filter with bacteria from the Aquaclear filters on the main tank.
Dealing with sick fish, medication AND a cycling tank was a nightmare.
After the Ropefish disaster in January, I ended up getting another
Aquaclear for the QT, and setting it up with mature media from my main
tank when I got the new batch of Ropes about 10 days ago.
<Good>
Even though I now have the Eheim canister filters, I should be able to
continue doing it this way: take a handful of media from the canister,
put it in the Aquaclear, and add a handful of new media back into the
canister.
Given the size of the canisters and the fact that I'm running two of them,
I don't think that would have a huge impact on the filtration in the
main tank. I don't have the space to keep the QT running and
cycled all the time; in fact, when I do need it, it winds up sitting on
the floor in front of the main tank. Manageable for a few weeks,
but very undesirable on a permanent basis.
<Sounds/reads good>
The other reason why I didn't quarantine in the past was because I
(mistakenly) believed that the point of quarantine was to medicate.
I wouldn't buy a fish that looked sick, and I wouldn't medicate a
healthy one, so I didn't see the point. Now I understand the value
of the QT even if it's purely for a period of observation.
> <Ah no... You TREATED the main tank? Almost always a mistake>
Indeed. Unfortunately, I could not move 8 Denisonii barbs into my
15 gallon quarantine tank. I can put 8 Ropes in there, since they
don't dart about as much, but the barbs would have been a disaster.
Nosebleeds and stress, especially for them.
> <There are other means [of handling nitrites]... did you search WWM?>
Yes, but I'm still not very skilled at it. I don't use very good
search terms, apparently. From what I was able to find (this, for
example:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwestcycling.htm ), I was doing
everything I could: changing water, not feeding, not adding fish,
bottled bacteria (what was available, anyway), and using "Purigen"
(forgot to mention that). I didn't have anywhere else to put my
fish, and I did eventually get some good bacteria from the LFS.
I did not, however,
search for Macro-Algae.
<I would have you read here as well:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwmaintindex.htm
scroll down to the yellow tray>
> <A few are real [bottled bacteria]... the others... ALL covered on
WWM>
The ones that are the highest rated (Dr. Tim's, FritzZyme) were not
available locally. I can't simply keep those on hand, since they
expire.
I chose what seemed like the best products from a questionable
selection.
<I see; a shame. They may be ordered from worthy etailers like Dr.s
Foster & Smith (.com)>
> <I might add a third ... A hang on power filter... for many reasons>
As it is, the current in the water is strong. There are several
spots where even my Denisonii have to work to swim against the current!
My plants were getting blown out of the substrate until I found a few
spots where the flow was less intense. Any suggestions for adding
a power filter without adding to the strength of the current?
<Oh yes; most all hang ons just return the water in an overflow (low P)
"wave"... I like the Whisper and Hagen lines>
> <Mmm; no. I would leave out any large Neotropical Cichlids. There are
many
> better, less aggressive/agonistic choices>
I thought the EBJDs were less aggressive? I was attracted to them
as a large, colorful "centerpiece" for the tank. Any suggestions
for a good alternative? I'm thinking mid-level or top swimmer,
big, bright, and few (between 1 and 3).
<As Neale has remarked, added; they're still too likely to be
problematical>
> <The SAEs may be predated by the Ropes; definitely by the EBJDs...
I have not had SAEs eaten by Ropes in the past, but I do take your
point. The Ropes are babies, and I can get SAEs that are already a
good size, about 3-4 inches. If the EBJDs are also very small to
begin with, maybe 2-3 inches, would this work? Would a full-grown
EBJD eat a full-grown SAE?
<Oh yes; assuredly>
If I leave out the EBJDs, do I have the capacity for the rest of my
plan?
(1 L333 Pleco, 2 SAEs, 12 Ropes, and 14 Denisonii in 125 gallons with
two
Eheim 2217s.)<Yes>
Thanks again,
Jane
<Welcome again. BobF>
Re: Ropefish health problems - another update 2/25/14
Hi, Neale! Thanks for the reply; you've already answered some of
the questions I asked in my response to Bob.
<Cool.>
You have convinced me to not to risk my Ropefish (my all-time favorites)
with an EBJD.
<Wise.>
Regarding temperature: 75 F is at the warm end for the Denisonii Barbs
and the cool end for everybody else, but it seems like it SHOULD be
workable, at least for the time being.
<Agreed; just do be aware the Denisonii are at their upper limit, so
oxygenation of the water becomes critical.>
I'd like to move the Denisonii to another tank that could be kept
cooler.
<Is the ideal; a low-end tropical system at the least. Many barbs,
loaches, L-numbers etc will prosper in such; just avoid the "hothouse
flowers" like Angels, Clown Loaches and some of the Gouramis.>
My problem is that I don't have space for another tank downstairs, due
to the locations of big windows and electrical outlets, and I need to
have a construction specialist tell me whether and where my upstairs
could support the weight of a large tank.
<I see.>
I recently read an article that questioned the need for heaters in home
aquariums, even for fish that supposedly need warmer water, as long as
the temperature in the tank is kept STABLE and above 65 F.
<Sounds dubious.>
I will try to find the reference. What do you think?
<Bad idea. Ample, and I mean ample, evidence that tropical fish
(particularly cichlids) are stressed by relatively cool conditions,
hence the limit spread of cichlids northwards from Texas and (via human
introduction) Florida. To be fair, aquarists would be surprised how many
fish naturally come from relatively cool conditions, and many "old
school" species like Corydoras and even Neons actually prefer somewhat
cool conditions.>
Could my Ropes, SAEs, and L333 manage at, say, 72 F?
<I would aim for 75-77 F, and your Denisonii Barbs should be fine.
Simpler all around. Just keep an eye on water circulation, and use an
airstone if needs be. In the future, just shop a wee bit more
carefully.>
I know the L333 likes very warm water and might be less active in cool
water,
<Correct; a poor choice for life alongside low-end tropical or
subtropical fish.>
but it almost never comes out of its cave during the day anyway, even
when I had the temp at 86 F to treat for Ich. If I want to see it,
I have to shut off all the lights, put in some food, and sit still in
front of the tank for 20 minutes. Needless to say, I don't do that
very often.
<Is the nature of many/most L-numbers to be strongly nocturnal. They do
eventually settle down, but don't buy them expecting to see them in the
open much! Try to find irresistible foods and use them accordingly, to
train your L-number to associate you with food. The smaller species like
Hypancistrus can be very nervous, but even my Panaque, whose been in my
care for almost 20 years, is easily spooked. Still, if I throw in some
cucumber or courgette, or even better the opened up "head" of a cooked
shrimp with all its smelly goo, she usually comes out. Cheers, Neale.>
Rope Fish problem; hlth. 7/30/13
Hi, my name is Shania, I'm 16 years old and my dream is to be a marine
biologist. Well, recently I reset up my 50 gallon tank, bought a new
filter and a new air pump. I recently just bought two Rope fish because
they were both in the same tank and I didn't want just one and not the
other.
<This species is better kept as more than one to a tank>
Well, earlier today I tried to feed my rope fish some bloodworms.
<I wouldn't use these. Google our site re>
Well, the female I guess got stressed and now has what you guys called
"Slime disease".
<Mmm>
Her tail is white and starting to fall off piece by piece. I quarantined
her to a tub with shallow water a small filter an air pump and a heater.
She seems to be doing just fine, I added some aquarium salt to calm her
down a bit. Well, here's my problem... I don't know when it would be
appropriate to add her back to the fish tank. I quarantined her as soon
as possible because I had bought a rope fish from a local pet store and
they had dropped it and it had gotten slime disease plus an infection
and died.
When I noticed my new rope was showing the same symptoms I immediately
took action. Is there anything more I can do to try and save her?
<Antibiotics may help here. Either a Furan compound, or the combination
of Maracyn I and II>
I can't get medications until Saturday and I'm afraid she may not make
it until then. I got her from PetCo with a 30 day health guarantee but I
don't want to have to drive an hour to the closest PetCo if I can help
save her.
I really need help. I've been researching all day about this and I
haven't found anything until I went on your site. Should I leave her in
the tank for a few days and monitor her or should I put her back with
the others?
<Whichever system has the better water quality and stability>
Please, any information you have could be super helpful and greatly
appreciated. Thank you!
-Shania
<Welcome. Bob Fenner>
sick rope fish. No info.; rdg.
7/16/13
Hi I'm hoping you can help me. I have had 2 rope fish for about 8 years
now and been so happy with them. They have been healthy and seemingly
happy, swimming around my 120L aquarium with other fish coming and
going. They always come to eat from my hand when I feed.
Just yesterday I noticed some strange movements in one of them, and this
morning I saw her/his eyes were all clouded over with a white/light blue
colour. This evening it was floating on it's back with some
contractions.
I'm wondering if this is an infection I can do something about, or if it
could be old age?
Really hoping for answer asap as it saddens me very much to see it like
this.
Thanks (in advance),
mette
<Umm, no data of use... Important that you just read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/RopefishDisF.htm
and the linked files at top. Bob Fenner>
Re: sick rope fish 7/16/13
Thank you, I have read those links already. Doesn't seem to be anything
conclusive.
I was also wondering if 8 years can be considered old age for a rope
fish?
<Know of some older than 20... When, where in doubt, change water...
daily.
BobF>
mette
Re: sick rope fish 7/16/13
Wow ok, thank you very much again. will do.
Mette
Reed/Rope Fish Paralysis?
4/2/13
Good day!
Thank you so very much for taking time to read my email.
<Welcome.>
I apologize for the haste but I have a sick/ oddly acting reed/rope fish
(Erpetoichthys calabaricus) aka "Megan", that I would desperately like
to save.
<Indeed so.>
I have an established 55 gal freshwater aquarium (8mo old). But I have
owned and maintained healthy fish tanks for the past 20 yrs. A few cases
of Ich was worst that has ever happened.
<Easily dealt with using salt/heat in most cases.>
The water chemistry is all at normal levels for a healthy tank, so says
the aquatic store that I get my fish at. I can get specific numbers
today if you would prefer. I keep the tank at 81 degrees since the
variety of fish in my tank prefer temps at 78 to 82.
<Somewhat; the Eartheater and the Baryancistrus do prefer warm water,
around 28 C/82 F would be about right, but I'd be leery about mixing
these with fish like Black Ghost Knifefish and any sort of Pufferfish
because these energetic fish can be sensitive to low oxygen levels.>
I also add 1 Tbs of salt (aquarium safe) to every 10 gal of water.
<To treat the Ick, I assume; long term salt will be harmful to some of
these fish.>
I know it's usually 1 tbs to every 5 gal but from what I have read,
there are fish in my tank that cannot handle the higher dose of salt but
that the fish that require salt will do fine with a lower dose. Please
correct me if any of this information is wrong.
<Consider yourself corrected. Always go by this simple rule: does the
fish I am keeping naturally inhabit brackish water? If the answer is NO,
then adding salt to the water is, at best, pointless, and more often
than not harmful. Perhaps not immediately, but long-term, the use of
salt is the kind of thing that stresses freshwater fish such as
Knifefish that have very low tolerance for salt. Of the fish you have,
only one is a brackish water fish, the Figure-8 Puffer, and obviously
long term (after no more than a couple months) will need to be installed
in a brackish water system. The Severum and the Ropefish both have some
slight tolerance for brackish conditions, but the Ropefish would never
be kept with Puffers -- I've seen pufferfish strip the fins from
Ropefish and Bichirs -- and there's no advantage to keeping Severums in
brackish conditions even if they may occur in them in the wild. All the
other fish are strictly freshwater fish, and soft water fish at that!>
I would greatly appreciate any and all feedback.
I have:
One 6" black ghost knife
Two 3 1/2" Severums
Two 6" reed fish (one is new to tank 4 days. New one is acting fine)
One 2 1/2" gold nugget Pleco
One 3 1/3" Satanoperca jurupari
<Nice fish, but sensitive to water quality.>
One 3" Peacock child
<Do you mean Aulonocara spp? The Malawian Peacock cichlid? Needs hard,
alkaline water, so doesn't belong to any of these other fish. Or do you
mean the South American Peacock cichlid we otherwise call Cichla
ocellaris? These latter are GIANT fish with predatory habits, though not
aggressive and can make good fish for public aquaria. Virtually no use
to home aquarists though; just too big.>
And one 1" Figure 8 puffer (new to tank of 4 days)
<See above; doesn't belong.>
As in the subject of my email I highly suspect one of my reed fish may
have some form of paralysis? She was in normal condition last night and
when I woke up to feed them this morning, (I feed a variety diet of
frozen shrimp brine, frozen blood worms, and pellets. Not all at same
time obviously), she was swimming in a stiff almost swirling formation,
disoriented and stressed.
<Worrying; any chance of poisoning? Being air-breathers, most anything
in the air will get to them before any other fish -- paint fumes,
cleaning sprays, etc.>
It seems as though she has lost function of her pectoral fins, but was
able to right herself to air breathe but would not eat from my hand. She
is my favorite amongst all my fish since she is completely tame to the
hand and will even curl up in your palm for a rest:)
<Nice.>
She is amazing and I would like to save her if possible! There are so
many hiding spots in our tank but I'm afraid since she is so docile,
that one of the other fish, I'm highly suspecting the blk ghost knife,
may have gotten a hold of her. The blk ghost knife is finding a new home
today since she/he is the most aggressive in the tank and have witnessed
it shoving and smashing into my other fish. I know they have every bad
eyesight and will push other fish out of the way but this one seems to
be deliberately going after some of my fish.
<Is unusual for this species, but they are territorial, and Ropefish are
really quite docile, so it's not impossible there was a squabble over
hiding places. Nonetheless, I'd look at cichlids as well; Ropefish
aren't good companions for cichlids, expect perhaps the more gentle
Dwarf Cichlids.>
I have searched the web for reed fish paralysis or fish paralysis in
general and have not found any substantial information. If you have any
information I would so greatly appreciate it! And I thank you for
supplying such a informative site!!
<There's little you can do here and now… ideally isolate the fish in a
hospital tank where it can recover… keep the water shallow so it can
breathe easily. Minimise dress, check water quality, review any other
sources of stress or poisoning. The fish may recover, but I'd not be
surprised if it didn't.>
Sincerely, Jessica
PS. Just an fyi, I am not the same Jessica who was inquiring about
another reed fish. I read that article since it was in re: to reed fish
illness.
<Understood! Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Reed/Rope Fish Paralysis?
4/2/13
Thank you so much for your response!
<Most welcome.>
And you were correct, she didn't make it. Sniff sniff :(
<Ah, too bad.>
Shortly after sending my email to you, I had found her in one of the
black ghost knife hiding spots where she never visited in the past, I
guess there is a first for everything but I think this bgkf was very
territorial, like you said, from the start and caused her death. I
bought the bgk when he was already 6" and saw how pushy he was right
from the start and I should
have done something about that right away. My fault. Obviously he came
from a tank that was more aggressive in nature and just acclimated that
way.
Sigh.... :(
I also make sure there are no perfumes, cleaning agents near the tank
and I make sure to rinse my hands and arms thoroughly before I handle
the tank and fish. No perfume soaps.
<Good. Don't be paranoid, but be aware.>
And thank you for the other information and plenty of it! Obviously I
need to return the puffer fish right away too! I bought him because my
tank had a sudden outbreak of snails! This I have never encountered
before!
<Do read up on freshwater snails elsewhere on WWM; adding snail-eating
fish, in itself, is rarely a cure for snails.>
I do not mix aquarium store water with my tank but 2 mo ago one of the
bags ripped and some of the water got into my tank. About a month later
snails were crawling everywhere! Do you have any ideas on how I can get
rid of these annoying little guys? I'm so glad you told me about the
salt issue also and will gradually wean back to pure fresh water. We
have very hard city water should I add a little salt? Or let them
acclimate to the hard water?
<The latter. Adding salt doesn't help "soften" hard water.>
All over the net is this huge debate re: this salt or no salt issue.
<The debate is an old one, but persists because adding salt is cheap and
easy to do, so a lot of people *want* it to be useful. It made some
sense decades ago when water quality wasn't properly understood; salt
slightly reduces the toxicity of nitrate and nitrite, so those hardy,
salt-tolerant fish kept through the 60s and 70s did well when a little
salt was added.
But as time passed we got better filters and did more water changes, and
we also switched from a small set of hardy fish to a much bigger
selection of more sensitive species. End result, adding salt is a relic
of the past, and in many cases does more harm than good.>
Oh and the peacock cichlid is the smaller species you mentioned and I was
concerned at first because I know how they can be with aggression but he
is my second favorite out of the tank! He's extremely friendly with
everyone!
<Aulonocara can be first-rate fish.>
Even with the jurupari fish, who is by the way a shy guy.
<Can be so; does depend on tankmates.>
I did take back the bgk today and was reluctant to get another but the
aquatic sales person said that the one I was looking at was extremely
docile and he was correct (so far). She is sweet and already eats out of
my hand and when the other fish come near her she doesn't react
aggressively like the other one did, just a slight tilt of her head in
their direction and that's it. Fingers crossed she stays like that.
<Quite so.>
But yes, if you have any advice on the snail issue and salt debate that
would be wonderful! And I promise there are no more issues to email
about:)
Sincerely,
Jessica
<Much at WWM re: both topics. Maybe start here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/SaltUseFWArtNeale.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fwsnails.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fwsnailcompfaqs.htm
Snails are rarely a real problem, even if unsightly, so the best
approach is to starve their populations down to tolerable levels through
removal of excess food and fish wastes, while periodically culling them
as needs be.
Cheers, Neale.>
Sick rope fish... no reading/WWM, 1 ppm NH3, mixed tropicals
and not... 1/4/13
Hi, I'm looking for help treating my sick Ropefish. I recently bought 2
to add to my aquarium and one has developed puffy white lips and cloudy
eyes as if it's going blind.
<Unfortunately an all too common scenario for this imported African>
The second one seems ok but is starting to develop the cloudy eyes as
well.
The one with puffy lips stays at the bottom of the tank, still, trying
to gasp for air from its mouth. Occasionally it swims aggressively to
the surface before sinking back to the bottom.
I have had them for about 3 weeks and have not seen them eat once. I
have tried feeding them freeze dried shrimp and live bloodworms,
<See WWM re these insect larvae>
and hoped they might eat flakes and pellets
<No sir, not likely; but we/WWM has a section on this as well>
with their other tank mates, with no success.
As for the details of my aquarium: 55 gal., gravel, fake plants. Tank
mates include 2 Plecos, 2 Bala sharks,
<Get very large...>
3 dojo loaches, 1 black moor goldfish,
<... misplaced... these last two are subtropical... Have to be
elsewhere; not kept w/ tropicals>
1 silver dollar tetra, 2 snails (all the other fish are healthy and
behaving normally). Ph levels approx. 7.4, but I have had trouble with
reducing ammonia levels which are stuck at 1.0.
<... extremely toxic... At least a source of your troubles here>
The rep at the pet store advised that just keeping up with the weekly
water changes should fix this, but it has been almost 2 months since I
started adding fish on top of the 4 weeks spent cycling the aquarium.
<... you should have cycled fish-less... should be reading on WWM, doing
what you can (bacteria cultures of use now)>
My maintenance schedule for the aquarium has been weekly water change of
10-15% and one monthly water change of 25-35%. The water being added is
treated first. I use a gravel vacuum to clean the gravel while changing
the water. The fish get fed twice a day, and I check my water quality
every other day.
<You should curtail feeding period till the ammonia is negligible>
I bought my aquarium used and it was very dirty when I first got it, I
replaced the gravel and cleaned the tank and all the components of the
filter, and replaced about 1/4 of the filter media (just in case any of
this info points to anything).
I'm really hoping to get some help
<... and maybe a read through of a tome or two on general freshwater
aquarium set up>
with this the reps at the store have no idea what I'm trying to explain
and offer no suggestions. I have also attached a picture of the sick
rope fish, which I hope helps identify the problem. Thanks a bunch.
<.... Read the above a few times; search/read on WWM, elsewhere. And
esp. here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/RopefishDisF.htm
and the linked files above. Bob Fenner>
|
|
Ropefish health issue, sudden onset
12/14/12
I have a Rope fish, he is 15-17 inches in length. He lives in a dirted
community tank, with many plants and tank mates. it is 55 gallons with,
C02, 200 watts 6500k lighting. The illness he is currently battling,
started yesterday. Or I noticed it for the first time yesterday, The
water parameters are perfect, zeros across the board (0 nitrate,
0,nitrate 0,ammonia, 7.4-7.8 Ph level). My PH is always high and the
plants and fish are all long time residents and well adjusted to it. I
have had only two
changes that I have noticed lately, One I have a new spotted Raphael
catfish. (I assumed he was the cause at first) The next change is that
my heater went out and caused the temperature to be up around 80-81 F.
On to the symptoms, the first thing I noticed and the reason I assumed
it was the new resident (Raphael) was a small circular pattern of
injured, missing, or damaged scales on last 1/3 of Rosefish's belly.
(looks like a bite given to the under side), about half the depth of his
body.
<It is possible the Raphael catfish is somehow involved. Some of their
relatives can act as cleaners on other fishes, their spines can be used
to hurt predators and they share the same space (bottom, partly buried)
as rope fishes. Also both species are active at night, when you likely
don't observe them.>
Today the affected area has spread, and his left eye has fogged over and
has a cataracts look to it. His eye is also slightly bulging.
<Bacterial infection.>
It also seems that his left side pectoral fin is paralyzed. I
immediately quarantined him and started treatment. I have to admit that,
although: the hospital tank is also dirtied and planted, with perfect
water. It is unheated with no filter and no air supply. (I never need to
use it, usually)
<Needs to be heated, air supply won't hurt either and help to keep the
pH stable at night.>
I am treating with, JUNGLE's all in one treatment, fizz tabs.
<A strong oxidant releasing chlorine... If you see no effect you may
have to use an antibiotic (such as Maracyn 1). Salt can also act as a
mild, supportive remedy in this case. Please read
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/RopefishDisF.htm for similar
cases and details on the use of salt.>
I also lost a very small scissor tail today. It had no symptoms of and
injury or illness, none others seems to have any symptoms.
<Can be related or not.>
I will attach a picture of the injured area of the Ropefish when I first
noticed it. Thanks in Advance for any help/advice.
<Hope it helps.>
Brandon Peoples. Life long aquarium enthusiast, Three 55 gallon, one 29
gallon, Three 20 gallon, Two 2.5 gallon. Many species.
<Good luck. Marco.>
|
|
Some very unwell Ropefish. No data, rdg.
8/25/12
Hello,
I searched all over your website and could not find anything that
matched the symptoms my fish have and i really need help.
We have two rope fish that we have had for about a month, they have been
fine, eating well and enjoying themselves.
Then yesterday evening they didn't touch their food, which
alerted us to something being wrong. On a closer inspection they both
seem to have what looks like cataracts on both eyes and are hardly
moving.
<Something amiss w/ the environment here. I'd change half the water
ASAP>
They are more than sluggish and both appear to be gasping at times. One
of them was having spasms and seemed unable to swim for a small while
but that has subsided.
This morning they are hardly moving still, simply sitting at the bottom
of the tank together. Do you have any idea what could be wrong and any
advice?
<As stated... test your water, change it... You offer little input of
use re the system et al. READ here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/RopefishDisF.htm
and the linked files at top. Bob Fenner>
I am so very worried.
Thank you.
Grace.
Re: Some very unwell Ropefish. 8/25/12
<... why aren't you reading?>
Sorry, we don't have a water tester as we are new to this.
One fish was dead when i got in from work.
I have changed half the water.
Its a 48 litre tank,
<Too small for this species>
we use ultrafin cycle
<... is this system cycled?>
and AquaPlus for the water.
You suggested a little salt to others, do you think that may help?
I guess the next few hours matter the most.
Thanks.
<... keep reading, or start. B>
Ropefish Ick??
3/26/12
Hello I have had my current rope fish for over ten years and he has
been living in a tank with a goldfish that I have had for two years.
Both fish got along great and I decided to buy my nieces a goldfish to
put in the tank also which is probably the first mistake. Well I bought
this goldfish and after three days I noticed the original goldfish had
extremely red fins and was showing symptoms of stress. I looked up some
of the causes as I have dealt with ick in the past and have treated it
however it did not look like ick more like a fungal infection. So I
treated the tank with a fungal remedy and after two more days the
goldfish broke out with white spots and was now flashing and scratching
himself on anything he could find on the aquarium. The goldfish I
originally bought showed no symptoms of ick and my ropefish's coat
started to look worn out (rough looking almost). I removed the fungal
medication from the water and after two days of waiting and the ick
getting bad on the goldfish i added some API Super ick cure. After four
days and following the directions the fish did not look any better and
looked like he was rotting away zombie like. This morning i woke up and
he was dead. I found the rope fish floating at the top of the aquarium
and thought he was dead too. I turned up the oxygen in the water and
now he seems to be doing better as he is resting and eating but his
scales still look extremely rough and he does not look healthy at all.
The original goldfish still looks fine and is showing no abnormal signs
of behavior. I did a partial water change this morning and increased
the tanks water temperature to 82 degrees. During the Ick outbreak it
was only 70 degrees which I now understand prolongs an outbreak. Anyhow
is there any treatment that I can use on the Ropefish or should I just
keep the temperature high for now and wait it out to see if he gets
better or worse. He does not seem to have any white spots on himself
however his scales are extremely rough looking and it looks like he has
bumps all over them....Any help diagnosing the problem or fixing it
would be greatly appreciated.
<Ropefish can get Whitespot but they're stressed by many
medications… hmm… what to do: use the salt/heat method! They're
salt-tolerant (live in brackish water in some parts of their range
even, as do Goldfish in places) so should respond well.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/SaltUseFWArtNeale.htm
Slightly brackish water can have a useful tonic effect on these fish
too, even though they're not exclusively (or even commonly)
brackish water fish. Cheers, Neale.>
Concerned about my new Rope Fish 1/8/12
Good Morning,
<Hello Mona,>
I am praying that you can give me some information regarding
several situations I have. I am relatively new to tropical fish
keeping. I have an established (eight months now) 36 gallon
bow-front aquarium. My water perimeters are PH 7.6, Zero Ammonia,
Zero Nitrates, Zero Nitrites (using API test kit).
<All sounds fine.>
Because the only fish suppliers in our area are the chain stores:
Wal-Mart, Pet Smart, Pet Depot, etc,. I refuse to purchase pets
there. I get my plants and my fish normally from a aquatic store
in Nashville TN - which is almost a two hour drive from home.
<Shouldn't be a problem if the fish are bagged or boxed
properly. I assume you tell them it's a long trip home, so
they use the biggest bags and under stock each bag, ensuring
there's plenty of air in the bags.>
Up until now I have trusted them completely to help me pick out
plants and fish that will compliment the community. They have
been in business over 23 years.
<Sounds good.>
About ten days ago, I visited the store and was immediately
attracted to a rope fish. They had two in a tank and they seemed
so interesting and mild mannered.
<Are indeed.>
I checked with one of the store helpers about this fish being
suitable for my tank. The other inhabitants are: 3 white tip
tetras, 1 Pleco, 1 Cory cat, 2 pink kissing gouramis, 1 large
female guppy, 2 cherry shrimp, 3 ghost shrimp, 1 small female
Endler's guppy, 1 male fancy tail guppy, 1 large sail-fin Dalmatian
Molly, 1 sail-fin white molly, 1 black molly, and 3 Mickey mouse
platys. She assured me he would do well in my tank. I purchased
him and brought him home. Initially he hid. This did not alarm me
as I knew he would need to adjust to the new environment.
<Yes.>
My concerns are this: I have never seen him eat. Not once! I was
told to feed him sinking shrimp pellets at the store - which I
purchased.
<Heaven's no!>
I have since read on your site that they won't eat this.
Argggh. I did have some frozen blood worms so I thawed them
using a syringe with some of my tank water and tried to feed him
this.
<Better.>
Even holding the bloodworm dangling from the syringe directly
against his mouth - he was not interested in eating the worm.
<Not during the day, no.>
I still put three shrimp pellets in the tank every night and they
are gone in the morning so something in the tank is eating them.
I have also noticed that all of my original shrimp are still
alive and well in the tank so apparently he isn't interested
in them (I must admit I am happy about this).
<Indeed! But they are nocturnal predators. Feed at night,
ideally things like small chunks of white fish fillet (tilapia is
good) or prawn (sparingly, because it's too rich in
Thiaminase to be used all the time).
Earthworms are another good food. Wet frozen bloodworms will be
eaten, but probably at night.>
My third issue is that I am extremely frustrated with the store
because according to your information this fish will get up to 3
feet! I can't see my 36 gal tank being anywhere near large
enough for him so I will soon be trying to find someone who can
adopt him. IF I can keep him alive long enough!
<They are social fish too, and singletons don't always do
well.>
We do have earthworms in our front garden. I understand they will
eat those. But how much of one should I offer him and how
often?
<A 2-3 per week should be ample.>
The other issue I have is that I regrettably ordered what was
labeled as a "cleaning crew" off of EBay. This was
several ram-shorn snails and several cherry shrimp. The seller
stated in the listing that they would not multiple in captivity.
Wrong! I am being overrun with snails and I was told by someone
recently that any snails in your fish tank will increase the
ammonia levels greatly. Is this true?
<No. Or at least, compared to fish and the food you add, their
impact is minimal.>
I am catching and removing them as quickly as I can - but it
seems they are multiplying faster than I can catch them. So,
again I messed up and bought two assassin snails because I was
told they would kill and eat the other snails and that they would
not multiply in captivity. Yes they do...so now I am catching a
lot of baby assassin snails.
<But the good thing is Assassin Snails breed more slowly, and
because they're higher up the food chain, there will be about
one-tenth the Assassin Snails compared to the Ramshorn Snails, so
over time, you should see a net reduction.>
Can you PLEASE offer me some new perspectives on my tank
situation. I have invested a lot of love and time in my tank. It
is totally natural - real plants, rocks, driftwood....and so far
no dead fish - I don't want to start now.
Many thanks, Mona
<Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
|
|
Re: Concerned about my new Rope Fish
1/8/12
Thank you for the speedy reply - you folks are AWESOME and will be
my first and most trusted source for information as I grow in my
fish keeping hobby.
Cheers to the New Year!
<Thanks for the kind words. Cheers indeed, Neale.> |
Rope Fish has tiny
white spots 10/20/11
I have been reading many articles on
your site about treating the rope fish if it has Ich. My problem is
that I have a tank with different fish and it is the only one that has
the problem. In my tank with the rope fish I have 2 parrot cichlids, 2
blue cobalt cichlids, 2 pink kissing Gourami, 3 pictus catfish, 2
dragon gobies, an African knife fish, an African butterfly fish, and an
albino clawed frog. They are all still young and nowhere near full size
yet. I am concerned about what to treat the tank with since there is a
variety of fish in the tank. If you could please help me with a
solution because I don't want to lose any of my fish. Thank you.
Angela
<I'd go the elevated temperature and salt route... READ:
http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwichremedyyes.htm
Bob Fenner>
Re: Rope Fish has tiny white spots -- 10/22/11
Thank you for the help. I just have another question. This is our
second ACF and the last one died when we raised the temp. Also I was
reading on your site that they are not to have the temp above 75F nor
any salt in the tank.
<Correct. Xenopus can be intolerant of very high temperatures over
long periods. If you can, remove to another aquarium, even an unheated
one containing as little as 5 gallons, provided it has a filter or some
sort (an air-powered sponge filter would be fine).>
I am trying the Ick medication right now to see if that will help but
only used a half dose because of the fish we have without scales (like
it recommended). Could you please let me know if there is something
else that I can do or a way to keep from getting Ick/ white spot
disease again. Thank you again for the help and I love the site it has
been very helpful with other questions that I have had!!
<Whitespot tends to come in with new fish. Quarantine new fish if at
all possible. Alternatively, do the heat/salt thing every single time
you add new fish to kill off any free-living stages of the parasite.
Remember, you don't kill the white spots you see, just their
"babies", so it takes a couple of weeks to do this, because
you have to wait for all the visible white spots to hatch into the
free-living stages.
Cheers, Neale.>
Caring for my rope fish (RMF, anything
else?)<<B>> 6/23/11
My three rope fish have been happy, eating well, and
growing for nearly six months. But now there seems to be a problem.
They haven't eaten in three days, and tonight
one of them has been panting heavily.
<Not good. Do immediately check water quality and chemistry, in
particular if there's been [a] a sudden pH change; and [b] a rise
in nitrite and ammonia levels. A large water change is often a very
good idea, though perhaps not changing all at once: 25-33% immediately,
and then another such change 4-6 hours later, so that the fish can
adapt to any changes (corrections!) in water chemistry. 10-25% water
changes daily thereafter should flush out any problems. >
There has been some drama with one of my Cyclocheilichthys janthochir.
Don't know if it's related to the issues with the ropes, but I
can't think of anything else that has really happened/changed.
<Oh?><<Am suspicious that this involvement of a Redfin
Silver Shark/Minnow is related>>
Wednesday (one week ago): Cyclocheilichthys janthochir got stuck in an
ornament. Had to physically pull him out, he had injuries on his
back.
Fish store recommended treatment with Methylene blue to prevent
fungus.
Changed 25% of water, removed offending ornament, rearranged plants and
remaining ornaments.
<Okay. Now, it's pretty uncommon for fish to actually get
"stuck" in ornaments. More often, they fall into them when
weakened for some other reason.>
Thursday: Picked up a new plant and the Methylene blue, was told to
catch the fish and apply the treatment directly to its wounds. Had a
trace (less than 0.25 ppm) of ammonia in water, did another 25% water
change. Brought ammonia back to zero.
<I see.>
Sunday: Still treating injured fish, spilled a bit of the Methylene
blue in the tank, enough to turn the water slightly blue. This is when
the ropes stopped eating and became withdrawn. Put carbon in the
filter, water was clear by morning.
<Ah, now, Methylene Blue can be toxic in some situations. Not
usually, and not with most advanced fish, but with primitive fish like
Rays, Mormyrids, and yes, Bichirs and Ropefish, there's always this
risk.>
Monday: The Cyclocheilichthys janthochir's original injury was
visibly healing, but he bashed up his nose while fleeing from my net.
No longer treating with Methylene blue (don't want to chase him
anymore). Did another 25% water change.
<Okay.>
Wednesday (today): ropes a bit less withdrawn, but still not eating.
Now one of them is panting. The Cyclocheilichthys janthochir's nose
looks horrible and was bleeding at one point. Could this be affecting
the ropes?
<Yes, could. Do also check the Methylene Blue doesn't contain
some other supplemental medication, such as formalin.>
I'm puzzled. The ropes have been enthusiastic eaters ever since
they got used to their diet of tilapia fillet and krill. Normally they
seem to enjoy water changes, so I wouldn't think that the frequent
water changes in the last week would have upset them.
<Quite so; these fish do inhabit brackish water regions, and like
other brackish water fish, tolerate quite dramatic changes in water
chemistry without fuss. And on that note, obviously salt can be a
useful medication or even tonic when handling these fish, and may be
worth using in this instance, perhaps at a dose of 2-3 grammes/litre so
that the other fish in the tank aren't stressed. Salt can have a
very mild beneficial effect when injured fish are being
treated.>
All of the other fish appear fine. Even the injured Cyclocheilichthys
janthochir's behavior is normal. I've been testing daily, and
the ammonia has been zero (except for Thursday morning), nitrates less
than 10 ppm, nitrites zero, hardness about 120 ppm, total alkalinity
about 100 ppm, pH about 7.0. Temperature 78 F. These are very typical
readings for my tank, conditions my fish are used to.
<Sound fine.>
I haven't lost a single fish in the six months I've had the
tank, and I don't want to start now! I'm so worried about my
rope fish that I've been getting up to check on them several times
per night. I don't know if I've provided enough information for
you to offer any advice, but I'd appreciate any thoughts you might
be able to share.
Thanks,
Jane
<Hope this helps, Neale.><<How large is this system/volume?
How filtered? I would definitely follow Neale's lead here in
changing water out... add aeration, water movement, look about
for some source of toxicity (decor? aerosol?...), add
activated carbon to your filtration. RMF>>
Re: caring for my rope fish (RMF, anything else?)
6/23/11
Thank you so much for the input.
<You're welcome.>
It does help; I will do a 25% water change now, and another later
today, add a bit of salt, and keep doing daily water changes until
they're happy again. (The Methylene Blue does not contain formalin
or anything else. I have stopped using it regardless.)
<Okay.>
I'm a bit squeamish about it, but I would be willing to dig up some
worms from my garden and chop them up for the ropes if you thought that
might entice them to eat. How much time do they have before they
starve? It's been four days now since they've eaten.
<Takes several weeks before fish this size truly begin to
starve.>
It was a freak accident how the Cyclocheilichthys janthochir got stuck
in the ornament. He was hanging out with the others when they got
startled and scattered; this one happened to dart in the wrong
direction, right into a tunnel that he was slightly too big to get
through. The poor thing was thrashing frantically, trying to free
itself.
<Yikes!>
His back is healing nicely, but his bashed-up nose looks awful.
They're jumpy and prone to running into things. Normally it's
not a big deal, but with his nose already compromised, it seems to be
getting damaged more every day. I'm trying to keep them quiet, and
I've removed all the hard-surfaced items except the jar that the
ropes like to sit in. Is there anything else I can do? The pet store
told me to put Melafix in the water, but I'm VERY reluctant to
involve chemicals at this point, considering what's happening with
the ropes.
<I'd agree, but at the same time, I'd not put huge faith in
Melafix. If it were me, I'd treat the Barb in its own tank with a
suitable anti-Finrot medication. An antibiotic should be safe with the
Ropefish, so could be used in the main tank, if moving the Barb
wasn't an option.>
Thanks again,
Jane
<Cheers, Neale.>
More Re: caring for my rope fish 6/24/11
The tank is 55 gallons. I have two Aquaclear 70 filters, so it's
about 600 gallons per hour of filtration. They're the
hang-on-the-back type, and they appear to provide a lot of aeration via
surface disturbance from the outflow. They push bubbles about halfway
down into the tank. The current they produce is visible all the way
down to the gravel, but there are plants and decor that create pockets
of gentler water movement (which is where the ropes tend to hang
out).
<Sounds okay, though aerators generally don't do much either way
to improve water quality. At best, they help with water circulation.
Your Barbs are quite lively, messy species so I would want quite strong
filtration here, closer to 8 times the volume of the tank per hour than
6. But I doubt this is the critical issue at the moment.>
What would be a source of aerosol? How would I identify a source of
toxicity? Just by process of elimination?
<Pretty much. Common causes are things like paints, spray cleaners
used around the tank, insect sprays, and so on. Sometimes spillages by
family members can be to blame, though more often overfeeding by
children is the problem in that sort of scenario.>
I removed my most recently acquired decoration; the others have been in
the tank for months. (Is it usual for aquarium decor to cause problems?
Doesn't sound like a good business plan!) I have a week-old live
plant that is attached to a piece of wood, similar to two others that
have been in the tank for quite some time. Should I remove that, too?
Might it survive removal if I transfer it to a bucket of tank water or
something?
<You can, but I doubt it'll be worthwhile.>
I did another water change yesterday (Thursday) per Neale's advice,
and added salt, about 2 grammes per litre. The chemistry remains stable
and unchanged since my last report. I don't normally run carbon in
my filters, but I did put some in five days ago to remove the traces of
Methylene Blue.
<As Bob suggests, using a big bag of fresh, high-quality
(marine-grade) carbon would be an excellent way to remove
medications.>
There is no change with the gasping rope, although a second one also
seems to be huffing a bit now. The third one appears unaffected.
<Curious. Do check the substrate is nice and clean, and that water
current at the bottom of the tank is brisk. Because Ropefish spend a
lot of time rooting about at the bottom, poor water or substrate
conditions at the lower level of the tank can cause problems that
don't affect midwater fish.>
New development: late last night, while checking on everybody, I saw
that my timid 4-year-old Red Tail Black Shark's eyes were filled
with blood, and one of its eyes was bulging out. I was astonished -- it
had been fine when I did the water change just a few hours earlier!
Afraid it might have an infection that could spread, I removed it to a
bowl, and it died within half an hour. My first loss in a year. .
.ironically, a fish that seemed to have nothing to do with all
that's happened in the last week.
<Perhaps nothing to do with it'¦ but I think not. When one
fish gets sick, it can be a one-off. When several fish of a single
species get sick, then it's likely a species-specific disease. But
if several fish across several species get sick, the environment is
usually at fault.>
When you say you're suspicious that the involvement of the Redfin
Silver Shark is related, does that mean that you DO or DON'T think
the issues with the Redfin has affected the ropes?
<I think Bob is saying what I just said above, when two species
sicken, you need to think about the tank having a fault of some sort
rather than a particular fish being sick.>
Manipulating so many variables -- water changes, Methylene Blue, decor,
salt, etc. -- is making it hard for me to figure out what's going
on. My local fish stores thinks it might be a gill infection and/or
parasite. They're recommending a medication containing
Metronidazole and Praziquantel. Thoughts?
<I wouldn't medicate without knowing what's wrong.
Metronidazole is used to treat protozoan infections, and Praziquantel
to treat intestinal worms. I don't see that either of these is an
obvious cause of your problems. Adding medications at random can, will
do more harm than good. If the large Barb still has a bacterial
infection that's damaging its snout, then medicating with an
antibiotic makes sense, ideally in a hospital tank (obviously carbon
removes medications, so you can't medicate in this tank while
running carbon or for that matter doing multiple large water
changes).>
Again, I appreciate all the input and help you've been
providing.
Regards,
Jane
<I know it's hard to do, but observation is what I'd
recommend here. Add the carbon, and ideally, some Polyfilter too. Do a
succession of large-scale water changes. Thoroughly clean the substrate
if you're at all suspicious it isn't as clean as it might be
(there's an odd dichotomy here: undisturbed deep sand beds and thin
layers of gravel generally stay clean without bother, but medium to
high thickness beds of gravel can trap a lot of dirt yet lack the
infaunal biota to "self-clean" in the same way as deep sand
beds). Review filtration and water circulation at the bottom level of
the tank. Move filters around if needs be to optimise water circulation
(I prefer external and internal canister filters compared to
hang-on-the-back filters because the latter often only clip onto the
back of the tank and nowhere else). Make sure the heater-stat is
working properly. Check with your water company to make sure they
haven't altered drinking water in some way, and at minimum, review
your water condition and choose a brand that not only removes chlorine
but also Chloramine, copper, and ammonia. If you have a lot of plants
in the tank, make sure there aren't any dying ones somewhere, and
conversely, you don't have too many fast-growing species that alter
water chemistry under bright light (Vallisneria is notorious in this
regard, and can really mess up soft water!). Cheers, Neale.>
More Re: caring for my rope fish 6/25/11
Another update: the second rope fish (the one that recently started
breathing a little harder, not the one that has been panting
heavily)
appears to be twitching. Its head. It's a small movement, one you
wouldn't notice if you weren't watching closely, but every once
in a while its head jerks a few times. Very strange.
It's like a cascade of disasters that began with trying to help the
injured redfin. I feel like I should have left everything alone and let
the redfin either live or die on its own.
<Possibly, but hard to say. Certainly the value of a hospital tank,
even a 10-gallon one, shouldn't be ignored. Cheers, Neale.>
More Re: caring for my rope fish (Again Bob, any further
thoughts'¦?) -- 06/26/11
Regarding filtration: unless there's s calculation that I'm not
aware of, isn't 600 gallons per hour in a 55 gallon tank over 10
times the volume of the tank per hour? How did you come up with 6?
<Quite right.>
The Barb's nose doesn't actually appear infected. Just really
beat up, and it doesn't seem to be healing, even though the injury
on its back is well on its way to recovery. I've been wondering if
it's continuously re-injuring its nose by running into things, if
the other fish are pecking at him, or if it really is infected and
I'm just not recognizing it.
<Then do consider the obvious -- social behaviour not working (not
enough specimens, perhaps?) or tank lacking swimming space (physically
bumping into things, perhaps when the lights come on or go off, in
which case having the lights come on in stages may help).>
I normally use Prime as a dechlorinator, and I know it covers
Chloramine and ammonia, but I don't know if it also removes copper.
I will find out at the pet store today.
<Cool.>
I'll get going on a hospital tank. I have no idea how to run one!
Establish biofilter?
<Use established media, or use Zeolite to remove ammonia
directly.>
Sterilize and re-establish biofilter between uses? Keep running at all
times, or only set up when needed? I'll check on Wet Web Media for
articles.
The ropes aren't any worse today, but they're not better,
either, and they still won't eat. I have noticed that their throats
(the underside, just behind the jaws) are looking a bit swollen. The
panting one is looking wobbly when she swims to the top for a breath.
Weak from lack of food, or just ill?
<Doesn't sound promising. But there's really not much I can
say without a photo of the sick fish, and really, these vague malaises
are extremely difficult to identify.>
Hope is waning. . .
Thanks again,
Jane
<Cheers, Neale.>
More Re: caring for my rope fish (Again Bob, any further
thoughts'¦?)<<>>
6/27/11
I would send a photo of the fish except that they don't appear
abnormal unless they're seen in motion: the panting, and now the
weaker swimming. They look terrific in a still photo. The throat/belly
swelling behind the jaw is too subtle, it doesn't show in a
picture.
I was able to identify several problems yesterday. My ammonia
test kit was not sensitive/accurate enough; I was using the
strips with the pads which always showed zero ammonia, but
when I ran out of those and bought a liquid kit, it showed that
I DID have traces of ammonia in the tank. Another water change
last night brought it down to zero (for real this time, I hope).
I'm continuing to test several times per day.
<Sounds good.>
Major source of toxicity! On Friday night, I removed everything
(ornaments, plants) that was new to the tank in the last couple of
weeks. The idea was to re-create the pre-illness conditions. I took the
stuff to the petstore to find out what might be causing a problem.
Turns out one of the ornaments was actually a REPTILE
decoration, "treated with our special antimicrobial
coating!" (Insert expletive.)
<Yikes!><<Ah ha!>>
I can't blame EVERYTHING on the lizard log, though. While the
panting definitely started shortly after it was placed in the tank, the
hunger strike began several days before.
<Oh?>
I obtained a water conditioner that also removes copper and
other toxic metals.
<Good.>
They are still not eating. It's been a full week now, and the lack
of food can't be helping. I will continue to monitor water
conditions, of course, and probably continue with the water changes. I
am discouraged that they haven't improved since the removal of the
ammonia, the lizard log, and the subsequent water changes. Perhaps they
need more time? Perhaps they're too far gone? I guess we'll
find out.
<Indeed; with regular water changes, you should quickly flush out
any toxins in the tank. I'd also be aggressive about
cleaning/replacing substrate, removing ornaments for thorough cleaning,
and essentially reducing the tank down to as few variables as possible.
Perhaps even the glass tank, the filter, the heater, and a terracotta
pot for shelter.>
They were doing so well for many months, I thought I had their care all
figured out -- I didn't even think it was all that difficult! But
I've obviously failed them.
<Good luck, Neale.>
More RE: caring for my rope fish (Again Bob, any further
thoughts'¦?) 6/27/11
Tank is stripped down to one pot. Still changing water. Testing
continues to show zero ammonia.
The rope fishes' condition is unchanged -- two of them panting, one
of them appearing normal, none of them eating.
Should I be hopeful, since they're still hanging on? Or are they
just dying very, very slowly? In your experience, if they've lasted
this long, are they likely to recover?
<There is always that chance>
If it was clear they were going to die, I would be inclined to
euthanize them (although I'm not sure how), but I don't think I
could bring myself to do that if there's a chance they might turn
around.
<Patience. BobF>
More RE: caring for my rope fish (Again Bob, any further
thoughts'¦?) 6/27/11
Tank is stripped down to one pot. Still changing water. Testing
continues to show zero ammonia.
<Good.>
The rope fishes' condition is unchanged -- two of them panting, one
of them appearing normal, none of them eating.
<Indeed not, and unlikely to until they're happy.>
Should I be hopeful, since they're still hanging on? Or are they
just dying very, very slowly?
<Really difficult to say; if medication has caused damage to the
internal organs, could well be dying, but if the damage is stress and
something associated with that, or the damage slight, they may recover
in weeks, months.>
In your experience, if they've lasted this long, are they likely to
recover?
<Impossible to know.>
If it was clear they were going to die, I would be inclined to
euthanize them (although I'm not sure how),
<30 drops clove oil in a litre of aquarium water works well. Because
these are air-breathers, you'd need to hold them underwater so that
they didn't avoid the sedative by gulping air. In any event, could
take much longer than with other species (the usual is about a minute
to become comatose, and death within 10 minutes).>
but I don't think I could bring myself to do that if there's a
chance they might turn around.
<Quite so. Good luck, Neale.>
Re: More caring for my rope fish (Again Bob, any further
thoughts'¦?)<<>> 6/29/11
<<The ammonia is coming from the rope/s... Place in
larger volume; don't feed...>>
I moved the rope fish to a 15 gallon hospital tank yesterday. I put in
a heater and a sponge filter (the kind with an air pump attached). No
change in the fishes' condition.
<Oh dear.>
I checked ammonia in the hospital tank this morning, and was dismayed
to find it at almost 0.50 ppm. I'm truly baffled; I offer food at
the end of a stick (this is how I trained them to eat the tilapia
fillet when they first arrived) for a minute or so every day, but they
haven't taken it, and I don't leave it in there.
<Stop feeding.>
Where would the ammonia be coming from if they're not eating?
<Excretion'¦ or from the water. Do understand that if your
tap water contains Chloramine, it's possible to get
false-positives.>
It's been ten days since they've had any food. . .how could
they be producing that much waste?
<Do also review filtration.>
In any event, I did a 40% water change and added Zeolite chips.
<Zeolite will have some modest effect, but you need a lot for large
fish like these. I'd prefer to use biological filtration.>
I also added some Prime with an eyedropper, since Prime is supposed to
remove/detoxify ammonia, and was irked that it didn't bring the
ammonia down to zero. It's currently at 0.25 ppm. I will do another
water change in a few hours.
<Sounds exhausting.>
The local fish store told me that sometimes just moving them to a
hospital tank, and therefore removing them entirely from whatever was
making them sick in the main tank, can help them turn around. But since
the main tank has zero ammonia, I'm not sure that being in the
hospital tank is really doing them any favors.
Thoughts?
Thanks as always,
Jane
<I would tend to adopt a precautionary approach here. Assume the
biological filter has died for some reason. Treat the tank as being in
the cycling process. Use ammonia remover and Chloramine remover to
neutralise any ammonia and Chloramine in the tap water. Do 20-25% water
changes every 1-2 days. Don't feed except once every 3-4 days. If
they don't feed, remove the food within 10 minutes (it takes at
least that long for appreciable ammonia to be produced from food via
decay). Don't use Zeolite, as that'll hold back biological
filtration. Do rinse filter media thoroughly to make sure it is clean
and detritus-free. Do check the filter media you're using is
appropriate to the fish you have -- coarse media alone might not
support enough bacteria for messy fish. Do check the filter is
operating with good flow of water. Do check there's plenty of
oxygen in the water via circulation and/or air bubbles. Do direct the
outflow from the filter to maximise turbulence. Do add a temporary,
idiot-proof filter like a big-ass sponge filter if you have one. Do
remove any ailing plants, snails, etc. There's not much you can do
otherwise. At some point you might decide to cut your losses. Remove
healthy fish to another tank, if you have one, or to a friendly
retailer who'll babysit them (some will, if they know you and you
explain the situation). Else get in contact with a local fish club if
you can. Hope this helps, Neale.>
Re: More caring for my rope fish (Again Bob, any further
thoughts'¦?) 6/30/11
I've tested my tap water for ammonia, and it doesn't show any,
so I don't think I'm getting any false-positives due to
Chloramine.
<Good.>
I'm uncertain whether the recommendations at the end of your
message are meant to apply to the main tank, which now appears to be
the very picture of health, or the 15-gallon hospital tank, where the
rope fish have been for the past 24 hours. Either way, most of your
suggestions are already in effect for both tanks.
<Also good.>
What is "coarse media"? I have two filters in the main tank,
both containing a large sponge for mechanical filtration and a bag of
"bio-max" (a bunch of little ceramic-type sponges) for
biological filtration.
<Coarse media is merely media with a coarse grain, i.e., the
opposite of fine media. It's usually sold as the mechanical filter
or pre-filter, whereas the fine filter media is sold as the biological
media. In practise both work well at either job, but if you just have
coarse media your potential biological filtration will be marginally
less.>
In the hospital tank is a sponge filter w/ air bubbler. I was using the
Zeolite since the sponge is new and has no bacteria. I'd happily
borrow some of the established media from the main tank, except that I
haven't figured out how to get the sponge filter/air bubbler to
force the water through the borrowed media.
<I see.>
Everything else -- ammonia and Chloramine remover, water changes,
feeding, rinsed media, removal of snails (no ailing plants) -- is as
you recommend. Water flow and turbulence are better in the main tank
than in the hospital tank, due to their respective filter types, but I
do have the sponge filter/air bubbler in the hospital tank rigged up
for maximum flow and surface disturbance.
I'll let you know how things develop. . .
Thanks again,
Jane
<Sounds like you'll have to play the long game, and hope the
Ropefish recover. I really don't see any obvious flaws in your
approach thus far. Good luck, Neale.>
RE: More RE: caring for my rope fish (Again Bob, any further
thoughts'¦?)<<None>> 7/1/11
I am pleased to report that one of the ropes has made a dramatic
recovery! Not surprisingly, it was the one that never had visible
symptoms (panting, swelling, etc). He is back in the main tank and just
enjoyed two tiny pieces of krill. I figured, since he went eleven days
without eating, that I should take it easy re-introducing the food?
<Doesn't make much odds either way. No need to stuff food down
their throats, and certainly overfeeding can stress the water quality
aspect of things. But unlike warm-blooded animals, fish are well
adapted to feast and famine situations, so giving them too much food
won't cause them serious harm. Portions about the size of their
head would be ample.>
The rope that was the first to appear ill doesn't look very good,
unfortunately. She and the larger female, whose symptoms showed up
later, are still in the hospital tank. The larger female is looking
marginally better. I don't know which way they'll go, but right
now, I'm just happy that I haven't lost all three of them.
<Nothing to do but wait and see, really.>
The recovered male came from a different (and far better!) source than
the two females. Having had them for six months, would their origins
still be a factor in their health and/or resilience? Might their
genders be playing a role?
<Possibly. Among cichlids for example male fry tend to grow faster,
hog food, and generally do better through the critical few weeks. So
you can easily end up with mostly male fry. I've noticed a similar
thing with halfbeaks. There may well be slight differences in tolerance
for certain things when the two sexes are compared, but I'm not
aware of the science.>
On another note, I am thinking of exchanging my obnoxious purple gravel
for a tan-colored sand. I was watching the fish at the store picking
food out of the sand, and it looked like they were able to get at it
more easily than mine can through the gravel.
<I think sand is easier to keep clean, though it does show dirt more
quickly. You can use a turkey baster to pipette it out, of course, so a
good idea is to put the level of sand slightly lower at the front than
the back, so dirt collects at the front where you can see it.>
So, cleaner, right? I have one scavenger-type fish, an L333.
<You don't need a "cleaner fish" at all, and if
pushed, I'd recommend the excellent Tylomelania snails that burrow
through the sand, get to about 12 cm/4 inches long in the case of the
biggest species, and breed very slowly (and their offspring are easily
passed on to other aquarists). They don't eat plants. Assassin
Snails, Clea helena, would be another good choice. As for catfish, a
Corydoras like C. sterbai might work well (this species tolerates warm
water well) but my personal pick would be a loach species that will
plough through sand extracting any edibles. Cherry-Fin Loaches are good
kept singly, as are Horseface Loaches. Botiine loaches are a mixed bag,
some being rather aggressive, but the Yoyo Loach is generally
well-behaved if kept in reasonable numbers. In any event, yes,
Hypancistrus L333 will eat meaty foods though it is of course a useless
algae-eater and can be a bit sensitive.>
Also, when I tried to feed earthworms to the rope fish, the worms just
burrowed into the gravel with impressive speed. I had to dig them out
lest they drown and rot down there. Would the worms work better in the
sand?
<Assuming the worms are bite-size, yes, Ropefish should find them.
Do bear in mind Ropefish feed primarily on bloodworm-sized things.
Earthworms tend to be bigger than that.>
I thought I remembered reading that it's not a big deal to swap out
substrates, since I don't have an undergravel filter, and thus very
little of the biofilter is in the gravel. Any tips or suggestions for
depth, maintenance, and cleaning of the sand? I also seem to remember
reading something alarming about "anaerobic pockets"?
<Anaerobic pockets are not exactly a myth, but they are
misunderstood. In a tank with Ropefish and some burrowing fish or
snails, a depth of 0.5-1 inch will be sifted so thoroughly that
anaerobic decay won't happen.>
In addition to the ropes, the redfin Barbs, and the L333, I also have a
4-year-old albino Pristella tetra. If it matters. The tetra has
obviously adapted to the local hard water conditions.
<Pristella maxillaris actually comes from a wide range of habitats,
and can tolerate up to 35 degrees hardness and even slightly brackish
water in the wild! So yes, this is an EXCELLENT species for hard water
conditions.>
I am now going to have a very large vodka.
Thanks,
Jane
<Enjoy the drink! Cheers, Neale.>
Re: caring for my rope fish (Again Bob, any further
thoughts'¦?)<<Steady on>> 7/4.5/11
Still no change with the two sick fish.
<Not good.>
After more than two weeks without eating, if they died, I'm not
sure whether I would know if it was from their illness or from
starvation.
<Quite so.>
I was wondering, how quickly do they grow?
<Slowly.>
I don't think any of them have grown more than an inch or two in
the last six months.
<About right. Plus, Ropefish don't get anything like as big as
some books suggest. The scientific reports suggest lengths of up to
about 3 feet, but in aquaria most are about 12 inches in length. Even
Fishbase suggests a maximum length of 37 cm, about 14.5 inches.>
They currently range from 9 to 11 inches. Are they likely to get any
bigger in a 55 gallon?
<Nope. Cheers, Neale.>
More Re: caring for my rope fish 7/14/11
I thought I'd update you on the conclusion of the rope fish drama.
I wish it were a happier one.
<Oh?>
As I mentioned, one of the three rope fish recovered at home and has
been fine ever since. The other two were still sick, one worse than the
other. I talked to the store in Portland (Oregon) were I buy all my
livestock. They specialize in freshwater tropicals. They suggested I
bring in the sick ropes, and they would try to see if they could turn
them around.
The sickest one died a few days later, which wasn't surprising at
all. At the store they remarked on its yellow color. I had noticed the
color, of course, and always thought it was pretty, but they said
they'd never seen a yellow one before. Have you?
<They are orange below, but green on the sides and top.>
The other fish got better and started eating. Considering the
circumstances, I was delighted that two out of three made it through
the illness, whatever that was. I went to pick her up yesterday. . .but
she had escaped from her tank the previous night and died.
<Oh dear.>
It really breaks my heart. For the poor thing to have survived a
three-week illness, only to die by accident/carelessness?! Tragic.
<Indeed.>
I'm also a little ticked off, and kicking myself for not picking
her up just ONE DAY earlier. (My tank at home is very carefully sealed,
and I've never had an escape.) The store obviously felt bad about
it -- they have their own pet rope fish in one of their display tanks,
they should have known to seal the lid better -- and they replaced the
fish at no charge. The irony is that I would rather have paid for my
original fish ten times over than gotten new ones for free. I was
really very attached to them.
Trying to move on. . .I have question about feeding. The redfin Barbs
were extremely piggy eaters, and I always had to stand there and chase
them off with a net so the rope fish could get some food. I also think
they were getting too big for my 55-gallon tank, running into the glass
and such. I exchanged them for a small school of Bleeding Heart Tetras.
I chose the Bleeding Hearts over the Pristellas simply because they get
bigger and would be less likely to end up as rope fish snacks.
<Actually, I'd be surprised if the X-Rays got molested, but your
approach is wise.>
Now, I THOUGHT that tetras only ate out of the water column and would
not gobble food off the floor, but these were eating the rope
fishes' food before I could even blink. I can always continue with
the net-waving system, but it's a pain, and it seems invasive. Any
suggestions? Do rope fish eat from the surface in the wild?
<Not so far as I know. In the wild they feed in very shallow water
where there's a mix of terrestrial vegetation, aquatic vegetation,
and some few inches of water. They slither through this, often moving
from pool to pool, rather like snakes. In any event, they're
nocturnal, so adapted to feed at night.>
Would I have better luck if I floated the food instead of sinking
it?
<Do try feeding small morsels of meaty foods at night, perhaps
chunks of lancefish, tilapia fillet, cockles, and the occasional slice
of squid or prawn. All things being equal, tetras won't be able to
find these, and the Ropes will feed in peace.>
By the way, I looked up Neale Monks online, and was truly
impressed with your background! It's wonderful that you
(all of you, really) take the time to share your expertise like this. I
appreciate it more than I can say.
Regards,
Jane
<Thanks for the very kind words. Cheers, Neale.>
Erpetoichthys; health 3/24/11
Hello,
I read your web site all the time! And I have a question for you.
<Fire away!>
I have had my rope fish for a couple months now. A few weeks ago he was
no longer able to swim to the bottom of the aquarium.
<Curious, and usually implies a problem with Bichirs and Ropefish.
Perhaps stress and secondary infections can make it difficult for them
to submerge properly.>
So I did research and found that it was a swim bladder disorder. So we
went to local aquatic specialist and they told us the same thing
<Ropefish don't have swim bladders, so this is unlikely the
problem. Let me say here that "swim bladder disorder" is one
of the most meaningless statements in the hobby, and almost never
mentioned by experts. It's something beginners latch onto, as well
as retailers who simply haven't kept up with the hobby since they
learned the basics thirty years ago!
Honestly, it doesn't mean anything.>
and that there is nothing we can do for him and as long as he is still
eating he will live. We have been hand feeding him blood worms but
starting 2 days ago he would no longer take it.
<They do need a more diverse diet than this. Bloodworms are not rich
in nutrients. Like all carnivores, the problem is that many cheap foods
are rich in thiaminase, and used over the long term (several months)
fish can end up with Vitamin B1 deficiency is fed primarily
thiaminase-rich foods like prawns and mussels. Instead their diet needs
to be focused on thiaminase-free foods: tilapia fillet, cockles,
earthworms.>
I woke up this morning to find him completely swollen. His entire body
is really big except for his face.
<Sounds like a systemic bacterial infection. Because Ropefish swim
close to the bottom they're particularly sensitive to stress caused
by poor circulation. You see the same thing in other bottom-dwellers
like Corydoras and loaches.>
I know it's probably too late for him and it brakes my heart to see
him, but is there anything at all you would recommend?
<Do need data on your aquarium for any sort of analysis here. But to
recap, sources of stress/damage will include indifferent water quality,
a poor diet, the use of feeder fish, maintenance as a singleton rather
than in groups, gravel instead of sand, insufficient hiding places,
nippy/aggressive tankmates including Suckermouth catfish, Chinese algae
eaters, etc. Do read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/polypterids.htm
>
Even if it helps a little. The Ph is at 7 and there is about 1/2 a
teaspoon of aquarium salt per gallon, 0 ammonia and 0 nitrite, just in
case you need to know.
Thank you for your time, and take care
Gina
<Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
<PS. Should have said: Since Ropefish breathe air, they're also
sensitive to airborne pollutants, e.g., paint fumes, tobacco smoke, bug
spray, etc. Cheers, Neale.>
Rope fish hlth., env., reading 2/21/11
I have done quite a lot of research on the web.
I have owed <owned> several reed fish, a few have escaped, but
most died from an Ick like disease.
This seems to cause a thickening of the slime coat and I can see silver
patches and it just gets worse from here, eventually leading to
death.
<Quite common source of mortality... mostly borne by effects of
capture...>
I have three new ones that I am treating with Maracyn 2 and they are
fine now.
Once placed in the community tank they seem to become ill after a few
days.
I have not tested my water quality,
<?>
because I have a healthy, happy discus fish.
<... Erpetoichthys have other requirements>
I was told if my discus was healthy they water should be.
<See fishbase.org or just WWM re>
In the past when I tested my water it was clean and stable. None of the
other fish in the community tank bothering them.
Do you have any suggestions, or should I return them to the store if I
notice them becoming ill again?
Thanks so much;
Linda
<And read here: http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/polypterids.htm
and the linked files above, and here:
http://fishbase.sinica.edu.tw/Summary/SpeciesSummary.php?ID=4830
Bob Fenner>
Re: rope fish 2/21/11
> <Quite common source of mortality... mostly borne by effects
of
> capture...>
> I have not tested my water quality,
> <?>
> <And read here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/polypterids.htm
> and the linked files above, and here:
>
http://fishbase.sinica.edu.tw/Summary/SpeciesSummary.php?ID=4830
> Bob Fenner>
Umm, Linda?
Re: Ropefish, hlth., sys. 2/19/11
Hi Neale. Tragedy stuck my rope - he escaped the quarantine tank
- somehow - I had a tight lid with things sitting on it to hold
it down. We can't figure it out.
<It is remarkable how good at escaping they are. A couple of
approaches you could use are to stop up any gaps with filter
floss, or to use a deep tank and only half fill it, so it's
more difficult for the Ropefish to slither upwards. They
can't climb like snakes, and instead rely on being able to
swim to the surface and then stick their heads out a little way
into any crevices. Anything that gets between their heads and an
opening will help keep them in the tank.>
So I worked it out with the local fish store so that when they
got new ropes in, they would treat/quarantine them so I
didn't have to put them in the QT tank. They did that and as
I purchased them, they casually mentioned they got them from a
guy who was peddling them and they had to treat them for
something. They said they used Lifegard All-in-One on them for
nearly 2 weeks and they looked good. I was a little concerned but
thought that treating them should have eliminated the risks. So I
brought them home and acclimated them carefully to my 150 gal
tank and they have done great except they were carrying Ich and
now we are losing a lot of our other fish as a result. It's
sickening. The fish store staff are trying to say it's just
related to stress or temp change and not something that is their
fault. I have brought many fish home and never had this happen. I
feel they should help replace some of the fish. What is your
opinion?
<Whitespot is one of those things that retailers struggle with
all the time. If properly quarantined, they shouldn't
introduce Whitespot to your aquarium. So if they did, then they
either didn't medicate them correctly, or they didn't
wait long enough for the Whitespot to complete its life cycle --
remember, the medication doesn't kill the parasites on the
fish, only the free-living stages, which is why you keep fish
extra warm when treating for Whitespot to speed up the maturation
of the parasites from the "in the fish" stage to the
"swimming in the water" stage. In any event, a
combination of salt and heat should deal with Whitespot very
effectively.
Note that Ropefish tolerate brackish water well, rather better
than they tolerate copper or formalin, so that should guide you
when medicating.>
We have not had Ich since 2008 and have a u/v filter with a
recent bulb, so I know it came from the ropes. I am hoping they
will be ok. I have the temp up to 82, increased the aeration, and
am putting Paraguard (Seachem) in daily. I have Chemi-Pure Elite
in the filter and the water is clear. One of the ropes is hiding
a lot so I can't tell how he's doing but one is acting
odd - he has a bare strip on his side which makes me think he
brushed up against the heater and got burned. His tail is also
whitish and has a red something on it - not sure where their anus
is, but it looks like he has blood blister hanging there.
It's fairly small but awful looking. I don't know if
it's a parasite or what. I took a bunch of pictures and
inserted one below hoping you can see it. I didn't want to
stress him too much with the flash.
<Nothing came through. Do remember to send images that
aren't too big -- 500 KB is fine. Use iPhoto or something to
reduce the size of the images from your camera. In any case, yes,
you do need a heater guard around the heater. You might treat
with an antibiotic rather than copper or formalin.
Burns and blisters should heal in time even without medications,
but damage to the anus is more serious if it prevents the fish
defecating. The anus is close to the beginning of the anal fin in
these fish.>
By the way, you are right, the ropes are so much happier as a
pair.
<Yes. The bigger the group, the funner they are, and the less
likely they are to escape.>
They have been so fun to watch. I so hope they survive. I ordered
some other fish online from a reputable dealer and they pretty
much all died from shipping stress. Don't think I'll do
that again. I got some replacements locally and they have done
great - I know it's not me creating all this mess. I am
keeping these other fish in quarantine until the Ich is gone.
Needless to say, I'm very frustrated. Anything you can
suggest? I don't really see Ich on the ropes. I have clown
loaches so I am limited in some of my treatment options.
<Indeed, but salt/heat is harmless to Clowns too, and the
preferred method for treatment.>
Thanks very much, Kimber
<Cheers, Neale.>
|
The end is near...
|
Re: Ropefish 2/20/11
Thanks very much for your quick reply. My rope seems to be dying
- he was just floating with the current in the tank and I thought
he was dead, so I went to net him and he swam into the
decor where he is mostly staying which concerns me
because I know he needs oxygen. I'm so disheartened. Is there
anything I can do? Moving him would be so stressful.
<I would agree he's dying; this looks like a systemic
bacterial infection of some sort. Antibiotics might help, but I
wouldn't bet a lot of money on it. Euthanasia might be
better; 30 drops of clove oil in a litre of aquarium water should
work quickly, but be sure the Ropefish is kept underwater. If he
breathes air, he could survive in this mixture indefinitely.
Clove oil is a sedative, and usually works painlessly and
effectively, but allow 10 minutes after the last sign of gill
movements before declaring the fish dead. Being a low metabolism
air-breather, I'd allow even more time for this fish, perhaps
an hour or more, and wouldn't remove it until I was
absolutely certain it was dead and non-responsive.>
I checked the water and there is just trace ammonia, no nitrites,
40 ppm nitrates, pH 7.6. I put a small amount of salt in but I
have a Cory cat and have read they don't like salt.
<Corydoras tolerate the 2 g salt/litre of water needed to
treat Whitespot just fine. The idea they're
'allergic' to salt comes from a misconception about how
osmoregulation works. It's commonly stated by inexperienced
aquarists on forums and whatnot. I have treated tanks with
Corydoras with salt many times and never had problems. Yes,
Corydoras shouldn't be kept in brackish water, but 2 g/l is
far below what's considered brackish.>
I would move him to a different tank, but that tank has other
fish in it. Don't want to infect them.
<Indeed.>
To prevent escape, I actually bought screen mesh for windows and
taped it to the tank with gorilla tape; just leaving a small hole
for the inlet tube of the filter. Airlines, etc. were taped down
with mesh over them. I put the lid over that and held it down
with weighted objects. No one escaped that! It was a pain to work
with, but worked.
<Yes, you do need to be creative with this fish, and their
relatives, the Bichirs.>
See the picture I attached. Thank you!
<Grim indeed. Good luck, Neale.>
Re: Ropefish 2/21/11
Did you say you thought maybe it could be a bacterial infection
because of his pale tale or the red area?
<Neale is "out"... The "infection" on your
Rope is secondary... not a principal issue>
Our African knifefish has a pale tale <tail> now. We have
lost well over half our fish now but the Ich seems to be dropping
off.
<... through what treatment?>
The Cory has done ok with the salt. Thank you for clarifying. Do
I replace any of the salt after I clean the tank tomorrow? Your
help has been awesome! Thanks!!!
Kimber
<Read here: http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwich.htm
and the pertinent linked files above. Bob Fenner>
Re: Ropefish 2/21/11
I am using Paraguard by Seachem.
<A good product; but what again leads you to believe your
fish/es are parasitized?>
Do you think the secondary issues of their loss of color on their
tail could be due to Ich or would that be more likely a bacterial
infection?
<? Could be just physical or chemical... IF bacterial,
secondary>
We have lost so many fish - some before we saw the Ich - that I
think we are dealing with multiple issues. The first fishes to
die were some of our toughest catfish. They lost their color and
had respiratory distress but we did not see much if any Ich.
<Sometimes goes unnoticed... the manifestations are
secondary... i.e., you're not seeing the actual pathogens,
but the fish's mucus irritated reactions>
I don't know when it will be safe to bring the new fish in
from quarantine. Obviously not for a week or so.
I will do a gravel vacuum today and hope the u/v filter kills the
rest of the Ich.
<This it will not do. READ where I referred you to>
Should I put more salt in after I change the water?
<... please. Don't write: READ>
Do I need to be using something else to deal with the secondary
infection?
Thank you so much!
Kimber
<B>
Re: Ropefish 2/22/11
He died but the other one is very active and so far appears ok. I
will add some salt and do a water change today since we lost two
Bala sharks last night, too. I am hoping the Ich is releasing
now. Then I will add some salt. Just one time for salt or after
each water change or???
<Make up enough salt for the entire tank, say 2 g/l. So if
it's a 100 litre tank, 200 grams in a jug of warm tap water.
Pour this into the tank over an hour, perhaps in 4-5 portions, so
the fish can react to the slight change in salinity. Once done,
turn the heater up to 28 C (use the thermometer in your tank to
check it really is 28 C, and adjust heater up or down
accordingly). Leave running like this for 2 weeks, with no water
changes. After 2 weeks, you should be done. Do a regular 20-25%
water change without
adding any more salt. After a month or so, all the water should
be flushed out.>
Thanks again!
Kimber
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Ropefish 2/23/11
Thank you Neal! I took the surviving rope back today, so the
remaining fish appear to be without Ich. The fish store said it
wasn't their fault although they knew it had parasites and
was actively treating it when they
sold it to me and said it was fine. We lost 20 fish! They'd
never heard of Paraguard and said it was harsh on the fish,
obviously insinuating it was the Paraguard and not the massive
Ich outbreak that caused the fin rot and hemorrhaging. Your help
has been great!
<Glad to help. Your local fish shop guy has a point in saying
Seachem Paraguard is hard on the fish, but then so too are
virtually all fish medications, especially those containing
copper and formalin. Some of the
dyes, particularly malachite green, are quite nasty chemicals
too. This is why Bob and I stress the use of heat or heat/salt
combinations where viable, as well as preventative care, e.g.,
quarantining and good diet.
Ropefish are very primitive fish, and primitive fish generally
show a low tolerance for medications designed for use on tetras,
barbs, and other community fish. It's a good idea to choose
medications stated to be safe with sharks and rays if you want to
treat Ropefish or bichirs. Cheers, Neale.>
|
Ropefish illness? Costiasis? Ancistrus incomp.
12/11/10
Hi, you have helped me in the past with my Ropefish to beat Ich, and it
is greatly appreciated. I now have another issue with my Ropefish. I
cannot send you a picture, but it has discoloration like the Ropefish
pictured on your "Ropefish Health" link. There are three
places that are about 1/4 inch in size, one on each side of its tail
fin and one an inch up from it's tail. The scales are just slightly
whiter than the surrounding ones. I read through the first post on that
page, and I did just recently add an Albino Bristlenose to the
aquarium, so I thought maybe it was sucking on the Ropefish. However, I
am concerned because the Ropefish has been scratching violently against
a rock, but only up around it's head and the first couple inches.
It makes me think something is irritating it's gills?
Can you prescribe a course of action?
Stats: Ropefish 10 inches long. 55 gal with a HOB filter. Ammonia 0,
Nitrite 0, Nitrate 5, PH 7.8, hard water, Temp 77-78 F. Water change
15-20% weekly. Feed, almost entirely blood worms, rarely tilapia, and I
just recently fed some frozen brine shrimp. Actually, the issue and the
first use of brine shrimp were about the same time, possible cause?
Tank livestock for the last three months: "Ropefish",
One-stripe eel, 6 Giant Danios. Two weeks ago I added an additional
Ropefish 9", and the Albino Bristlenose. They were quarantined for
two weeks and showed no signs of issues then or since being placed in
the new tank. The two Ropefish do not spend time around each other.
They both seem to prefer to curl up with the eel, but only one at a
time.
Thank you for your help.
Nick
<Hello Nick. Generally Ancistrus spp. catfish behave themselves very
well, so while it's always possible these or any other of the
Loricariidae might nibble on the flanks of Bichirs and Ropefish, I
think the likelihood in this situation is small. If you can, isolate
the Ancistrus, but my gut feeling is that Costiasis, "Slime
Disease", is more likely the issue. There are a variety of
medications that will treat Costia, though I prefer to use them
alongside seawater dips.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fwfishmeds.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/SaltUseFWArtNeale.htm
I think your observation about the two Ropefish curling up with the
Macrognathus aral is interesting. It clearly reveals how these Ropefish
enjoy company, but like other gregarious fish, when kept in too-small
a
group, their schooling behaviour can present itself in odd ways.
As/when your Ropefish gets better, do try adding one or two more
specimens. Please, do also vary their diet rather more. Bloodworms
contain very little nutrition. Use them once or twice a week, sure, but
do also feed (at night if needs be) tilapia fillet, cockles, prawns,
squid, earthworms. The more variety, the less the risk of vitamin
deficiency, and needless to say, after a few months of a monotonous
diet, it's perfectly possible for vitamin deficiency to present
symptoms superficially similar to parasitic, bacterial infections.
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Ropefish illness? 12/11/10
Thank you for the quick response. Please clarify the following: If it
is slime disease, can it heal itself given good nutrition and
conditions, or will it die eventually if nothing is done? The areas
have not spread since
three days ago when I noticed it. Can the salt dip cure it by itself,
or is the medication necessary as well? Will adding salt to the
aquarium, like treating for Ich, help with the condition?
<Unfortunately, the Costia parasite needs a much higher salinity to
be killed than the Ick parasite, so no, the usual 2 grammes/litre salt
concentration used for treating Ick won't work. As stated in the
article I
linked you too, high salinities will work, but it's questionable
whether your fish will tolerate such conditions. That said, you might
try a middle ground salinity that Ropefish and Spiny Eels will
tolerate, around 5-6
grammes/litre, whilst ALSO doing daily seawater dips at 35 g/l.
Seawater dips can sometimes cure Costia by themselves.>
I have been trying to add Ropefish and another eel for some time, but I
had to setup another tank, then cycle it, then keep the new fish in it.
And one of the quarantined Ropefish died during that period. I have
patience enough to add fish properly, I just hope my fish's health
is patient enough to wait that long.
Thanks,
Nick
<Good luck. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Ropefish illness? 12/11/10
Since everything is on the back 2 inches of the fish, would it be
better or worse to just dip the tail into the mixture?
<No. The parasites, if this is Costia, will be all over the fish.
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Ropefish illness? 12/13/10
I just did a dip, and it looked pretty rough on the Ropefish.
<It is indeed unpleasant, essentially a chemotherapy for fish. Like
chemo, it works because it kills the parasite before it kills the fish,
but yes, timing is everything, and it isn't any fun at all. The
good news is that
once returned to freshwater, the fish should recover very
quickly.>
After laying in the net for about five minutes back in her home, she
took a couple laps and settled under a rock. Then I saw the
Albino Bristlenose sucking all over the Ropefish. I
kept pushing it away and it would come back and suck on it again and
again. So, maybe that is the issue instead of slime disease?
<Does sound like it!>
However, as much as it looked like it wanted to suck on it, I find it
hard to believe that I wouldn't have seen this before at all.
<Not if happening at night.>
Especially since the Bristlenose was in a 10 gal quarantine with the
recently added Ropefish and I never saw it do that and there were never
any marks on that Ropefish. Could the sucker be attracted to the salt
on it, or sense that the Ropefish is currently hurting and it is taking
advantage?
<Possibly.>
Please let me know what you think, because I am ready to make the
Bristlenose a permanent resident of the quarantine tank.
<I'd do that anyway, simply to zero out that variable. If the
Ropefish gets better, then that's the main thing. Whether it's
the catfish or Slime Disease is interesting but not particularly
important. Treat for Slime
Disease, move the Ancistrus, and then see what happens!>
Thanks,
Nick
<Cheers, Neale.>
Ropefish, trouble. Hlth. 11/28/10
Hi. I have a Ropefish
<"A" Ropefish will be an unhappy Ropefish; these are
social animals -- keep in groups of three or more.>
who is having some strange coloring. I read the links and saw
some others describing similar concerns but the reasons did not
seem to apply here. We have not added any new fish in quite some
time. The only problem I know of is that I was gone for a few
months over the summer and the person watching the fish overfed
them and did not clean the aquarium enough. Thus, there was some
stress and we lost a couple sensitive fish. This discoloration
problem seems to have begun recently, though, and not during that
time period.
<Agreed.>
For background, I tested the water tonight and the nitrates are
at 20, pH about 7.2, no nitrites or ammonia, temp 76 and the
water is clear.
<Sounds fine.>
There is one live plant and lots of hiding spots!
<But no company of its own kind. Although I doubt that your
fish is sick because he's lonely, his loneliness will cause
stress, and stress WILL make an otherwise healthy fish
sick.>
We have a canister filter that is for tanks bigger than ours, so
no problems there. I keep Chemipure Elite (grande) in it and
change it regularly. We have well water. There are 2 powerheads
with air lines and an air stone. Our tank is 150 gal and has
mostly barbs and small catfish (including 4 small Plecos), with a
few Bala sharks and Gourami, a small clown loach, one Ropefish,
one African knifefish, and one "rubber eel"
(Typhlonectes natans).
<An amphibian, and a poor companion for fish
generally.>
Everyone generally gets along and we rarely lose a fish, so the
water is stable most of the time.
<Plecs and Ropefish are not really compatible. A very real
problem with the Bichir family generally is that their heavy
armour makes them slow-moving, and Plecs are among those fish
that opportunistically scrape at their bodies, presumably to eat
the mucous. Long term, this damages the skin, initially causing
discoloured patches but eventually sites of infection. I would
not recommend mixing Bichirs with Plecs except the most strictly
herbivorous species, such as Panaque. Generalist genera, such as
Hypostomus and Pterygoplichthys, as well as carnivorous Plecs
like Acanthicus, are definitely worth avoiding!>
Our Ropefish has been in there for a few years and has done well.
He at least a foot long.
<Okay.>
He eagerly eats frozen mostly bloodworms and Tubifex worms, and
some dried shrimp (not daily). He is quite active periodically
throughout the day. He is very protective of his food and swims
to the corner with it or hides, but I don't think he is
underfed. He has grown a few inches this year and gotten a little
wider. Our catfish stay mostly on the bottom, so he will swim to
the corners away from them. He seems to fare well. He also comes
out of his favorite hiding spots periodically during the day and
will eat whenever we put food in. We have been considering some
buddies for him and got rid of a few fish that were bigger and a
bit rowdy so the tank would be less stressful and we would have
room for more ropes. I know they prefer to be in a group. I could
only find them locally for $20+ and couldn't afford to get
3.
<I can't speak for the US, but in the UK the average price
for a Ropefish is about 8 UK pounds, or about 13 US dollars. So
while a little pricey, these are wild-caught fish and never going
to be as cheap as Guppies.>
Recently, he has shown white-ish discoloration on his back but is
still swimming and eating.
<Does sound like physical damage. Remove the Plecs to another
aquarium and see what happens.>
Not sure if his activity has changed - maybe a little. We have
not added any fish so it's not Ick. It does not look velvety
or fluffy. It just looks like his skin has changed colors. We
found a long, translucent piece of something that looked a little
like plastic in the tank last week and wondered if he had shed
his skin or something.
<No, they don't shed their skin, but your Caecilian does,
as I hope you realise.>
It is the same as it was last week - not significantly worse or
better. His tail appears to be normal. I added some Stress Coat
twice last week in case his slime coat was inadequate,
<Stress Coat is a fairly pointless product outside of
retail.>
did a 40% or so water change and gravel vac, and added some
aquarium salt - not enough to make it brackish.
<Ropefish do in fact inhabit slightly brackish habitats in
parts of their range, and 2-3 grammes of marine salt mix per
litre can be a useful tonic when displaying signs of stress,
though it's not essential by any means.
Otherwise, salt is very misunderstood and often used without any
real purpose in mind. Do read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/SaltUseFWArtNeale.htm
>
I've attached pictures of him and would appreciate any help.
We enjoy watching him and are planning to get a quarantine tank
up and going soon for his new friends but want to make sure he is
ok... Thanks!!!!
<He's clearly exposed to something irritating in the
water. Perhaps the Plec, if the other fish look good. Do review
water quality and also diet, by themselves bloodworms aren't
enough! You need to be providing a rich mix including earthworms,
strips of tilapia fillet, cockles, plus occasional mussels and
prawns. The more variety the better, and with carnivores, if you
aren't offering at least 5 different things, then you're
likely on the road to malnutrition. The more diverse the diet,
the better. Do read about thiaminase here at WWM.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_6/volume_6_1/thiaminase.htm
Otherwise, this fish is on the slippery slope to death. What you
have here is a very common situation when Ropefish and Bichirs
generally aren't kept adequately. Do read, understand their
needs, and then act accordingly.
Bichirs react poorly to many medications, so prevention, and if
necessary the INFORMED use of salt, antibiotics will help with
long-term maintenance significantly. Do read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/polypterids.htm
Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
|
|
Re: Ropefish 11/30/10
Wow - such great information. Thanks!
<My pleasure.>
I have tried to research fish before I go to the store but when
you see something cool like the eel, and they say it's a
community creature, you think it's ok.
<The problem is that a "community fish" may or may
not work in a community depending on the size of its tankmates,
its diet, its social behaviour, and its water chemistry
requirements. Angelfish are great community fish, but they view
Neon Tetras a food. Likewise, Platies are excellent community
fish, but their need for relatively cool, hard, basic water makes
them incompatible with Ram Cichlids. Oscars are outstanding
community fish by the standards of big cichlids, but their sheer
size limits their tankmates to other large fish.>
A mistake - I know now. I am looking at the Plecos in our tank
and we have one long-term member - the clown Pleco (Panaque), and
3 Bristlenose Pleco (Ancistrus temminckii). The Bristlenose
Plecos were added about 5 months ago. Since those are algae
eaters/herbivores, I would think they would be ok. No?
<These should be okay. Panaque are generally very harmless and
almost entirely herbivorous, and I'd be very surprised if
Ancistrus caused problems. But still, if you have the option of
moving either the Ropefish
or the Plecs, try it, and see what happens.>
The rope has a big shark head that he loves and can hide in. The
entrance is tiny, so the other fish can't sneak in. I'd
be amazed if he was getting nibbled on by the Plecos if he can
hide. Do you think?
<It's possible, and it does happen.>
I will work on getting him more variety as far as food. Do I just
buy fresh/frozen seafood at the grocery store for him? I would be
concerned about some that have preservatives.
<Fresh or frozen seafood good enough for humans is fine for
fish. There are plenty of preservatives in flake food, and no-one
worries! What Americans call "market shrimp" is
somewhat acceptable, but so rich in thiaminase I wouldn't use
more than once or twice a week. Tilapia fillet, by contrast, is
very cheap and easy to use. Buy a fresh fillet, slice into
worm-sized strip or chunks that the Ropefish could swallow easily
-- 5-10 mm long by 2-3 mm wide -- and freeze these in tin foil or
an old ice cream carton.
Remove, defrost, and use as required. As it happens, loaches and
catfish will enjoy these too. You can use tilapia and other
thiaminase-free foods, such as cockles, as often as you
want.>
I have heard that the eel is not a good companion (after I bought
him) but am not sure what the issue is. What is the problem?
He's been growing and seems to be thriving.
<The thing with amphibians generally, whether caecilians,
newts or aquatic frogs, is that their requirements and those of
fish tend not to completely overlap. Some people have kept
caecilians with small fish, but as you know caecilians are
predators, and like all amphibians they have very delicate skins,
so larger fish can damage them by accident or otherwise. If your
caecilians are happy, then all well and good. But that certainly
isn't the usual situation, and experienced amphibian keepers
will usually recommend you keep them in their own aquarium where
their specific needs can be more easily ensured.>
I'm guessing the other fish must be eating the eel's
shedding skin because if we do see something like that floating,
it disappears quickly. I'm amazed we have not seen it more
often. But our tank is pretty big and there are lots of places
for things to get lost!
<Indeed.>
Thanks for the links. I have done some reading on controversies
over salt and also thiaminase. But I'm sure I can learn more!
I appreciate your help!
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Ropefish 12/2/10
Thanks again for the info. I don't have a 2nd tank up and
going. Would it be better to put the rope in a tank that has not
cycled through yet and risk the nitrogen/ammonia levels
increasing temporarily, or leave him where he is for a few weeks
until it has cycled and then put him in? Don't want to wait
too long and lose him. We have a few small Pictus cats, a small
bumblebee cat, and a medium Featherfin cat. Will these bother the
rope? We watched him a lot last night - he was pretty active -
and he didn't seem to be scraping his back on anything - the
tubes we have are wide and he stays in the middle. We'll keep
watching and I'll get him some tilapia today.
Will be fun to watch him get excited about that!
<I would never move a fish to hospital tank that wasn't AT
LEAST as healthy as the one the fish was already in. What would
be the point? It'd just make a bad situation worse. It
isn't clear to me precisely what has harmed your Ropefish,
and if it isn't the Suckermouth Catfish species, then you
might want to look at territorial or aggressive behaviours on the
parts of any other catfish or cichlids in the tank he's with.
You could try adding a little salt to the water, perhaps 2-3
grammes/litre. This shouldn't stress its tankmates, but may
help speed up the healing process. Ropefish tolerate salt well
because they come from slightly brackish deltaic regions of West
Africa. They don't need salt, but it can help in some
situations. You might also read up on Slime Disease, also known
as Costiasis. This isn't a particularly common disease, but
its symptoms do include patches of grey slime on the body, in
extreme cases with raw or bloody skin underneath. Treating Slime
Disease can be tricky because Ropefish and Bichirs generally
react badly to copper- and formalin-based medications. On the
other hand, saltwater dips together with salt in the water can
help. While 3-5 g/l in the tank won't harm your Ropefish, it
will stress salt-intolerant
freshwater fish, so this may/may not be an option depending on
the tankmates. As ever, a cycled, healthy hospital tank is a big
plus.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/SaltUseFWArtNeale.htm
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Ropefish, hlth. 12/5/10
Thank you. I have a tank cycling and when it's ready, I will
put him in there. It appears as if the grayness is spreading up
further. He still is active and eating. I'll check back in
when I have an update. Thank you again!
<Do try treating with an antibiotic and add some salt to the
water, up to 5 grammes/litre, to see if that helps slow down/stop
the skin infection. Antibiotics will deal with bacterial
infections -- hopefully -- and salt can slow down certain skin
parasites such as Costia. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Ropefish
Will do. I so appreciate it!
<You're welcome and good luck. Cheers, Neale.>
|
What is wrong with my Reed fish? -- 10/28/10
Can you please help me, my Reed fish's tail seems to be preventing
it from swimming around freely. This has also led the fish to
'spin' in distress.
Please see the attached video. Your assistance would be greatly
received.
<Hello Matthew. Please don't send videos, especially not oddball
formats used on cellphones. A JPEG photo is much better, and be sure to
reduce the file size down to about 500 KB per image using whatever
image software you have on your computer. We don't have the time or
bandwidth to deal with bigger attachments. As for what might be the
problem, Ropefish are sensitive to certain chemicals including copper
and formalin, so check you haven't used medications containing
them. Also be sure basic water quality and chemistry are acceptable: 0
ammonia, 0 nitrite, pH around 7 and a hardness between 5 and 20 degrees
dH. Although they don't need it, they will tolerate slightly
brackish conditions well and the use of salt at low doses, around 2-3
grammes per litre, can be helpful when treating Whitespot and certain
other external parasites. Ropefish are very prone to starvation and
malnutrition because they are slow, carnivorous feeders. A common way
to kill any predatory fish is to feed it feeder fish, so make sure
you
haven't used any. Certain other live foods can be risky, most
notoriously Tubifex worms which can carry the parasite that causes
Whirling Disease.
Mussels, prawns and several other seafoods contain Thiaminase, and if
these are used too frequently vitamin B1 deficiency can cause
neurological damage. Ropefish should be fed primarily Thiaminase-free
foods: cockles, earthworms, tilapia fillet, krill and bloodworms. Do
read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_6/volume_6_1/thiaminase.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fdgfdrartneale.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/polypterids.htm
Starvation is a common problem when any of these slow-moving, nocturnal
carnivores are kept with catfish or loaches, so don't combine with
such; instead keeping them with day-active midwater fish of appropriate
size and temperament. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: What is wrong with my Reed fish?
Thanks for your help.
<You're welcome. Cheers, Neale.>
Rope Fish Healthy Behavior? - 10/14/10
Hello,
I have a question about Rope Fish behavior as a sign of health. I
don't see any major concerns, but I don't want to be one of the
people writing a question about my fish that just died. I have had the
Rope for six days (9' long). The first three days it was very
active and would swim all around the aquarium and then rest under
something, and then do it again several times while I'm watching.
The last three days it has been barely active. It rests under a
plant/cave and only goes to the surface sometimes for a breath. I have
seen it eat black worms three times, but yesterday it was not
interested at all. It has no other signs of stress or disease other
than it changed behavior. My main concern is that it was the same time
my tank showed a reading of .02 ammonia. I did a 10-12% water change
which brought it to zero for a day. Then again today it is at .01 and I
will do another water change. Here is the background information. I
have a 55 gal. tank that is fairly new. It has lots of hiding and live
plants. I was cycling it with six Giant Danios. I never got any ammonia
readings for two weeks. I then read that this could be what is called
'silent cycling', because the aquarium was heavily planted. I
do not have any sort of air bubbling device, because I assume the
filter dumping water back into the tank, and the plants would produce
enough oxygen. So, now its tank mates are 6 Giant Danios, 1 Iridescent
Shark, and 1 One-Stripe eel 7'(new at the same time). The water
parameters are 77 degrees, PH 7.8, zero Nitrite & Nitrate, ammonia
.01(the last couple days only). Is this just normal Rope behavior? Is
the ammonia the problem? Should I use an ammonia binding agent, or just
keep changing the water? Also, the Eel almost did the exact opposite.
It mostly hid the first three days, and the last three has been
actively swimming through the tank. I don't think they bother each
other, because they will rest under the same cave together. Also, none
of the other fish spend any significant time at the bottom of the tank.
I have done tons of web searches before and after buying anything,
however, if you could point me to a resource that lists healthy and
normal behaviors for fish types, then I would at least know the
difference between healthy and stressed. Your help is greatly
appreciated.
Nick
<Hello Nick. In a nutshell, happy Ropefish lurk in caves in small
groups, often with their heads poking out but otherwise bundled up
together in a big ball. Yes, they will side-wind up to the surface
periodically to breathe, but during the day they are essentially
resting. They are most active at night, when they hunt, by smell, for
small worms, crustaceans and insect larvae (these latter making up
almost entirely their diet in the wild). Common stress factors in
aquaria include lack of company (treat them as schooling fish, and keep
at least three specimens); aggressive tankmates (some fish nip their
fins); and lack of the right sorts of food (mostly wet-frozen insect
larvae, chopped seafood, and the occasional earthworm). While ammonia
isn't good for any fish, Ropefish are fairly resilient fish so
should get through the next few weeks assuming regular water changes
and careful feeding. In fact the usual sources of mortality are, in
this order, escaping from the tank and starvation. Forget about plants
as a source of oxygen: unless you have intense lighting, the overall
impact of photosynthesis on oxygen levels in the tank will be trivial.
A good canister or external filter should circulate water sufficiently
well you don't need an airstone. Ropefish are air breathers anyway,
and actually live in swamps, so the Spiny Eel and Danios will be
stressed by lack of oxygen long before the Ropefish. Your Iridescent
Shark is going to be a monster, and has no place in this aquarium.
Please Google "Pangasius hypophthalmus" and take a look at
how big these fish can get. Even under aquarium conditions you can
expect this catfish to reach 20 cm/8 inches within a year, and 60 cm/24
inches within 2-3 years. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Rope Fish Healthy Behavior? - 10/14/10
Neale,
Thank you so much for a thorough and incredibly quick response.
<Glad to help.>
The Pangasius cat was a mistake.
<Quite possibly.>
I wanted something smaller than a Pleco, so they pointed out some other
options at Petdumb. They said 12' max for this guy. I immediately
saw on the web, after introducing to my tank, that they are giants.
<Indeed. They are food fish, prized for their rapid growth rate. To
be honest, many do indeed get to about 30 cm/12 inches before they die
for one reason or another, but they can and often do get very much
larger.>
Update: yesterday after work my Rope fish was again swimming actively
all over, and it ate really well. Maybe it just swims a lot when it is
really hungry, and otherwise it just sits at the bottom. Isn't my
tank too small for another two 6-12' Rope fish? (55 gal)
<Not too small at all. I would encourage you to shift the Pangasius
and add the extra Ropefish.>
I'm planning on a bigger tank in the future, but not for at least a
year. Is it possible that the Rope is comforted by the Spiny
eel?
<Possibly, but my guess is that because they want the same thing,
they hang out in the same place. Is the Spiny Eel Macrognathus aral?
Most Macrognathus species are quite gregarious as well, and well worth
keeping in groups.>
It likes to stay near it sometimes. Out of curiosity, if my plants
(regular pond weed) grew 6' in the last two days, does that mean
lots of photosynthesis and oxygen?
<Yes, to some degree, but remember plants use up oxygen too, and at
night they aren't photosynthesising, so their net effect is to pull
down oxygen levels. Also, the amount of oxygen produced per plant
isn't that great. So while plants help a bit, and they do absorb
ammonia and nitrate, both of which actions improve water quality, they
don't really do a huge amount in terms of oxygenation. At least,
not unless there's a lot of plants, a lot of light, and a very
small loading of fish.>
Thanks again,
Nick
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Rope Fish Healthy Behavior? - 10/14/10
I would be happy to add Rope fish if I can find them, but I was
concerned by all of the web resources stating no more than 1' of
fish per gallon of water.
<That's a benchmark, and not a terribly accurate one. For a 55
gallon tank, you shouldn't have any problems at all keeping three
Ropefish, two or three medium-sized Spiny Eels, and a school of
suitable dither fish. Maybe even a Bristlenose Plec to help with the
algae. All I'd recommend you do is ensure good water quality via
generous filtration. I happen to like canister filters, but anything
will do, provide the water turnover is brisk, 8 times the volume of the
tank per hour. Because these fish are mostly carnivores, don't
overfeed, and feel free to skip a day per week. Do 20-25% water changes
per week.>
I already have 37' of fish with the 6 Giant Danios, 1 Pangasius, 1
Macrognathus aral, and 1 Rope fish. And all my fish aren't even
adult size yet.
<Ropefish get to about 30 cm/12 inches or so under aquarium
conditions, and they're pretty thin. Many books say they get to 90
cm/3 feet long, but that appears to be based on an erroneous scientific
record. The biggest ones I've seen are maybe 40 cm/15
inches.>
Yes, my eel is Macrognathus aral, but everything I read on Spiny eels
state that they don't like each other when they are adults. Is that
incorrect for this particular
one, and can you give me a link to that research?
<Here's the deal. There are two genera in the trade,
Macrognathus and Mastacembelus. Mastacembelus includes things like Tyre
Track Eels and Fire Eels, and yes, these are territorial when mature.
But the genus Macrognathus includes mostly smaller species that
don't seem to be territorial, and happily hang out in small gangs.
It's worth noting that it's this genus that includes all the
species bred in captivity.>
Also, if I get rid of the Pangasius I won't have anything eating
the food that drops to the substrate. Any suggestions for a compatible
cleaner fish?
<Would strongly recommend an Ancistrus, i.e., a Bristlenose Plec,
since these are the right size and temperament, and unlikely to compete
strongly for the food you want the Spiny Eel and Ropefish to eat. Other
catfish and loaches will be too competitive.>
I've heard some suckers will damage eels by sucking their slime
coat off?
<Correct. Ropefish and Bichirs are both prone to this, and cichlids
will also peck at their fins. Again, Ancistrus, being herbivorous, tend
to ignore even delicate tankmates, making them especially good choices
and very different to the standard common Plec species. Spiny Eels tend
to get damaged because of abrasive rocks and the use of gravel. So long
as you use smooth, lime-free sand (pool filter sand appears to be
popular in the US) instead of gravel, this shouldn't be an issue.
But once Spiny Eels get damaged, they quickly develop skin infections
and then die.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/spinyeelsmonk.htm
The bigger Mastacembelus are a bit more resistant to damage from
gravel, but I'd consider sand essential when keeping
Macrognathus.>
Thanks,
Nick
<Good luck, Neale.>
Re: Rope Fish Healthy Behavior? -- 10/20/10
Update on my Rope Fish condition. It has become increasingly
reclusive,
which I know is how they are supposed to be, but it used to swim all
over the place. Also, it appears to have tiny white bumps all over
it.
Yesterday they were just on its head, and now go down it's body. It
looks almost like salt. I know that this must be some kind of disease.
Please
help.
Thanks,
Nick
<Sounds like Whitespot/Ick to me. Treat using the salt/heat method.
Two grammes per litre should do the trick, but Ropefish tolerate
brackish water so you can go up to 6 grammes/litre if needs be, and
this level would be good for treating Velvet and certain other
infections.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/SaltUseFWArtNeale.htm
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Rope Fish Healthy Behavior? -- 10/20/10
I have read through the article, very informative. Will 2 grammes/litre
harm any of the other inhabitants? Six Giant Danios and one
Macrognathus aral.
<No. In fact the Spiny Eel species will probably be healthier if
maintained this way, though the Danios wouldn't like it for more
than a few weeks.>
Thanks,
Nick
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Rope Fish Healthy Behavior? 10/26/10
I have been using the salt and heat method to cure my rope fish of the
Ich for six days now. The rope fish has had zero spots for a couple of
days and there are only about three spots total on one of the other
fish. Thank you for the assistance in saving my fish.
<Cool. Remember, the salt isn't killing the spots; it's
killing the free-living stages they produce.>
However, I have a new question. Can either salt or a temperature of 86
degrees cause Giant Danios to go blind?
<No.>
During morning feeding time they are usually lightning quick and splash
at the surface as they scarf down food. But, today they knew it was
feeding time and went to the surface, but just swam around with their
mouths at the surface until they happened to run into some food.
Sometimes they would just swim right past it and keep trolling around.
Really weird.
<Indeed. But if the eyes aren't cloudy, I doubt they're
blind. Giant Danios are quite jumpy though, and if they hit the hood,
they can damage their eyes.>
Another change in the aquarium is that my Nitrites are at .5, and have
been at least measurable for three days.
<More of an issue.>
Can Ich cause blindness?
<Unlikely, but not beyond the realms of possibility. When the white
cysts burst they leave holes in the skin, and these holes can become
sites for secondary infections. The cornea isn't a favoured habitat
for Ick
parasites, but I'm sure it can happen. But still, if the cornea was
damaged, I think you'd be able to tell.>
Thanks,
Nick
<You're welcome. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Rope Fish Healthy Behavior? 10/26/10
Thanks, I guess it remains a mystery. It is almost just like they swim
around at night with the light off, just hoping to eat something at the
surface. Just usually in the day with the lights on, they make quick
and direct hits on the food. I have never seen them jump into the lid
though. Nitrite doesn't cause blindness either does it? Half the
responses on WetWeb suggest people frequently change their water to
dilute the nitrite, and the other half say to stop water changes so
that the bacteria can grow sooner. Do you have any suggestions? Also,
what is the 'freak-out' level of nitrite when I should panic
and move the fish to anything including pots and pans?
Thanks,
Nick
<Fish go off their food when water quality drops, so I'd
concentrate on establishing why you have non-zero ammonia and/or
nitrite levels. Sometimes newly established tanks go into a mini-cycle
weeks after you think cycling finished. In itself not a disaster. Stop
feeding, do 20% water changes every day or two, and check the filter is
properly configured and maintained. Common problems include clogged
media and overfeeding. So long as nitrite stays below 0.5 mg/l, your
fish are not in any imminent danger, generally, but some fish are more
sensitive than others. Cheers, Neale.>
My rope/reed fish... in w/ goldfish? Fed guppies?
10/10/10
Hello,
<Hello,>
I bought a rope about a week ago that was in a tank with large Oranda
gold fish. I found this fish to be very interesting and since it was in
a tank with gold fish, I bought it because that is what I have at
home.
<Your first mistake. Pet shops will often stick all kinds of fish
together in one tank, and for a few weeks that might be fine. But what
works at home is often very different!>
I also bought an Oranda that was in the tank with him so he would have
someone familiar.
<No.>
The lady told me she fed him guppies everyday;
<The lady at the pet store is taking full advantage of your
ignorance. You should never, EVER use feeder fish bought from a pet
shop. Sure, they sell them, but there are folks who sell crack cocaine
too, and that doesn't make it safe. Please do some more research
and less shopping!>
so I bought 10 feeder guppy's for him. In two days 8 were gone. 2
remained for almost a week.
<Indeed. But feeder fish are then #1 way of getting diseases into
your aquarium. So unless you want to make your fish sick, don't use
them. Secondly, Ropefish aren't really fish-eaters. They mostly
feed on insect larvae and other small invertebrates. In aquaria
wet-frozen bloodworms and krill make good staples, augmented with small
pieces of tilapia fillet, cockles, occasional prawns, and
earthworms.>
I started to worry that he was not eating. Then I noticed my
Oranda's left fin was tore up like it was nipped at.
<Oh. Could be the guppies, could be the Ropefish. Hard to say. In
any case, fancy Goldfish should not be kept with other sorts of fish.
Yes, Orandas are social and need companions, but much better to choose
another Oranda.>
The store told me it could have been the rope. This makes no sense to
me because there were still 2 tiny feeder guppy's.
<What's that go to do with it?>
Well, the Oranda's fin began to get infected so I quarantined her.
I later read that ropes like to be in groups and tend to eat better
that way.
<They are certainly social and should be kept in groups of three or
more.>
I went back to purchase another and they had just got a shipment in. I
had two choices, a larger rope that flipped and flopped everywhere or
the smaller rope that seemed calmer.
<I'm sure the bigger one was healthy, merely very unhappy. Your
retailer doesn't sound like she knows anything about fish.>
The store also recommended me to stop giving guppy's and make them
adjust to shrimp pellets. I added the new rope and he didn't really
swim around like my first did in his introduction but, I gave him the
benefit of trying to figure the new home.
<Hmm'¦>
By the morning I saw that he found the cave he chose and one of the two
guppy's were gone. Don't know which one ate it but was glad to
see one eat regardless but still concerned of eating habit because 1) I
don't know if they are really eating the pellets and 2) It has been
4 days since the second rope was added and all four days he stayed in
his cave; even at night-I check several times.
<Ropefish do not eat pellets. So stop using them. They need foods as
listed above. Can't supply those? Then don't keep
Ropefish.>
Today he came out but swims weird. He will position his body vertically
with head down and spin in circles while staying straight and vertical.
By the evening he is now floating at the top of the tank with his body
in a circle and floating in a circle.
<Stress.>
This behavior is very different from the other and he occasionally
swims from one side of the tank to the other while my first rope
continues to hang out at the bottom as usual and sits at top time
<Not sure what you mean here.>
there is still one guppy there and I don't know if they are eating
at all and don't know if they are really eating the shrimp pellets
plus my gold fish try to eat the pellets even when I shut the light off
at night.
<They will eat a range of live, fresh, and wet-frozen foods. They
WILL NOT eat freeze-dried foods including pellets and flanks.>
Is the second rope sick or is that just his personality and how long do
they go without eating?
<Usually they starve to death when people try to give them the wrong
foods. My guess here is that yours will be dead in a couple of months.
You seem to have made no attempt at all to research the needs of these
very unusual animals.>
My tank is a 65 gallon breeder with two power filters that each filters
up to 70 gallons. Nitrates and nitrites are good and yes even with my
gold fish the ammonia is maintained with chips and remover and test
shows safe and the ph is 7.0.
<"Good" means nothing to me. Ropefish need 0 ammonia, 0
nitrite.>
I have inspected everyone's body and fins, everyone looks good
except the Oranda which is quarantined and being treated and yesterday
one of my black moors had the same fin problem so he is with the Oranda
now getting treated before his infection could even get started. I read
the ropes like to bundle together and they don't even go near each
other.
<They're stressed and unhappy, and I'm fairly sure trying to
escape. Since they WILL escape given even half a chance, I suspect the
next part of this sorry story will be a dead, dried-out Ropefish on the
carpet.>
Any thoughts, comments, suggestions and advice.
<Read. There is nothing mysterious about the maintenance of
Ropefish. But you are doing everything, and I mean EVERYTHING,
wrong.>
If it helps, each rope is about 5 inches,
<Seriously? That's tiny.>
the Oranda is about 4, 2 black moors are 3in, and one fancy tail is 2
and 1/2, the other fancy is 1 and 1/2, and 3 comets are 2in. You are
probably thinking this is too many fish but these fish look tiny
compared the this tank and the 65 breeder is just a temp home and
looking to get a tank over 100 gallons maybe 200 to accommodate the
ropes adult size and the 3 comets were for my uncles tank but when I
brought them I did not add them to his tank because his current one
fish had slim and sickness all over it so I placed them in mine till
his gets better. Oh yea, I had a snail but he disappeared today,
can't even find the shell.
<Sometimes Ropefish eat small snails, if the snail can fit into
their mouth.>
Jessica
<Do read, Jessica:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/polypterids.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/RopefishSysF.htm
and linked articles. Cheers, Neale.>
My Rope Fish 9/1/10
Hi, First off I want to thank you for your page. If not for you I would
have never got my Rope Fish.
<Indeed?>
I got my first Rope Fish about 2 months ago. He was doing great up
until yesterday.
<Oh dear.>
We went to bed Mon. night ( of course I always feed my Rope Fish at
night because he is not very fast an he seems to be able eat better
when all the lights are out, thanks to my many other fish) he was
eating great, he looked good.
<Correct; these nocturnal fish have terrible eyesight and hunt by
smell. While they eat wet-frozen foods like bloodworms and chopped
tilapia fillet just fine, they can't compete with barbs, cichlids
and so on. I wouldn't keep them with catfish or loaches either.
Good companions are peaceful day-active fish or nocturnal fish that
don't feed quickly, for example spiny eels.>
Nothing on him to say he had slime or a fungus. The next morning I
didn't really pay much attn. I had to get out the door, but I fed
them as always. Well when I got home 3-4 hours later he was dead
(floating at the top of the water).
<Oh dear.>
I went straight down to the pet store and had my water tested.
Everything looked great 0 Ammonia , PH was 7.5 (maybe a little high but
I keep it that way for my Dempsey's),
<Should not be kept with a Jack Dempsey at all! Could very easily
have been killed by this fish.>
Nitrates were good. He had not been ate on (no signs of damage).
<The problem is the armour plating on these Ropefish. Bruises and
internal bleeding would not be obvious.>
I'm about out of options so I thought I would ask you? I do have
one other Rope Fish and he seems to be doing great, other then missing
his friend (which I plan on getting another, they just don't have
any in right now) he is very active.
<Hmm'¦>
In my 150gallon tank I have 2 channel cats,
<Not at all compatible with Ropefish! Starvation is a VERY real
threat, and long-term, Channel Cats will EAT Ropefish. Do you realise
how big these Ictalurus species get?>
2 Dempsey's,
<Not compatible with Ropefish.>
2 crabs,
<Almost certainly brackish water and/or amphibious -- do not belong
in this aquarium.>
and 1 peacock.
<Requires different water chemistry to Ropefish.>
They all seem to get along very well. Even the Rope fish gets along
great. If you can help it would be much appr., if not that's fine
but I would like to thank you very mush for your time!.......Sabrina
J.
<Sabrina, the bottom line is I think you stocked this tank badly,
and I'm almost certain livestock will die until only the toughest
remain. You need to sit back, think about what sort of fish you want to
keep, and then add/remove fish accordingly to create a balanced
community of compatible species. At the moment you have a series of
disasters waiting to happen. Good luck, Neale.>
Re: My Rope Fish 9/2/10
Thank You for your help I really want to keep my Rope Fish if I get
another tank for the Rope Fish could everything else live fairly well
together?
<In a big tank, yes, Channel Catfish and Central American cichlids
coexist well. I've kept them together myself. But do understand
adult Channel Catfish will view all but the largest cichlids as
food.>
Also I always add salt to my water, my crabs do great
<So far. If these are Red-Claw Crabs (Perisesarma bidens) which seem
the commonest ones in the trade at the moment, these are brackish water
crabs that prefer to spend 90% of their time on land. You aren't
keeping them properly, and they will eventually die
prematurely.>
and the salt helps to heal the sores the Dempsey's leave on each
other (they fight all the time)
<Well, the salt has nothing to do with healing sores, so you're
misunderstanding that aspect of healthcare completely. Under good
conditions fish will heal any superficial damage. In any case, if you
have two fish fighting, they need their own tanks. Obviously they
can't be kept together. What's the point? The weaker fish will
eventually be stressed and succumb to some problem or another.>
but they leave the rest of my fish alone and I think it is because they
where the last in the tank so the cats already had rule of the roost.
Right now they are not very big, My bullhead cat's are bigger then
them but I only got the Dempsey's because my friends tank got a
whole in it if I didn't get them she wouldn't have had another
tank to put them in. I plan on selling the Dempsey's when I know
they are going to
live. Also my peacock cichlid
<Is this Aulonocara, the Malawian Peacock Cichlid, or Cichla, the
Peacock Bass Cichlid from South America?>
as been in there longer then any of my other fish and seems to do great
in that water.
<Still'¦>
I never could find anything on peacocks so I just kind of guessed.
<Hmm'¦ there are MANY books on Malawian cichlids, and
Aulonocara are amongst the most popular Malawian cichlids. So
there's no excuse at all for being ignorant to their needs.>
But like I said he does good.
<So far.>
Again Thank You very much for your time.......Sabrina
<Glad to help. Cheers, Neale.>
Rope fish help -- 08/22/10
I've had my rope fish for a little under a month now (though I got
it not from a pet store but a friend who was unable to keep it) and
its' started acting strangely recently.
<A gregarious species'¦ tends not to do well kept
singly.>
As well, since the time I got it I've been having trouble telling
if it's been eating.
<Make sure there is no night-time competition. No loaches or
catfish, except possibly small algae-eating species such as Bristlenose
Plecs.>
I've been feeding it frozen bloodworms and PE Mysis but when I put
the food in it doesn't show any interest in it.
<Won't during the day if not settled. Does prefer to eat at
night. Earthworms and live river shrimps are good starting
foods.>
It shares the tank with two mollies and two gold fish, and I'm not
sure it's getting any of the food.
<Shouldn't be much competition from these two. Luckily, Ropefish
tolerate slightly brackish water well, so if you need to add salt for
the benefit of the Mollies, no harm done.>
Until recently it seemed fine, but recently its' been acting really
strangely. Yesterday I found it floating at the top of the tank
(it's body was perfectly vertical) and it's fins weren't
moving at all. I tried shifting it (normally it really doesn't like
being touched) and there was absolutely no reaction.
<Not good.>
When I took it out of the tank it just dangled limply without any
reaction at all. I'd figured it was dead and set it on the counter
for a minute (and admittedly poked it to see if it was really dead) and
it just lay there for the longest time before suddenly starting moving
again. After putting it back in the tank it swam around and seemed fine
but within the hour it was back floating at the top of the tank.
What's wrong with it?
<Difficult to say without any details on the aquarium. Water quality
should be good, 0 ammonia and nitrite. Water chemistry isn't
critical but shouldn't be extreme: pH 6-8, 3-20 degrees dH will be
fine. But water chemistry should be reasonably stable. If you're
adding salt, add only a little, 3-4 grammes per litre is more than
enough.>
Is there anything I can do to help it? I really don't want it to
die.
<Do need more information.>
Thanks,
Samantha
<Cheers, Neale.>
Rope Fish breathing hard 10/15/09
I bought two new rope fish put them in my 100 gallon tank. One was
really active right away the other one not so much. Do rope fish
usually breath hard with their mouths open and side gill flaps opening
and closing or is this a sign of distress.
<No.>
My PH is 7.8 my ammonia is zero and temp is 78-80. I do add salt to the
tank also.
<How much salt? Ropefish do come from slightly brackish water in
part of their range, but the casual addition of "tonic salt"
or "aquarium salt" -- as opposed to careful use of marine
salt mix -- may cause problems. As is now well understood, there is no
reason to add tonic/aquarium salt to a freshwater tank except to treat
specific diseases.>
Thanks,
Troy
<Ropefish are generally hardy fish, but they do have some wants.
They prefer a shallow aquarium so that they can swim to the top and
breathe air easily, 30 cm water depth is ideal, 45 cm tops. They are
nocturnal
burrowers, and need a quiet tank with lots of shady places to hide. A
soft substrate is highly beneficial. They cannot be kept with
aggressive fish, e.g., cichlids. Keep with quiet midwater things like
Congo tetras or
Spotted Ctenopoma. Choose catfish that aren't territorial or
aggressive, and you may want to forego catfish altogether if you're
worried the Ropefish can't feed easily. Ropefish are gregarious,
and often pine when
kept in insufficient numbers. Being air-breathers, they are sensitive
to airborne pollutants, e.g., paint fumes, bug sprays, etc. Hope this
helps.
Cheers, Neale.>
Rope Fish breathing hard
I bought two new rope fish put them in my 100 gallon tank. One was
really active right away the other one not so much. Do rope fish
usually breath hard with their mouths open and side gill flaps opening
and closing or is this a sign of distress.
<It wasn't clear -- I meant no, they don't normally do this,
and yes, it's a sign of distress.>
My PH is 7.8 my ammonia is zero and temp is 78-80. I do add salt to the
tank also.
Thanks,
Troy
<NM.>
Re: Rope Fish breathing hard 10/16/09
Thanks for the information. My tank is two feet deep, but I do see them
swim up to breathe.
<A bit deep for this species. I'd install a rocky ledge about
halfway up.>
I do have fine sand substrate in my tank. I had no idea that the
aquarium salt was no longer used except for treatments.
<Is indeed the case. Constant exposure to saline conditions can
cause problems for freshwater fish. Do review "Malawi Bloat"
for example. Sodium chloride detoxifies nitrate and nitrite, and
that's probably why people used salt so much in the past. But now
we can provide better water quality with more reliable equipment, so
salt shouldn't be necessary.>
I will go buy some saltwater salt mix.
<Why?>
How much salt do you recommend for a 100 gallon tank??
<Don't need any. Ropefish are PERFECTLY HAPPY in freshwater.
They DO NOT NEED SALT. If you wanted to keep them in brackish water, SG
1.003 is probably the tops, and that's about 6 grammes per litre of
water. I'd suggest a lower level, SG 1.001, or about 3.5 grammes
per litre. But as I say, you DO NOT need to be adding salt.>
I believe my other problem is I do have them in with some peacock
cichlids.
<Bingo.>
I watch my tank a lot even late at night and it seems as though they
completely ignore each other I wonder if mere sight is stressful for
them??
<Indeed, far too aggressive and active. Cichla spp. are active
midwater predators that will terrify gentle, swamp-dwelling Ropefish. I
wouldn't keep Ropefish with anything other than small community
fish (obviously too large to be eaten, so not Neons). Corydoras, Giant
Danios, Bleeding Heart Tetras, etc. would all be good.>
Thanks so much,
Troy
<Cheers, Neale.>
Questions Regarding Rope Fish, hlth., fdg., sys.
8/3/09
Dear Sir / Madam,
I hope all is well !
My name is Kush and I'm from India.
<Hello,>
I have 6 Rope Fishes in a 3 Feet ( 40 Gallon Tank ) with plenty of
hiding caves and pipes for them. Just wanted to request you to kindly
guide me on a few questions that I have regarding these wonderful
fish.
<Fire away.>
Sir, one of the Rope Fish that I purchased recently, seems to have a
eye problem. I can't say that its eyes are cloudy, but it looks
more like a "white dot in the center" of both the eyes.
<Often mechanical damage. These fish are burrowers, and in tanks
with gravel can injure themselves. Smooth silica sand is better. But
smooth gravel usually works okay, too. In any case, treat as for
Finrot, and hope for the best.>
All other ropes that I have, have clear and beautiful eyes. Is this
some kind of an eye disease ? If yes, how do I treat this. Somebody
suggested to use Tetracycline in the tank water, as this could be a
Bacterial Disease - just wanted to know if this is safe and effective,
and how much dosage is recommended. Also the only Tetracycline I get
here are Capsules labeled as Oxy tetracycline - is this the same as the
normal Tetracycline ?
<An antibiotic should work safely, but observe the fish, and if
possible, treat it in its own quarantine tank.>
Another of my Rope Fish has a few White Spots on its body. They look a
little (very little) protruding (like very tiny ulcers) - I have a
feeling that its Ick (White spot disease) - I have raised the
Temperature to 31C
and added a little salt. The fish seem to be comfortable but they still
have the white spots. Kindly guide me on treating this.
<The salt/heat method should work well. Ropefish live in slightly
brackish water sometimes, and they have a good tolerance for salt. 2 to
3 teaspoons of salt per gallon (3.75 l) of water should work well. It
will take 1-2 weeks to wipe out all the parasites.>
Regarding Nutrition for my Rope Fish, I feed them Live earthworms
everyday, and they really eat them well. Just wanted to know if this is
ok for them as a standard diet.
<Yes.>
I'm not able to 'train' them to eat anything else. I fed
them Chopped prawn meat and pellets, but they don't even touch
them.
<They will eat chopped prawn and other seafood eventually. They hunt
by smell, mostly at night. So offer the food in the evening, and if
necessary, starve them a couple of days before adding these
foods.>
I worried that they aren't getting any vitamins in their diet and
wanted to know if there is any way, I can make them ingest some
vitamins.
<Variety is the key! If you have earthworms, prawns, mussels,
bloodworms, squid, and small piece of white fish (such as tilapia) you
have a nice, varied diet. These fish will eat most fresh or wet-frozen
foods, though
they have little interest in dried foods or pellets.>
Will adding some vitamins directly to the tank water be effective ?
<No.>
Lastly, Just wanted to know if my current tank ( 3 feet - 40 Gallons )
be enough to house these 6 Ropes that I have or do they need a larger
tank.
<Should be fine. These fish rarely get above 45-50 cm in captivity.
Your main issue is escaping: these fish VERY COMMONLY escape from fish
tanks. A secure lid is essential. In the wild they move across land at
night, from one pond to another, like eels. They are very, very good at
squeezing through tiny holes. Be careful!>
Kindly guide me on the above questions, Sir - I really have nobody else
to guide me. Thanks for reading and for caring, Lots of Regards and
Wishes, Kush
<These are wonderful fish. Do see here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebindex/polypterids.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebindex/ropefishfaqs.htm
And follow the linked articles for more. Good luck with them!
Neale.>
Rope Fish (Erpetoichthys calabaricus) Tail
Problem 10/22/07 Hi. This is my first time asking a question
here although I have been a regular reader of your website. You
have already been very helpful. I recently purchased a 14"
Rope/Reed Fish. In the LFS he was active and seemed healthy. Having
got him home he is still active, feeding well on bloodworm and
coldwater prawns however he seems to have something wrong with the
last 1cm or so of his tail. This portion of his tail seems a
grayish-white (the rest of him is a lovely olive colour) this
morning I have seen he has two tiny grayish patches on his back
too, about midway along his body. He is still active and eating. I
would appreciate any advice as to what this could be. I was hoping
to get him a friend or two soon but would like to ensure he is in
tip top health first. He is in a 350 litre 5ftx18"x18"
mature tank with sand and fine gravel substrate, bogwood and plants
(plenty of hiding places) with 4 juvenile Kissing Gourami and 4
adult Gold Barbs. The water stats are all good, water changes are
done regularly (approx 10-15%) and the dechlorinator used is
Seachem Prime. Ph is between 6.5 and 6.8 (varies slightly depending
when measured) and the water here in Manchester, England is very
soft. I have attached a picture, hope it helps. Thank you in
advance for your advice. Jennifer <Hi Jennifer, and thanks for
the kind words. While it's difficult to say precisely what your
fish has, it would seem to be one of the complaints generally
called "slime disease". This is normally an external
bacterial infection, similar to Finrot, except it works on the body
of the fish and you see dead skin and excess mucous (which is the
white stuff). What you need to use is something to treat external
bacterial infections. Maracyn (Erythromycin of some sort) would
probably be a good place to start if you were in the US, but if
you're in the UK, then unless you obtain that from a vet (which
will cost you around £20) you can use something like
eSHa 2000 or Interpet #7 Anti Slime & Velvet. These are
antibacterials rather than antibiotics; while they can work, they
tend to work best with early stage infections, and may be useless
once the infection gets a firm hold of your fish. Polypterids are
not especially sensitive to medications, so you should be fine
using it at full dose. I have also found saltwater dips work well
for treating slime disease. This is basically a case of making up a
mixture of 35 grammes of sea salt (from the grocery store is fine)
per litre of water (taken from the fish tank). Dip the fish into
this saltwater solution for 1-20 minutes. You pull the fish OUT as
soon as it shows signs of distress, such as rolling over. As an
estimate, I'd guess you'll be fine foe 2-3 minutes at a
time. Repeat daily (using new batches of water each time). This
dehydrates the bacteria and also cleans up the slime and dead skin.
Combined with eSHa 2000, I've found this an extremely effective
approach to treating slime disease. Ropefish inhabit brackish
waters and are reasonably salt tolerant, so you aren't risking
the fish unduly. Just pull the fish out after a couple of minutes
or if the fish is clearly distressed. The "art" is to
make the saltwater dip long enough it kills the bacteria, but not
so long it kills the fish. A subtle, but useful, art to learn!
Cheers, Neale> |
|
Rope Eel Problem 6/30/07 Hello, <Greetings.>
My fiancé© and I bought a rope eel/fish two days ago and
we're worried about him. The "capture" was shockingly
rough, I don't think the two boys knew what they were doing - they
seemed to be afraid of the rope fish. When we left we noticed that his
(our rope fish) left fin - by his head - was injured. A small piece was
missing, but he was the only one they had so we decided to take him
home anyway since he was so lively. <Ropefish, Erpetoichthys
calabaricus, are indeed fascinating animals. But there are a few things
to bear in mind. First, they are sociable, and really don't do well
kept alone. 3-4 is a much better number, and increases your chances of
seeing them swimming about. Second, they get big. Almost a metre in the
wild, though ~50-60 cm is more typical in aquaria. Finally, they are
predators despite being otherwise peaceful. Anything guppy-sized or
smaller is food as far as a Ropefish is concerned, especially if they
aren't otherwise well fed on the stuff they like, worms and insect
larvae. They don't eat dry food, and certainly aren't
"scavengers".> Last night we were watching him as he was
"floating/hovering" at the top of the tank, his tail sinking
downward, causing his body to take a L shaped form. We thought he was
sleeping, since every now and then he'd move to another part of the
tank and continue to lay in this position. About two hours passed
before he began to swim around again, however, we began to notice that
he was having trouble reaching the bottom of the tank. At first we
thought it was because of his injured fin, but the longer we watched
the more certain we are that its because of his tail. <Very odd. How
deep is this tank? Ropefish are obligate air-breathers that live in
swamps: they drown if they cannot easily gulp air. They do not like
deep water. A tank around 30-45 cm is about right for a juvenile.>
When he reaches the bottom his tail will pull him back towards the top
of the tank. Were wondering if it has something to do with his
"lung-like swim bladder". If so is there any way we can fix
the problem. My fiancé© thinks that he just swallowed to much
air, since our last rope eel would "burp" water every now and
then. <The swim bladder is connected to the oesophagus, and Ropefish
(like their relatives the Bichirs) breathe air in and out the mouth
just like we do. So it's unlikely there's a swim bladder
problem of the type seen in other fish. I'd be concerned about the
overall health of the fish first of all. Water quality, diet,
temperature should all be checked. Like other air-breathing fish,
Ropefish can be sensitive to cold and dry air, so it's important
that the humidity above the tank is kept high. One thing I might check
would be whether there are any signs of paralysis. Sometimes these
long, eel-like fish get damaged in transit, for example by having rocks
dropped on them when clumsy retailers are trying to capture them. Look
to see if the finlets on the back are moving and that the tail swishes
from side to side normally. A similar problem can happen when eel-like
fish curl up around heaters or too close to water pumps. Check also
there's nothing in the aquarium that might have bitten or otherwise
molested the fish. Otherwise, nothing springs to my mind as being an
obvious case for what you're describing.> Thanks for your time
and help, Aurora <Sorry can't be any more specific. Watch, check
aquarium conditions. Cheers, Neale>
Question about Ropefish and Oxolinic acid... --
5/4/07 Hi, I've bought two Ropefish from PetCo (I know, my
first mistake). The first one died of white smeary patches, mostly on
his face and then his fin. <"Slime Disease" can be caused
by any of a variety of external parasites. It is almost always promoted
by poor water conditions and overcrowding, so fixing the husbandry
issues is part of the solution.> We had treated him by adding salt
to the water, changing the water, raising the temperature of the water,
treating for ammonia, and raising the pH. He still died. <No
surprise. Salt isn't a treatment for anything much. Improve water
conditions, and then use an anti-Slime Disease medication.> The
second one we bought (also from PetCo. When will we learn?) started
getting the same thing. <Which should be ringing some alarm bells.
Either they have poor conditions in their aquaria, or you do, or
both.> We went to a different pet store and they told us it
wasn't Ich but a fungus. <Can't think why. Fungus looks like
little fuzzy patches; slime disease like grey slime.> We started
treating for the fungus with Pimafix, still changing the water, testing
for pH, ammonia, nitrates, and nitrites. We still added salt. We also
used Copper safe. He just died. We really don't want to go through
this again and would like to know how much Oxolinic acid to use to keep
our Ropefish safe. <Saying you're "testing" for things
doesn't help me much. What, specifically, are the pH, ammonia, and
nitrite levels. For Ropefish these should be pH 6.5-7.5, ZERO ammonia
and nitrite. You DO NOT NEED salt with these fish. While they sometimes
occur in brackish water, there's no real advantage to keeping them
thus.> They're great fish with awesome personalities. <Yes,
they are!> Any help you could offer would be greatly appreciated. I
only hope I gave you enough information to help. <Need more
information about your aquarium: size, water chemistry, filtration.
Also be sure and read up about Ropefish, they're demanding in some
ways. Need to be kept in groups, great escape artists, potentially
predatory on very small tankmates.> Thank you very much, Josh
<Cheers, Neale>
Rope Fish With Spots 4/9/07 Hello, My
fiancé© and I bought our first Rope Eel (or fish since
that's what they come up as under Google) and she looked fine when
we were in the store. However, the next morning I notice two small
white dots on her back, so I called a friend whose had a fish tank for
over 30 years. He assured me that Kaliah didn't have ick, although
we went ahead and put Ick away in her tank. This morning when my
fiancé© and I woke the two dots turned into three large ones,
one on her underside and two along the length of her body. We are
extremely worried about her since we've grown attached so the
question to you is if Kaliah is shedding at all, since the spots do
look like dead skin. Is it normal for a rope eel to shed its skin and
if not then what can we do to spot it and make her healthy? We feed her
tropical fish food and some shrimp, per the sales lady. Thank You.
Lotsa Love Aurora < Check the WWM website for articles on general
info on bichirs. To be more specific, your bichir probably has a
stubborn bacterial infection. Do a 50% water change, vacuum the gravel
and clean the filter. The first drug of choice is Oxolinic Acid.
Difficult to come by and very expensive, it is a miracle worker on rope
fish and other bichirs. If you cannot find it then try a double dose of
Nitrofuranace and Metronidazole. Let your local pet shop know so maybe
they can treat the next batch before they sell them. Many stores
don't know about this treatment and think that rope fish die
because they are fragile, but they are actually very hardly and live
for many years.-Chuck>
Ropefish - best to do research BEFORE adding
fish...not to mention, QT is always a good idea... 3/15/07
Just a quick question... My husband and I just bought a Ropefish
approximately 5 hours ago...(Wait that's not a question! Just let
me explain first..) When we put him in our 56 gallon tank he seemed
content, even happy. <What, no quarantine tank? Not a good idea; can
very easily wipe out an entire established tank in this manner.
Additionally, how did you acclimate this fish, if at all? How large is
the tank and what else is in there at the moment? What are the current
water parameters?> Over the last 30 minutes he has stopped moving,
and will lay face up, or on his side, looking unable to move. In your
opinion is he just stressed or is there a legitimate concern? <The
latter. Sounds as though he's in shock. Test your water parameters
ASAP - check for ammonia, nitrite and nitrates. Without knowing whether
you acclimated this fish prior to its introduction, what your setup is
like, and what conditions the fish was previously kept in (at the fish
store), there's really not too much I can tell you aside from what
conditions the Ropefish, Erpetoichthys calabaricus *should* be kept in:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/polypterids.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/bichirfaqs.htm
http://badmanstropicalfish.com/profiles/profile90.html
If there is a concern please share with me how to take care of him.
<See links above.> Thanks. <You're welcome. Jorie> P.S.
- Sorry if I messed anything up grammatically. It might be that
it's 2 am, that I just don't care, or that I'm really lazy.
Take your pick. <Wow - I sense a bit of hostility...not totally
appropriate, in my opinion, where you're asking for our
help/expertise. And, just for the record, I, for one, do try to be
reasonable in my requests for proper grammar, punctuation, etc. A small
error or two will not result in my returning an e-mail; a blatant
disregard for my time, in contrast, will...><<RMF would have
ret'd>>
Rope Fish Acting Weird 10/11/06 Hi, I have had my rope fish
for a couple years now and it has always done great. But for the last
couple of days it has been acting weird. Sometimes it acts normal and
swims around normal but then it just kind of floats at the top of the
tank. I am worried about swim bladder disease and wanted to know what I
can do to help it. Thank you. Toni <Do a 50% water change, vacuum
the gravel and clean the filter. Try feeding him some live washed
earthworms and see if he perks up. These fish are pretty tough but when
they do get sick they get really weird diseases that are tricky to
cure.-Chuck>
Sick Rope Fish 9/19/06 Today when my rope fish came out of
his den, he seemed to have this white stuff on his skin and seems to be
really weak, I don't think it's Ick though. He seems to be
really stressed and keeps swimming around the top of the tank. If any
of you know what this might be, please send an answer ASAP <Rope or
reed fish come down with this weird bacterial infection that is very
difficult to treat. You can try Nitrofurazone but it only seems to stop
it but not control it. The only thing that really works is Oxolinic
acid. You will probably need to go online to buy it. It is very
expensive but really works very well on this disease.-Chuck>
Sick Rope Fish II 9/19/06 Should he be moved to a hospital
tank? ( I have a 10 gallon but its not set up) <A hospital tank
would be best. The medication will probably affect the good nitrifying
bacteria.-Chuck>
Sick Calamoichthys... no info. - 08/05/06 Hi I
had a question about my Ropefish, It doesn't seem its able to sink.
He's always at the top and when he tries to go down his tail wont
let him, so he just stays up floating. Is there a way to fix this?
<Can't say with the lack of information presented> Thank you
for your time. <Please read here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/polypterids.htm and
the linked files above. Bob Fenner>
Poor English <NNS?>, killing a Ropefish
8/3/06 I <I> had a question regarding my Ropefish. <What
happened to it?> I bought a couple of weeks ago, I've been
feeding it feeder fish either guppies or minnows. <Not a good
idea...> I think one of the feeder fish probably had ich or
something <Bingo> cuz my Ropefish got it. I've
<I've> been medicating with Maracide <Products are proper
nouns, capitalized...> for the recommended time and then used
Maracyn 2 also as recommended. but he still broke out again so this
time I but him in a separate tank and rededicating with CopperSafe.
I've also noticed that he always at the top of the tank, is there
any reason for that? <Yes, being poisoned by the Copper> I've
seen other Ropefish and the always at the bottom. and when I bought him
he was at the top. is he sick or something can it be fixed? Thank you
for your time. <Please fix your English before sending it to us...
And read here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwsubwebindex.htm
search out the articles, FAQs files on Ropefish, Ich, Copper use in
FW... Bob Fenner>
Improved English, poor behavior <Ropefish rant> -
02/27/06 So, I see that you have more than enough time to read your
e-mails and respond to them...God forbid that you can actually help
someone with a problem with their fish! <<Countless people are
helped here everyday.>> I did not realize that your site is here
to make you look good and have the ability to look down on someone for
their grammar and refuse to give an honest answer that may actually
help people better care for their fish based upon their e-mail not
being suitable to your liking. <<It is not that your email
wasn't to the first responder's liking, but that it gets
frustrating having to re-write emails with proper capitalization and
spelling. All that was asked of you, was that you re-write it and
re-send it, as there are many people who need advice.>> By the
way, I used my Yahoo spell checker before I sent my e-mail to you and
it still was not good enough for you! <<Again, it was not a
matter of quality of your email. I do not think it is too much to ask
that when writing to us (all of whom are volunteers) that your letters
are written properly, so that they need-not be re-typed. Many people,
from all over the world, read this site, and language is very important
for ease of understanding.>> I thought your site was awesome!
Until I actually needed some information on a rope fish that I need
help with which, by the way, I read all of your posting's before I
e-mailed you and exhausted all means of information available to me
before asking this of you. <<Appreciated>> You say you do
not have enough time to read all e-mails sent to you and respond to
them but yet, You have the time to send all the criticism in the world
if I AM NOT AN ENGLISH MAJOR! <<I'm sure it wasn't meant
that there is no time to send out all emails, but that it is time
consuming, which is fine, but any help we can get from those writing
in, makes it easier to reply in a speedy manner to all.>> I am
American born and raised and anyone, and I do mean ANYONE that speaks
English could read my e-mail that I sent to you AND understand EVERY
word that it contained! <<Not all that read here are American
born, but again, it's not that your email was unreadable, but not
suitable for posting as it was at that time.>> My eight year old
even read it and understood every word of it! But yet, you have no time
to help but rather criticize what you feel to be proper grammar. EXCUSE
ME! I refuse to ever visit your web site EVER again and intend to tell
this to every person that I come across as well as my local pet stores
which, couldn't tell me what is wrong with my rope and wanted to
know your response to help them with their knowledge in the future.
<<That's too bad. I am sure if you had sent it back
corrected, you would have been quite please with whomever responded to
you.>> I originally planed on making a donation to your site
because it seemed to be extremely help full when people actually needed
help with their fishes health. <<It is quite helpful,
yes.>> Well, no help here!!! As far as my rope fishes health it
has gotten no better but a little worse since I e-mailed you initially.
But, Obviously you don't give a sXXX. <<Of course we do, that
is why we take the time to do this.>> So long. I will not bother
you or your uppity, uppity class of loser any more! Dan <<I am
very sorry to hear this. I do hope to help in the future, should you
change your mind. Lisa.>>
Dissatisfied Ropefish Response ... Chuck's go - 02/27/06
Dear Sir or Madam, I am writing about concerns with our previous
correspondence. It has come to my attention that it was difficult for
your staff to understand my question. Hopefully this can be resolved,
but yet again my question remains unanswered. Dan. So, I see that you
have more than enough time to read your e-mails and respond to them.
God forbid that you can actually help someone with a problem with their
fish! I did not realize that your site is here to make you look good
and have the ability to look down on someone for their grammar and
refuse to give an honest answer that may actually help people better
care for their fish based upon their e-mail not being suitable to your
liking. By the way, I used my Yahoo spell checker before I sent my
e-mail to you and it still was not good enough for you! I thought your
site was awesome! Until I actually needed some information on a rope
fish that I need help with which, by the way, I read all of your
posting's before I e-mailed you and exhausted all means of
information available to me before asking this of you. You say you do
not have enough time to read all e-mails sent to you and respond to
them but yet, You have the time to send all the criticism in the world
if I AM NOT AN ENGLISH MAJOR! I am American born and raised and anyone,
and I do mean ANYONE that speaks English could read my e-mail that I
sent to you AND understand EVERY word that it contained! My eight year
old even read it and understood every word of it! But yet, you have no
time to help but rather criticize what you feel to be proper grammar.
EXCUSE ME! I refuse to ever visit your web site EVER again and intend
to tell this to every person that I come across as well as my local pet
stores which, couldn't tell me what is wrong with my rope and
wanted to know your response to help them with their knowledge in the
future. I originally planed on making a donation to your site because
it seemed to be extremely help full when people actually needed help
with their fishes health. Well, no help here!!! As far as my rope
fishes health it has gotten no better but a little worse since I
e-mailed you initially. But, Obviously you don't give a sh*t. So
long. I will not bother you or your uppity, uppity class of loser any
more! Dan <All questions go to a general inbox. From there they are
sorted out in categories like Marine, Freshwater and Brackish. Once
they are in these categories crew members from around the country check
in a any given time and respond to these questions. Generally the
questions should be checked for grammar and spelling before they are
sent. This is fairly easy request because all computers have these
functions. It is up to the individual crew member to decide if the
grammar is too poor to respond. We may get up to 100 questions a day.
Sometimes the question is not very clear. Occasionally we don't
even know what the question is. Crew members are all volunteers and we
try to answer as many questions as we have time for. The more time we
spend correcting grammar and spelling, the less time we have to answer
questions and help to keep organisms alive. Questions that are properly
written almost always get answered first. I personally answered your
question about a Ropefish and the response was posted on the website
yesterday. You may have written another question that I am not aware
of, and it was answered by another crew member. Have your local fish
store start treating their Ropefish with Oxolinic Acid as per my
previous response. Hope things go better next time.-Chuck>
Dying Ropefish - 02/25/06 Hello, I just bought two Ropefish a
couple of days ago. I got their tank all set up and then went to work,
when I got home about 12 hours later I noticed that one of my Ropefish
was lying on its back on the bottom of my tank. It was in fact dead. I
fished it out and noticed that it's anus was bright red as if it
had been bleeding. My other Ropefish was still fine. I thought the
problem might have been with the water, the temp was about 78, ph was
7.0, I had hard water, low alkalinity, and no nitrites or nitrates. I
have never had any fish die like this and I'm a bit troubled that
this one died. So anyway, The day after my first Ropefish died I
checked my tank and the second one hadn't moved, so I poked it and
it started swimming around, but it only turned to the right and it was
doing these barrel rolls as well, something just didn't look right.
Then I noticed that it's eyes were clouded (they weren't like
this when I bought it). Now it pretty much only moves if its prodded by
me or the other fish. Would have any suggestions as to what might be
the problem?-Thanks, Elliot < This is a stubborn bacterial infection
that has killed many Ropefish. Oxolinic Acid works great on this
disease. Unfortunately it is difficult to obtain for the average
aquarist and is expensive too. Try Kanamycin or Nitrofuranace. Do a 50%
water change, vacuum the gravel and clean the filter. Treat as per
recommended on the package. After treatment you need to add carbon to
the filter to remove any excess medication. When the medication is gone
to need to get the biological filtration going again so I would add
Bio-Spira.-Chuck>
My Ropefish lost his nostrils!! 2/3/06 I have had my
Ropefish for about 4 years now. He/she has been great. A couple of
weeks ago his tank mates (an Oscar and large Pleco) died of I'm not
sure what. He seemed fine until his nose got very red and raw. It went
from red, to white, and then to normal. The only thing is his nostrils
are gone!! will they ever grow back? Thanks for any help. >>
Likely you had high ammonia, which killed your other fish, and burned
the nostrils off your rope fish. They will grow back.
HELP! My rope fish is ill and I don't know what to do!
8/9/05 Hi Bob, <Terry... your msg. was sent in HTML, your
spelling... is this an intentional insult?> I was wondering if you
would be able to help me (I took you email from WetWeb media). I have a
rope fish who up to a couple of days ago was fine. About 2 days after I
did a water change on my tank (1/3 of the total water volume) <Too
much... please read here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwh2ochgs.htm and
the FAQs linked at top> the rope fish began to swim around the tank
quite aggressively in loops, after which it began to float up side
down. It is still alive and if it does swim it rights itself, but it
seems to be struggling to keep at the bottom of the tank, so now just
floats. I wasn't sure if there was a link to me cleaning the tank,
so I repeated the water tests (nitrate, nitrite, total hardness, Ph,
temp) and all seemed fine. <Toxified.... likely with the sanitizer
(chloramine) in your source water> Any help would be most
appreciated, I don't know what to do. Thanks for your time Terry
<At this point, not much to do... perhaps add a bit of aquarium
salt. Also discussed on WWM. Bob Fenner>
Ropefish scale loss 7/29/05 Hi, we had 2 ropes in our tank
now we have 1. We have had them both for about 1 year they have been a
pleasant part of our 55 gallon tank. <Neat animals> We also house
1 fig.8 puffer, 2 lace catfish, 2 yoyo loaches, 2 clown loaches, 3
skunk loaches, 3 gold killies, (black skirt, serpae, lemon and black
neon tetras), (gold, rosy and tiger barbs), 2 pair Kribensis, 1 pair
Apistogramma verstrefen, and a couple small Plecos. <... these
fishes have very different water chemistry preferences...> The ropes
have done very well for just over a year. Then suddenly they started
losing scales in patches. I do regular water changes (every 2 weeks
about 25%) the first one died 2 days after scale loss started, the
second hadn't lost as many scales, but he is approaching the point
that the first was at when he passed. Neither rope showed any signs of
appetite loss and the remaining rope is still eating well. <What is
it eating? My first, best guess of the base "cause" of your
problem is nutritional> The first one only started showing signs of
distress as loss progressed. Stayed at bottom and so forth but during
last 12 hrs he swam erratically like he wanted out of the tank. Ph is
at about 7.0, I use easy balance once or twice a month to keep
balanced. Nitrate levels are below 40, <Better below ten> and
nitrites are at .1, <Should be zero> total hardness is at 75, and
total alkalinity is at about 160. Any possible answers or suggestions?
<Mmm, well, from what you've stated...> My husband and I both
love these lil guys and it is rough watching them go down so fast. I
have treated with Melaleuca, <Worthless> and quick cure
(Formalin, Malachite green). <Too toxic> No signs of a fungus.
Help please. Thanks, Dee Catch ya later. TTFN D.C. <Please read re
these medications utility, danger... on WWM, do look into more/better
filtration, more frequent water changes, and make it known what
you're feeding this Ropefish. Bob Fenner>
Re: rope fish scale loss 7/31/05 Just found out that our
water dept is having a food grade oil leakage into the water that is
being sent to houses and are making repairs to water system next week.
<Interesting> Figure this is what caused the problems with our
ropes. Wish I had known earlier would have used distilled water in
changes. We feed everything from Frozen blood worms, frozen krill and
beef heart, to live ghost shrimp and red wiggler worms. <Very
nice> List the other rope today though and they were soo cool. no
one else seems to be affected by any problems, but I have done a 40%
change with distilled water and will do another tomorrow to prevent any
more problems till after the water wells are fixed and the towers are
purged. Thanks for the speed of your reply. just wish I'd known
about the water problem 3 days ago. <I want to share a
"similar" instance with you... once coming back from the
Interzoo tradeshow, on a train to Frankfurt, I got into a conversation
with a freshwater fish exporter from Nigeria... and one of his
principal "products" was Ropefish... he shared with me a
difficulty they had in capturing same (with native labor, plant
extracts)... in that the fish would develop "loose scales"
and perish in great numbers, from over-exposure... On arrival, outfits
I have worked with, did something irregularly with this Polypterids,
and poured/saved their shipping water in with the standing systems...
to prevent chemical shock... a tough species nonetheless. Bob
Fenner>
Sick Rope fish Hello, We have set up a tank in one
of our classrooms here with three rope fish. The third day we had the
fish I noticed that one had a thin red line on its head. Progressively,
the line has turned into a nasty patch with white edges that has
covered the fish's eyes and is moving to the body. We have been
trying to find out what this is and how to treat it. We are not having
much luck. You are the only place I found any reference to the red
marks and patches. We would appreciate any reply, good or bad news.
Thank you! Kristen Self Program Development Education Department
Birmingham Zoo <Your rope fish probably has a bacterial infection
brought on from a bite or scrape with one of the other fish. The red is
a bacterial infection and the white fuzzy stuff is a fungal attack. Do
a 30% water change and vacuum the gravel and clean the filter. Treat
with Nitrofuranace or Erythromycin.-Chuck>
Ropefish I live at college and all we're allowed to have
is fish, so I decided to bring my tank with my Ropefish and a few
others. Recently, my Ropefish escaped during the middle of the night.
<Very common... aquatic Houdini's...> I'm not entirely
sure how, because I felt that I had covered the tank very well, but
needless to say, I've now closed practically every square
centimeter of the tank. Anyway, when I awoke in the morning, the
janitor came by and said "Hey, did anyone lose a lizard?" I
followed him to a closet where he had it sitting inside an empty
Gatorade bottle (Poor thing). He was sitting in a circle, so I had to
cut open the bottle to let him out. I immediately put him back in the
tank, where he struggled for a while to remove some whitish residue
that had been building up around his head and part of his body. Now
though, he just sits at the top of the tank in a half circle, with his
head and tail end pointing downward, and his midsection partially out
of the water. Though it has only been a little under a day since I
found out about this, it would like to err on the side of caution,
particularly because I can't stand to see an animal die, especially
on what it most likely my error. If you have any recommendations that
you could give me, I would greatly appreciate it. <I have seen many
Ropefish incidents as you cite... among them my own. I would leave the
animal as it is for now, and hope that it recovers (many do). If yours
develops red sores and/or obvious fungal (white, mycelious) patches, I
would elevate the system temperature (to about mid 80's F.) and
prescribe an anti-microbial (likely a Furan compound). Bob
Fenner>
Ropefish troubles Hi <Hi, Pufferpunk here> I have a
Ropefish which seems to be having a problem with buoyancy. He always
used to lie at the bottom of the tank and swim around the rocks, but
for the last 4 days he has trouble submerging, and seems to float
around the surface. He wraps himself around the heater and filtration
unit to stay down. I haven't noticed any bloating, but he had been
suffering with flukes and is now at the end of the "Sterazin"
treatment period. Could the treatment have caused the buoyancy problem?
Will he recover properly? <Sterazin appears to be toxic to several
species of fish. I would do a 50% water change & filter w/fresh
carbon, to remove all traces of meds. Try feeding w/live black/Tubifex
worms (well rinsed). That will clean out any intestinal blockage it may
have. Nutritious too!> Thank you for your help, Kerri <You're
welcome--Pufferpunk>
Ropefish Hi my name is Crystal and I hope you can answer my
question. My brother has 2 Ropefish, 1 is a couple of months old the
other he just got about a week or 2 ago. The one that he just recently
got is lying on his back... he/she is still breathing but just lying
there. could you possibly be able to tell us what is going on??
<These fish can have difficulties resulting from their capture,
shipping... Best to leave them at the store for a good week or two
before buying...> The store he had got him/her from told me to get
him to put aquarium salt in the tank because he/she might be having
digestive problems. But this person said they knew quite a bit about
Ropefish but doesn't know to much about their anatomy's because
according to him the only time a fish would be on their backs and still
alive is if they have a bladder infection and he doesn't know if
that could be a possibility for Ropefish or not because he doesn't
know if they have a bladder. <They and their relatives, the Bichirs
do... it is connected to the throat, and ventral to the esophagus...
Please see here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/polypterids.htm>
so I thought you could help me on this problem and I really really hope
so. <Do check on continuing water quality... the behavior of lying
on their back is not good. Bob Fenner> Thank you for your time.
Ropefish Problems <Hello, JasonC here filling in for Bob
while he's away diving.> My Ropefish got out of its tank a
couple days ago. <they are very good at this...> It was only out
for a little over an hour before I discovered it. <ok> when I did
I rinsed it and put it back in. Now the Ropefish is very inactive and
seems shy. Is this normal? <probably a little traumatized, after
being stuck to the carpet.> I thought at first that it might need
some time to adjust back but it has been over two days! Also there
seems to be a long tear on its bottom extending from near the head to
its tail. <ouch!> I think this might be damage incurred when it
escaped. <perhaps...> Any suggestions curing it and do you think
that this is the reason for its immobility? <will have to
"cure" on its own if it's going to.> It is also not
eating when I feed it. <Bob's advice on huger strikes with these
is to offer a live earthworm or mealworm - http://www.wetwebmedia.com/bichirs.htm
> Before it escaped it used to respond to feedings (I feed it
bloodworms), now even when I put the food in front of its nose it
won't take it in. Just lays there still. <again, your assessment
that it is taking it easy due to the injury sounds correct here.>
How should I get it to eat and is that a normal behaviour after they
escape the tank? <try those live worms.> I really don't want
this fish to die so any help is greatly appreciated! Thx. <No
problem - do check through that link. I do hope your Ropefish makes a
speedy recovery. Cheers, J -- >
Ropes and Dragons Robert, I have a 45 gallon freshwater live
plant setup. PH7.6 Hardness apx10 Ammonia and nitrite at zero. I
recently purchased two new rope fish and a Pleco (I think that's
what it's called). <Mmm, maybe a member of the family of mainly
South American Sucker Mouth Catfishes, Loricariidae:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/loricariids.htm> The two rope fish died
within two days and a day later the rope that I've had for 6 months
died. <Not unusual to have new Ropes bring in disease, stress... Our
coverage of this and the related Bichirs:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/bichirs.htm> Then last night my small
dragon Goby died. The ropes got the "glassy" eyes and
discoloration before they died and the Dragon lost a lot of weight and
showed a large white section on it's tail before it died. So far
the other inhabitants haven't shown any problems; they are: a
larger Dragon Goby (about 6"), two Bala Sharks, 1 Clown Loach, 1
Pleco (algae eater), and several neon tetras. I did a 20% water change
and filter maintenance after the first two died and I've been
running my Diatom XL (normally for polishing only) a couple hours a
day. Any possibilities you can offer will be greatly appreciated. <I
would do what you have done... and add some activated carbon/powder to
the diatom> As a side note. I have already purchased a cheapy 10
gallon setup to use as a quarantine tank in the future. <Good
idea> You might also be interested to know that the fish came from
Pet (not so) Smart. <Yikes...> Thanks Again Tom Peterson
Kissimmee, Fl <Sorry to hear of your trials and tribulations. Steady
on my friend. You're moving in more positive directions. Bob
Fenner>
Re: Ropes and Dragons Robert, One more thing I just
remembered. The day after the two rope fish died the water became
cloudy, that was my initial reason for setting up the Diatom filter.
Also, I use a Fluval 204 with just the foam and bio pellets. (No
carbon) I hope you're able to help. I'm really not enjoying the
kids reaction and the mortality lessons it forces me to give. <I
might also add a "unit" (bag) of Boyd's Chemipure to the
Fluval. Bob Fenner> Tom Peterson
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