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My Kissing Gourami is losing weight 03/04/2008
Hi, My pink kissing Gourami is loosing weight quickly. I have a 20
gallon aquarium with two kissing Gouramis (6 months), two gold Gouramis
(3 months), one fire Gourami (3 months), a leopard bush fish (5 days),
and a Chinese algae eater (three months) (Gyrinocheilus aymonieri).
Everyone is under 2 inches except the algae eater he is about 2 1/2
inches. About a week ago I noticed one of my kissing Gouramis was
loosing weight and yesterday I realized he was really skinny. Every so
often he will go to the back corner of the aquarium and sit on the
bottom. His eating habits haven't changed and I know that he eats
well because he eats on a separate side of the tank than the other
fish. He is not being picked on, and other than sitting on the bottom
at times he's not lethargic. I have a 20 gallon Penguin 100
Bio-Wheel Power Filter, two 20 gallon AquaClear submersible heaters (it
gets cold in my house and one was having trouble keeping up), and two
aerators. It is pretty well planted with a big rock that has caves in
it where the fire Gourami and bush fish like to hang out. I use API
aquarium salt (1 tablespoon per 5 gallons), and one a week I use API
Stress Coat and API Stress Zyme. My ammonia is 0, my nitrate is 0, my
nitrite is 0, and my pH varies between 7 and 7.6. I clean my aquarium
every other week and change 25% of the water using only distilled
water. I alternate my feeding between TetraMin Tropical Flakes and
frozen blood worms. I have had trouble with dwarf Gouramis in the past,
but this seems to be a good group that gets along well with one
another. I really love my aquarium and my fish and if I'm doing
something well I want to know so I can fix it. Thank you for any help
you can give me. Sorry if it's way to much information. Ryan
<Hello Ryan. First let's be clear that your tank is overstocked
with the wrong species. Gyrinocheilus aymonieri gets to about 25 cm and
is a completely psychotic, non-community fish once mature. If there is
a fish I would BAN from the trade, this would be it! Responsible for
more terrified community fish than anything else I can think of. A
nasty, nasty fish. The Pink Kissing Gourami Helostoma temminckii is
another big fish, potentially reaching 30 cm, though 15-20 cm is more
typical in captivity. While a tolerable community fish in jumbo
systems, it simply isn't viable in a 20-gallon tank. It needs a
tank something like 4 times bigger. Secondly, Helostoma temminckii is a
very difficult fish to maintain in aquaria; it is at least partially a
plankton feeder, and it needs to be fed a lot of food, more or less all
the time. In big tanks this isn't so much a problem because
there's enough filter capacity to compensate for that, as well as
algae-covered surfaces for grazing. But in small tanks if you provide
the fish enough food, you'll likely find water quality plummet.
When kept in mixed communities they also tend to lose out at feeding
time because they can't wolf down food as fast as the other fish.
Seriously, they need to be getting 3-4 meals per day, and those meals
need to be good quality algae-based flake foods. There must also be
constant supply of green foods, such as blanched curly lettuce (not
iceberg!) or Sushi Nori; tinned peas may be take, too. While it is
possible your fish has some other "wasting disease", my gut
feeling is that it is simply starving to death. You seem to be
suggesting one specimen is fine but the other one is thin; because
males are bullies, it is possible that the weaker fish doesn't get
access to food as often as it needs. One last thing: why are you using
distilled water in the aquarium? STOP! This is very bad for your fish.
Just use plain vanilla tap water (not water from a domestic water
softener) with suitable dechlorinator. There is no need to add salt.
Cheers, Neale.>
One skinny Gourami, one
bloated Gourami 3/3/08 Hello All! I'll try to
be as concise as possible, I have a 40 gallon freshwater
aquarium. The occupants are 4 adult platies, about 6 juvenile
platies, 1 Opaline Gourami (the other is in sick bay), a Pleco
and a Chinese algae eater (it was originally in a 10 gallon, but
I knew it needed more room so I moved him to the larger tank).
All water conditions are optimal, I do 25% water changes for 3
weekends , then a 50% on the fourth. I purchased these 2 Gouramis
about 6 weeks ago, put them in the quarantine tank, and well, the
bigger one started attacking the smaller one non-stop.
Wouldn't let it eat, etc...(turns out they are both males)
After a week of this I put the larger one in the 40 gallon. (I
know, a little too soon) I feed them flake food most of the time,
but every 3-4 days I give them blood worms and brine shrimp. I
also add algae disks for the algae eaters, which the other fish
eat on, too. Last week I noticed both Gouramis had long stringy
feces (no color to it, just transparent looking), so long it
would get caught on their feelers. Now the larger of the two is
bloated, but the smaller one looks normal (I've managed to
get him to eat some Tetracycline), but still no visible bowel
movement. The larger isn't eating at all, but is still
bloated, and I haven't seen any bowel movements from him in
about 3 days, either. My question is: Is he just
bloated/constipated, this all seemed to happen after the last
time I gave them the blood worms and brine shrimp. Or is it more
likely a bacterial infection? I've looked up Hexamita, and
that is another place where I'm finding some confusion. Some
sites list it as an intestinal bacterial infection with the
symptoms I've listed above, but other sites call it
"Hole in the Head" disease??? He doesn't have any
holes in his head or body. He's just "stuffed"
looking. No fins or scales are protruding, so I'm sure it
isn't Dropsy. And all the other fish seem healthy. Oh, and as
far as getting him to try a sweet pea, or eating medicine, he is
having NO part of eating anything! (Just an extra note, he seems
to be doing a lot more surface breathing than the smaller one.)
Thanks so so much, I LOVE YOUR SITE! Nicki <Hello Nicki. First
things first: when you say "Opaline Gourami" you mean
Trichogaster trichopterus rather than the small Gouramis (often
called Dwarf Gouramis) Colisa lalia? I only ask because the
latter are notoriously prone to a viral diseases called Dwarf
Gourami Disease that is incurable. The symptoms are very
consistent: lethargy, loss of colour/appetite, sores on the body,
swelling, then death. While it is possible that other Gouramis
might contract this disease, particularly Colisa hybrids, I have
not yet heard of Trichogaster spp. coming down with it. Now, I
will say a few things about food: Freeze-dried foods do tend to
cause constipation in some fish, particularly if used overly
often. Live foods can be a potential source of infections. So
while both these food items are popular with aquarists, they are
not without risks. Moderate feedings of dried foods (including
flake) with generous use of wet-frozen or fresh foods seems, to
me, to be the ideal. In any case, if constipation is the problem
(and it may well be) then use an approach similar to that
outlined here for Goldfish:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/gldfshmalnut.htm You may
need to focus on daphnia rather than vegetables as laxative
foods, but tinned peas may be eaten. As for Hexamita or
Hole-in-the-Head -- these are arguably the same disease,
manifested in different ways. External infections cause pitting
in the surface of the fish, usually around the lateral line,
while internal infections cause wasting. Anyway, treatment is
very difficult, though there are Hexamita-specific medications
such as ESHa Hexamita Treatment (both forms), Metronidazole (for
internal infections) and Quinine Sulfate (external infections).
Treatment almost always depends on the fish being dealt with
promptly; once established this infection is very difficult to
cure. Hope this helps, Neale.>
Re: One skinny Gourami, one
bloated Gourami 3/6/08 Thank you Neale! Yes, they aren't
the Dwarf ones, they are a hybrid of the 3 spotted blue Gouramis.
<Okely dokely.> So, an update: I managed to get the one in
quarantine to eat the Tetracycline for 3 days as directed, and he
finally had a real fish poop, no longer stringy and transparent.
And he appears to be back to his old self again. <Sounds
positive.> The other isn't eating anything! But now, I can
see it is Dropsy, his scales are just now starting to stand out.
I still can't get him to eat the Tetracycline. So I'm
going to check out your site for more info, and make a trip to
the Pet store for something that can be added to the water (I
switched him into Quarantine, and the other is in the big tank
now.) <Start here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/dropsyfaqs.htm Though
realistically, getting small fish back from Dropsy infections is
very difficult. By the time you see the fluid build-up, the
damage has largely been done. I'd tend towards painlessly
destroying this fish now.> I really do appreciate your site,
it has been such a blessing! <Thanks!> I'll keep you
undated! Nicki <Good luck! Neale.>
Re: One skinny Gourami, one
bloated Gourami Hi Neale, I wanted to let you know that he
did pass the following day. It was pretty sad, I was watching him
and suddenly his swimming became "bobble" like, then he
was on his side, just like that. I'm happy to say that the
other is back to full health, and enjoying a life in the larger
tank. :) I think the fact that he'd eat the medicine is the
sole reason he made it. <Ah, too bad. Well, glad the other
fish is feeling better. Good luck! Neale.>
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