FAQs on Freshwater Anti-Parasitic Medications,
Use
Related Articles: Choose Your
Weapon: Freshwater Fish Disease Treatment Options
by Neale Monks, FW Disease Troubleshooting,
Freshwater
Diseases, Nutritional
Disease, Ich/White Spot
Disease, Methylene
Blue, Metronidazole/Flagyl, Formalin/Formaldehyde, Malachite Green,
Related FAQs: FW
Anthelminthics, Freshwater
Medications, Quarantine/Treatment
Tanks, Treatments, Salt/Use, FW
Antibiotic Use, Aquarium
Maintenance, Ich/White Spot
Disease, African Cichlid
Disease 1, Cichlid
Disease,
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Prazi(quantel) and Spotted
Silver Dollars 9/14/10
Hello Crew
A couple of the fish in my community tank has been flashing without any
signs of Ich. While I am keeping an eye on things in case its just some
water quality issue, I've got Prazi on standby.
Is Prazi safe at "standard" dosage for Spotted Silver
Dollars?
Cheers
Tim
<Hello Tim. Why on Earth do you think a deworming medication will
somehow cure "flashing"? Let's be clear, flashing either
implies the fish is irritated by something in the water, such as
ammonia, or else its gills or skin are being irritated by external
parasites like Whitespot and Velvet.
Assume the problem is one or other of these and act accordingly. The
standard heat/salt method is perfectly safe with characins, and a good
way to treat Whitespot in situations where copper- and formalin-based
medications wouldn't be appropriate. Praziquantel is safe *and*
effective when used at the dosage recommended by your vet given the
type and body weight of the fish in question. In the US this medication
is available over the counter at some aquarium shops, but as any vet
will tell you, used this way there's no guarantees at all that it
will be *both* safe *and* effective. Elsewhere in the world
Praziquantel is prescription-only, and your vet will tell you precisely
how much to use to treat your fish, should you need to do so. Cheers,
Neale.>
Re: Prazi(quantel) and Spotted Silver Dollars
Hi Neale
<Tim,>
Thanks for your reply.
<Most welcome.>
Seeing that there are no signs of external parasites like Ich or
velvet, I thought I should have some Prazi handy in case it was a due
to flukes.
<Gill flukes you mean? Pretty rare among aquarium fish, and almost
never a major cause of mortality.>
In any case, I am still monitoring the situation, as I did have a
nitrate overload for some reason (I do weekly water changes, so I am
not sure what caused that spike).
<Far more likely to be the problem here.>
I have reduced the nitrates substantially through water changes over
consecutive days) and also used carbon
<Which will of course remove any medications.>
in case there was some toxic material inadvertently introduced, so I am
still hoping it may be due to some unknown water quality issue that no
longer exists.
<Indeed. Would be my hypothesis too. Do two or three 50% water
changes over the next 2-3 days, and then see what happens. Also check
water chemistry and temperature are in the favoured zone for the Silver
Dollar species being kept. Treating with heat/salt might be worth doing
as well, just in case there is Whitespot in the system at a very low
intensity, something that is far from uncommon. Since salt/heat has
zero impact on fish health and filtration, it's far, FAR preferable
to using medications.>
Cheers
Tim
<Cheers, Neale.>
puffer food
Using Dips and Feeding FW Puffers 8/9/10
Hi. Thank you very much for the help the other day with my bloated
Firemouth. I followed your advise and he seems to be doing fine now.
You did not quite get to the bottom of one of my questions however. It
could be my
own fault for not properly phrasing my question. So here it goes again.
Is it possible to administer meds. such as fungus or parasite
medication to a single fish in a small container (no filter, no heater)
containing only the fish, the meds. and a gallon of water for a short
period of time, say 30-45 min or does it take longer for the medication
to properly take affect?
< There are dip medications that are used as you
have suggested. Many fish are dipped in a salt bath as well to get rid
of external parasites like flukes.>
also wanted to ask you about the feeding of my puffer fish. I live near
a very beautiful spring and spring run which empties into a river. The
spring run is full of small snails and freshwater clams and mussels.
Can I feed these animals to my puffer or would there be a danger of
introducing parasites into the fish? If not, could these animals be
treated in a quarantine tank with Parasite Clear to remove potential
parasites before feeding time and for how long would they need to be
treated. I look forward to your response, and thanks again for all that
you do here. Brett.
< Parasites and snails are usually killed by the same medications.
The clams and mussels are filter feeders. If the water source is very
clean and has no contaminants the invertebrates may be ok to feed to
the puffers. An
alternative would be Can-O-Snails by ZooMed Labs. This
product was designed to be a reptile food but my friends with puffers
swear by this stuff. The canning process kills that parasites and the
snail meat can be cut up for any size puffer. I don't think I would
feed it exclusively but it is worth trying a couple times a week as a
treat so they don't get imprinted on it.-Chuck>
Question re: anti-parasitic
medicated fish food for Platys 2/24/08 Hello
Crew, I have spent hours reading the FAQ's and your responses
(my favourite being the one with the lady and her boyfriend
having issues with breeding and Don spitting out his coffee) and
have found them entertaining and informative. Now I have a
question, which I hope you will answer. I have a 35 gallon tank,
which has been in operation for about 3 years, so is well-cycled.
I do regular water changes and periodically test the levels of
nitrates, ph, and ammonia. All seem to be consistently within
acceptable ranges. This tank is planted with a large number of
artificial (plastic) plants, as well as live plants. There is 1
to 2" of gravel, 3 ornamental logs for hiding places, an
undergravel filter, an outside 3 stage power filter, and a bubble
bar. 6 weeks ago, my son helped me by bringing over his gravel
vacuum and vacuuming the gravel in this tank. This resulted in a
50% water change. The livestock in this tank includes one elderly
Pleco, whom I inherited with the tank, about 7 inches in length,
2 pearl Danios, 3 blacklight tetras, one of which is very large
(platy sized), 2 Glowlight tetras, and my favourites, 2 adult
male platys, and currently only 1 adult female platy. There have
been no new introductions of fish for the past year, although
there are about 15 juvenile platys of ages varying from 2 to 5
months. I feed twice a day, with premium flake food and
supplement with blanched romaine lettuce which seems to go over
very well with the platys, old and young. This past week, I lost
an adult female Mickey Mouse Platy. She was one of the original
introductions, so I was sorry to lose her. Her history includes
being placed in a nursery net within the main tank, when I was
quite sure she was about to give birth. She had the gravid spot,
and I could see the dark eyes of the babies. She was very unhappy
in the nursery net, so after 4 days with no results, I released
her into the main tank. That was probably a year ago, and while
she never lost the gravid spot, the dark eyes disappeared and
there never were any babies. The one male platy who is always
'on the make' seemed to know she was of no use to him,
and would chase her away. For several weeks before her demise,
she did have what I have seen described on your site as
'whitish stringy poop'. Up until 2 days before she went,
she was still eating, and swimming normally. During those last 2
days, she was hiding, and not coming out to eat. Today I noticed
this 'whitish stringy poop' from the second, less
aggressive adult male Sunset Platy. My question is, should I be
concerned about a parasitic infection, and should I start feeding
the anti-parasitic medicated fish food? Is it safe for the
juvenile platys and the rest of the fish? Should I abstain from
feeding the blanched romaine lettuce while feeding the medicated
food? I do realize my current ratio of 2 adult male platys to 1
adult female is not ideal, but the 2nd male is not particularly
amorous, although by their colouring, I do believe some of the
juveniles are his descendants. I also have a 2nd tank, populated
with a school of Cardinal Tetras, and one small, skittish Pleco.
My intention is to move some of the juvenile platys to this tank
as they mature. Thank you, for having such an informative site,
and for your anticipated response to my long-winded email.
Aprilwine <Anti-parasite food is usually safe for juvenile
fish. In this instance I wouldn't bother unless I saw any
other fish producing abnormal faeces. Do also switch to
high-fibre foods for a while -- algae, daphnia, brine shrimps,
tinned peas, etc. Won't do the other fish any harm. Anyway,
this'll help clear out the insides. But if you do see other
fish with odd faeces and/or signs of emaciation, then by all
means switch to something anti-parasitic. While constipation is
rather more common in livebearers, parasitic infections do
happen, and are worth bearing in mind when fish start looking
off-colour. Camallanus worms are probably the most commonly found
intestinal parasites in livebearing fish. Cheers,
Neale.>
Re: Question re: anti-parasitic
medicated fish food for Platys 03/04/2008 Thanks Neale, I
have been feeding supplementary peas (frozen, slightly cooked,
skinned) and they seem to go over very well. The adult Sunset
Platy seems to be back to normal, and all seem to be doing fine.
I appreciate your advice. <Greetings. It's good to hear
everything is working fine! Platies certainly benefit from a
"green" diet, and I think you'll find that over the
long term you'll have Platies that are more active and have
brighter colours than would be otherwise. Thanks for letting me
know the good news; it's rare we hear that our little
"patients" have got better! Cheers,
Neale.>
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Question re: anti-parasitic medicated fish food for
Platys 2/24/08 Hello Crew, I have spent hours reading
the FAQ's and your responses (my favourite being the one with the
lady and her boyfriend having issues with breeding and Don spitting out
his coffee) and have found them entertaining and informative. Now I
have a question, which I hope you will answer. I have a 35 gallon tank,
which has been in operation for about 3 years, so is well-cycled. I do
regular water changes and periodically test the levels of nitrates, ph,
and ammonia. All seem to be consistently within acceptable ranges. This
tank is planted with a large number of artificial (plastic) plants, as
well as live plants. There is 1 to 2" of gravel, 3 ornamental logs
for hiding places, an undergravel filter, an outside 3 stage power
filter, and a bubble bar. 6 weeks ago, my son helped me by bringing
over his gravel vacuum and vacuuming the gravel in this tank. This
resulted in a 50% water change. The livestock in this tank includes one
elderly Pleco, whom I inherited with the tank, about 7 inches in
length, 2 pearl Danios, 3 blacklight tetras, one of which is very large
(platy sized), 2 Glowlight tetras, and my favourites, 2 adult male
platys, and currently only 1 adult female platy. There have been no new
introductions of fish for the past year, although there are about 15
juvenile platys of ages varying from 2 to 5 months. I feed twice a day,
with premium flake food and supplement with blanched romaine lettuce
which seems to go over very well with the platys, old and young. This
past week, I lost an adult female Mickey Mouse Platy. She was one of
the original introductions, so I was sorry to lose her. Her history
includes being placed in a nursery net within the main tank, when I was
quite sure she was about to give birth. She had the gravid spot, and I
could see the dark eyes of the babies. She was very unhappy in the
nursery net, so after 4 days with no results, I released her into the
main tank. That was probably a year ago, and while she never lost the
gravid spot, the dark eyes disappeared and there never were any babies.
The one male platy who is always 'on the make' seemed to know
she was of no use to him, and would chase her away. For several weeks
before her demise, she did have what I have seen described on your site
as 'whitish stringy poop'. Up until 2 days before she went, she
was still eating, and swimming normally. During those last 2 days, she
was hiding, and not coming out to eat. Today I noticed this
'whitish stringy poop' from the second, less aggressive adult
male Sunset Platy. My question is, should I be concerned about a
parasitic infection, and should I start feeding the anti-parasitic
medicated fish food? Is it safe for the juvenile platys and the rest of
the fish? Should I abstain from feeding the blanched romaine lettuce
while feeding the medicated food? I do realize my current ratio of 2
adult male platys to 1 adult female is not ideal, but the 2nd male is
not particularly amorous, although by their colouring, I do believe
some of the juveniles are his descendants. I also have a 2nd tank,
populated with a school of Cardinal Tetras, and one small, skittish
Pleco. My intention is to move some of the juvenile platys to this tank
as they mature. Thank you, for having such an informative site, and for
your anticipated response to my long-winded email. Aprilwine
<Anti-parasite food is usually safe for juvenile fish. In this
instance I wouldn't bother unless I saw any other fish producing
abnormal faeces. Do also switch to high-fibre foods for a while --
algae, daphnia, brine shrimps, tinned peas, etc. Won't do the other
fish any harm. Anyway, this'll help clear out the insides. But if
you do see other fish with odd faeces and/or signs of emaciation, then
by all means switch to something anti-parasitic. While constipation is
rather more common in livebearers, parasitic infections do happen, and
are worth bearing in mind when fish start looking off-colour.
Camallanus worms are probably the most commonly found intestinal
parasites in livebearing fish. Cheers, Neale.>
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