FAQs on the Molly
Social Disease:
Related Articles:
Mollies, &
Poeciliids: Guppies, Platies, Swordtails,
Mollies by Neale Monks, Livebearing
Fishes by Bob Fenner,
Related FAQs: Mollies
1, Mollies 2,
Molly Identification FAQs,
Molly Behavior FAQs,
Molly Compatibility FAQs,
Molly Selection FAQs,
Molly System FAQs,
FAQs on Molly Disease:
Molly Disease 1,
Molly Disease 2,
Molly Disease 3,
Molly Disease 4,
Molly Disease 5,
Molly Health 6,
Molly Health 7,
Molly Health 8, Molly Health ,
FAQs on Molly Disease by Category:
Environmental,
Nutritional (e.g. HLLE),
Infectious (Virus, Bacterial, Fungal),
Parasitic (Ich, Velvet...),
Genetic, Treatments
FAQs on Molly Reproduction/Breeding:
Molly Reproduction
1, Molly Reproduction 2,
Molly Reproduction 3,
|
All life must at least tolerate water quality conditions
PLUS be compatible behavior-wise.
NOT so-called Chinese algae eaters... NOT Tetras or
other soft, acidic water life, NOT cold water life with tropicals, NOR
many catfish species.
Need to be placed more females than males...
|
Male molly seems 'lonely' 1/21/14
Hi crew,
<Katie,>
I have a community tank with various fish but mainly mollies and
platies.
Our largest female gave birth but died after a month. The male seemed to
be pining for her, he kept low in the tank, started losing his colour
and hid underneath the filter.
<Do read, here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/mollies.htm
Almost certainly your "unhappy" Molly is responding to some other stress
factor, perhaps environmental if water quality isn't spot-on (nitrate
levels need to be below 20 mg/l in freshwater) or the water isn't hard
enough (the harder the better, 15+ degrees dH hardness, pH 7.5-8.5).>
This morning he was just lying on the bottom of the tank and eventually
died. Could this be a disease in our tank or does this happen with males
that have mated with a female for a long time? (We have had them
together for more than a year and they used to swim together all the
time)
<Mollies do not need company, and form no bonds whatsoever with each
other.
Male Mollies are aggressive towards one another, and will attempt to
mate with any/all females that pass close to them. They can be very
persistent, and this can/does stress unreceptive (i.e., pregnant)
females, potentially causing miscarriages and even the death of the
female. Mollies are best kept in large groups with females outnumbering
males by at least two to one; failing that, just keep virgin females.>
Thank you for your help,
Katie
<Most welcome, Neale.>
My Dalmatian Molly; sys., hlth.
1/1/14
I got a 36gallon tank for Christmas. I filled it with filtered water
<What do you mean by "filtered water"? Did you buy drinking water from a
grocery store? Do you know the hardness and pH of this water? Do
understand that tap water, if treated with water conditioner, is best
for most tropical fish because it is inexpensive and you can afford to
do large, frequent water changes (25% a week is a good target). While
drinking water might sound a better idea, it's expensive, and "good"
water that isn't changed very often won't help the fish in the long
term. One last issue is water chemistry. Mollies (and Guppies, and
indeed most other livebearers) need hard, alkaline water. If you keep
them in soft water, they'll quickly sicken and die. If all else fails,
add salt to the water. A good target here is 3-6 grams per litre (about
0.4-0.8 oz per US gallon, roughly 2-4 teaspoons per US gallon). Marine
aquarium salt is ideal and inexpensive in the quantities required --
you'll find even a small box will last many months.>
and let it sit for 2-3 days with the filter and heater running and ever
since it has remained at 76 degrees.
<Do understand that running the filter without fish in the tank does
nothing to mature the aquarium. It's a good idea in the sense it shows
you the aquarium is set up properly and isn't leaking, but other than
that, it's pointless. The filter won't mature until you add fish.
Unfortunately for you, Mollies are extremely bad fish for maturing new
freshwater aquaria. Oddly enough they are very hardy in brackish and
marine aquaria, and historically were often used to mature such tanks.
But in plain freshwater tanks they very, very quickly sicken when
exposed to non-zero ammonia and nitrite levels.>
Saturday I bought 3 fish. A blue guppy a yellow guppy and a Dalmatian
lyre tail Molly. I don't want any babies so I got all males.
<Do understand these will fight. Mollies are not sociable, and males
especially so. Females are a better bet for a quiet aquarium, and even
if they are pregnant, they'll eventually run out of babies and your tank
will become a baby-free zone. Remove unwanted fry as necessary, and your
local pet shop will probably take them. If you leave them in the tank,
they're actually a good insurance policy for the future, bearing in mind
not all your original fish might survive, and over the years, having
younger fish to replace older ones is useful and economical.>
And they said add only 2-3 fish at a time.
<Yes. But Mollies are such bad fish for maturing tanks, even this won't
guarantee success. Do note that adding salt as instructed above will
turn the aquarium slightly brackish, dramatically increasing your odds
of success (in brief, salt slightly detoxifies nitrite, and the hardness
in marine aquarium mix further helps Mollies maintain better health.>
Well when I got them home I let the bag sit in the tank for a little bit
before I put the fish in. Once I did so they seemed happy. Well a little
while later I noticed the Molly was breathing really hard and I figured
he was stressed.
<Correct observation. Did you do an ammonia or nitrite test? When you
cycle an aquarium, first ammonia goes up and then comes down to zero
within a couple weeks. A few days after the ammonia goes up, nitrite
starts to go up as well. Eventually it comes down, usually within 3-4
weeks, by which time the aquarium is now cycled.>
He hasn't died yet but this morning I found my yellow guppy kept
swimming to the top.
<Likewise, modern fancy Guppies are extremely sensitive delicate fish.>
He looked like he was trying to get some air then he would stop moving,
turn upside down and sink to the bottom.
<Classic stress behaviour.>
He kept doing this and I noticed even when he was swimming back to the
top his gills weren't moving they were just like sticking out. I took
advantage that he kept swimming to the top and caught him in a bag. I
let some water flow into the bag along with him and after about 15
minutes he wasn't "coming back to life" anymore and trying to get air.
He was the calmest of them all and the most active I'm not sure what
went wrong.
<Easy: you added sensitive fish to a non-cycled aquarium. While some
fish are tough enough to go through this, with care on your part,
Mollies and Guppies are not (at least, not in freshwater conditions).>
Now onto the story about the Molly... He really isn't social at all and
sometimes his tail end (is that posterior end?) would be bent sideways
and he would tread water like that for a minute or a couple minutes.
<This behaviour is called "Shimmying" and it's a neurological symptom
often seen with Mollies and Guppies when stressed. It fixes itself if
conditions
improve.>
I don't know what to do
<Get a nitrite test kit (not a nitrate test kit, they're different). Do
a test. If nitrite isn't zero, don't feed the fish, and do a 20-30%
water changes (ideally, adding salt to each batch of new water as
mentioned above). Regardless, do water changes every day for the first
couple weeks.
Thereafter you might get away with changes every 2-3 days depending on
the nitrite level. Expect all this hassle for the first 3-4 weeks until
nitrite stays resolutely at zero for 2 or 3 days in succession. During
this first 3-4 weeks from the time you add the first fish, feed
extremely sparingly, a tiny amount (a 2-3 mm crumb per fish, say) and
only every 2-3 days. Don't worry about fish starving. Isn't going to
happen. Takes weeks! But ammonia and nitrite can kill fish within a day.
Use your nitrite test kit regularly, every day or two.>
I don't know if something is wrong or what but I don't want it to die.
<Good!>
I don't notice him eating very much either.
<See above; not a problem. Will eat when conditions improve.>
I haven't had fish for several years but I thought I'd give it another
shot. I'm extremely novice, I've never had more than a 5 gallon sponge
bob square pants tank with a Betta in it until now.
<Hope this helps, Brooke. Do read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fwset-up.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/mollies.htm
Follow especially the links on that second article re: Molly disease;
almost always caused by the environment, and what applies to Mollies
largely applies to Guppies too. Cheers, Neale.>
shy Gourami and vertical molly 8/22/10
Hi,
<Salve,>
I have a 72 gallon fresh water community tank. Tank is fully cycled and
established. Regular weekly maintenance (water change, gravel siphon,
glass cleaned with cleaning tool and all water conditions monitored and
within acceptable parameters.
<Meaning what, precisely? Mollies require very different water
conditions to South American tetras, and it's hard to see how you
can have "acceptable" water for both in one aquarium. Even if
you don't maintain Mollies in brackish water -- and to be fair,
some people manage to keep them in freshwater just fine -- they still
need warm, hard, basic water.
Danios require cooler water, and Tetras softer water.>
No live plants, though several fake plants and multiple hiding spots
for the varied fish There are 3 gouramis in the tanks (along with other
species - all community/peaceful -Danios/tetras/mollies/2 clown
loaches/Cory/Pleco).
<See above.>
Of the 3 gouramis, one is acting what I define as strange. During the
"daytime' or when daytime light is on the tank, it will
"hide" in one corner of the tank. However if I run the
"blue" light that I have for night time viewing, this Gourami
becomes active and swims throughout the whole tank and socializes with
the other fish. During the day or with day lights on this
Gourami will run from the other gouramis as if being chased, however
under the blue lights shows no such sign of submission and chases the
others as much as anything else. No obvious physical issues, and seems
to be eating regular.
<I do think this is aggression. Assuming this is Trichogaster
trichopterus,
the males -- which have longer dorsal fins -- are famously aggressive
towards one another. Adding more females might dilute things, and
keeping just two males within a group of three is bound to cause
problems because one male can always bully the other. Try keeping at
least equal number of females to males, and either one male or at least
three.>
Have also noticed that a silver molly (relatively new tank member - 2
weeks) swims around in a "vertical" posture, nose up/tail
down - almost like a rocket ship taking off.
<This is likely "the Shimmies", a neurological issue
related to poor environmental conditions. Mollies need 15+ degrees dH,
pH 7.5-8.5, and a temperature between 25-30 degrees C. Danios won't
enjoy water that warm, and neither will Corydoras or tetras such as
Neons; all of these are better kept at 22-24 C. Obviously, most
freshwater fish won't tolerate brackish water, but even the hard
water Mollies need will significantly shorten the life of the more
sensitive South American tetras such as Neons and Cardinals.>
It is capable of swimming horizontally, and will do so for a while and
then go vertical even though it is swimming along a horizontal plane.
My local fish supplier says that this is a common trait of this
species, but I have never seen so before. Again no obvious physical or
eating issues. Any thoughts/advice would be appreciated.
<It's possible the Molly has constipation or is simply
genetically deformed, especially if the thing is inbred or one of those
ghastly Balloon Mollies. But if the fins are clamped, or the fish rocks
when treading water, then Shimmies is very likely the problem.
Constipation can be cured using high-fibre foods such as peas and
spinach, together with Epsom salt if needs be:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/gldfshmalnut.htm
Genetic problems aren't fixable, and the Shimmies goes away usually
if the Molly is given good conditions:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/mollies.htm
>
Thanks
John
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: shy Gourami and vertical molly
Thank you for your response,
<Glad to help.>
I will try provide the further information you require.
<OK.>
Maintenance: weekly water changes, approx 30%-40%, use floating glass
cleaner to clean glass and gravel syphon to suction gravel. Fluval 404
canister filter Water conditions: Ph maintained at 7.0 as much as
possible, checked twice a
week. Nitrates checked weekly usually around 5 (lowest number on
scale).
Ammonia tested weekly usually 0-0.25 (keep a hang in tank monitor in
the tank to visually check daily - unsure how accurate these are).
<Very inaccurate. Do have the water tested with a liquid test kit;
if not zero, then you have a problem with water quality.>
Also check Phosphates and usually 0-0.25. Haven't tested the water
hardness in a while, but believe it to be hard (will get test kit to
test). Usually test water 2-3 days after water change to give numbers a
chance to balance.
Is this the proper type schedule. Anything specific I should be
checking as well?
<What you're doing sounds fine.>
Sorry not sure what you refer to as "basic" water?
<Basic is the opposite of acidic; i.e., pH 7 upwards. At school you
might have learned "alkaline" for this, but actually alkaline
means something quite specific, though closely related.>
Usually attempt to maintain a water temp of 76F (24C)
Food: TetraAlgae vegetable enhanced chips. Nutrafin Max sinking pellets
(for bottom feeders (loaches) bloodworms (every 10 days or so as a
treat
<All sounds fine.>
Tank inhabitants:
1 Bristlenose Pleco (2yrs in tank )
2 Clown loaches (2 years in tank)
6 Zebra Danios (3 months to 1.5 years)
6 Cardinal Tetras (1 year)
1 Juli Cory (1.5 years old)
2 black and 2 silver mollies (1 silver molly 1 year, other 3 - 2 weeks
in tank). They are not balloon mollies.
<Good!>
3 Gouramis (1 moonlight and 2 sunburst - the moonlight Gourami is no
problem (except chases the air bubbles), the solitary Gourami is one of
the sunburst).
<Right, the Sunburst Gourami is, I believe, a variety of Colisa
lalia, a very risky species. Highly prone to Mycobacteria infections as
well as a viral infection all its own called Dwarf Gourami Iridovirus.
Not a species I ever recommend. Sad, because it's a nice fish. But
inbreeding and intensive farming has completely ruined this
species.>
Between my LFS and the web, I thought I had done my homework regarding
water/environment compatibility within the tank
(www.peteducation.com/article.cfm?c=16+1911+1957&aid=2572
- was one article that led me to believe mollies and gouramis were
compatible) - though I am sure there are others to indicate
non-compatibility. However your information indicates the mollies do
not fit within this grouping and I am willing to accept your
analysis.
<It's not that you can't keep Mollies with Gouramis;
it's that you can't *always* keep Mollies with Gouramis. About
50% of the time Mollies just don't do well in freshwater
communities. Some folks write that off, and say if the Mollies
aren't happy, take them out and try something else. Or
alternatively, keep medicating as often as required. Or worse, treat
them
as disposable fish, and when they're sick, euthanise them and buy
some more. My argument is towards providing such conditions for Mollies
that you have as near to 100% chance of success as possible. So
certainly that means the water should be hard and basic (alkaline) but
it also means keeping your options open so you can add some marine salt
mix. Some tropical fish don't mind a little marine salt mix, and
will thrive under those conditions. Most other livebearers for example,
as well as things like Australian Rainbowfish, many Killifish and
Cichlids, and certain catfish such as Brown Hoplos. But on the other
hand, there are fish that dislike salt immensely, including most
tetras, barbs and gouramis.>
You seem to indicate that the best move is to remove the mollies from
the mix and I will probably go that route.
<Does tend to be my recommendation. Mollies are fine fish, but you
need to work around them.>
In the interim, will the Epsom salt have any effect on the other fish
in the tank/ should Epsom salt be a regular addition to the tank?
<Epsom salt won't have any negative effects on the other fish.
It IS NOT an substitute for marine salt mix, but rather a laxative that
helps relieve constipation. It also raises general hardness, but
that's something different to salinity.>
If there are any other compatibility issues I would appreciate further
direction.
<I think we've covered everything!>
Not sure of the sex of the gouramis - I was not there when purchased -
will attempt to determine
<Your Colisa lalia are males if colourful, females if plain
silver.>
I do not use any aquarium salt, should I?
<Some folk do add "teaspoon per 5 gallon" amounts to
community tanks but there's not much reason to. Do read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/SaltUseFWArtNeale.htm
>
Also have not had much luck with live plants (mollies ate everything I
put in there - which I understand they do)
<Not normally. They much prefer algae, which is their natural diet.
But certain soft plants may be nibbled on. Try Indian Fern, a species
that is clearly good to eat but also fast-growing, so tends to hold its
own.>
plus most of the information I was given seemed to indicate the
conditions for healthy plants were not compatible with
my fish. How important are live plants?
<They aren't crucial at all. Plants provide shade, but you can
do that with plastic or silk plants. Plants remove nitrate of course if
growing fast, but water changes will do that too. Fast-growing plants
do prevent algae though, and that's difficult to do otherwise, so
again, clumps of floating Indian Fern can make a huge difference if
you're constantly wiping algae from the glass.>
Bubble wall - I am not a huge fan of it esthetically, however if its
good for the fish I'll keep it. Recommendations?
<If you don't like it, don't use it! Contrary to popular
misconception, bubbles don't "force" oxygen into the
water. What bubbles do is move the water from the bottom of the tank to
the top. If you do that using a good strong filter, then bubbles are
redundant. Switch the thing off, and see what happens. If the fish seem
just as perky as before, then leave the
bubble wall off, or perhaps switch it on during hot spells when you
worry the water might be holding less oxygen than it should -- you can
tell because the fish become sluggish or hang about close to the top of
the tank. Do note that Mollies and Gouramis do this naturally, Mollies
to breath the air/water mix, and Gouramis to breath air directly, so
just because they're at the top of the tank doesn't mean
something is wrong.>
Finally, if there are no further compatibility issues, are there any
fish species that you would recommend to me.
<I think you have a fine mix of fish! You should add some more Julii
Corydoras because they are sociable. Clown Loaches get very big, and
also eat soft plants, so I'd tend to recommend Yo-yo Loaches or
Dwarf Chain Loaches over Clown Loaches. If you want a livebearer, I
suspect either Platies or Swordtails will be better in this tank,
depending on its size and how strong the water current is, Swordtails
being bigger, more active, more aggressive, and preferring strong water
currents. Failing that, Wrestling Halfbeaks are weird and lively, if a
bit more difficult to keep.>
Thanks
John
<Cheers, Neale.>
Molly Problems -- 10/02/08 Good Morning,
<Hello,> I read through almost all of the information here on
your site looking for answers to my issues, and as well searched the
web for help to no avail. I have a well cycled freshwater tank. It is a
Marineland Eclipse system 12 gal. It's been up and running since
May of this year. <Twelve gallons is next to nothing in terms of
aquarium stocking -- do be extremely careful what fish you add. Even
Guppies are too big/energetic for this tank in the long term. Have
written much about the problems of sub-20 gallon systems here at WWM,
so please do review.> Water quality is near perfect, and I keep the
temp around 76-78 degrees with a digital heater. The first fish
introduced to the tank about three weeks after set-up were two small
fancy fin zebra Danios. <Too active for this tank... need a tank 60
cm upwards in length once fully grown, given their size and
boisterousness. Also, they're schooling fish, so groups of six or
more essential. In smaller groups they're definitely unhappy (even
if you can't tell) and often become aggressive, chasing and nipping
each other and their tankmates. Please do get a fish book from the
library or book store, and review the needs of fish PRIOR to
purchase.> They did very well, and helped cycle the tank. About
three weeks later I purchased two red dwarf gouramis. They did
exceptionally well, and were thriving. <For now, anyway... Not my
favourite fish for lots of reasons.> Finally I added two Cory
catfish to help with tank clean-up. <Clean-up is YOUR job, not
theirs. Moreover, Corydoras need to be kept in groups of six or more.
Few species are small enough for you to keep six specimens in twelve
gallons of water. Only "dwarf" species like Corydoras
hastatus and Corydoras habrosus would be viable. Peppered catfish
(Corydoras paleatus) are the most commonly traded species, but at up to
7 cm long, they're WAY too big for a 12 gallon tank.> All was
well until a few days ago I decided to add some Mollies to the tank. I
was told by the pet store that adding mollies would be okay, for the
other fish I had were community fish. <Again, read a book. Almost
all problems in fishkeeping can be avoided this way. Mollies are FAR
FROM ideal community fish, not least of all because they need very
specific environmental conditions to thrive, ideally brackish water
conditions.> So I purchased two platinum Lyretail mollies, and one
black Sailfin molly. The Sailfin molly died within 12 hours. She seemed
fine, but then I found here floating upside down. That was weird, but I
figured maybe she was unstable to begin with and the shock of the move
did her in. I pulled the dead fish out and went to bed ( I leave a
small red led light on at night so the fish are not in total darkness.
good idea or bad?) <Neither, but a waste of electricity so for the
sake of global warming, how about switching it off...?> So anyway,
in the morning one Gourami was dead, fins eaten, and scales missing,
and the other Gourami was being hunted down and eaten alive. <Hmm...
could be many things going on here. For a start, two male Colisa lalia
will not coexist in 12 gallons. One will become dominant, and the other
will be (at best) bullied and at worst stressed to death, unable to
feed normally. Next up, mass produced Colisa lalia are of such
abysmally poor quality that no-one in their right mind should buy them
(at least not without a one-year guarantee!). Have written about this
here and elsewhere so do review.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebindex/anabantoids.htm Thirdly,
Gouramis and Mollies have utterly different water chemistry
requirements, so anything suitable for one will be harmful to the
other.> By the time I realized what was happening it was basically
too late for him. He was already battered, and they were relentless in
their pursuit. So I pulled him out and euthanized him with seltzer
water. <That's not euthanasia, that's a horrible way to go!
Where'd that idea come from? It's basically dropping a fish
into an acid bath... do think back to your High School chemistry: CO2
plus water = carbonic acid. Nothing there particularly good for giving
your fish a painless, rapid death. Do see here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/euthanasiafaqs.htm > The mollies were
acting like a pair of piranhas. Now the next day I notice that one of
the mollies lips and mouth are red and swollen with almost bloody spots
at the corners of his mouth. His eyes are wide with stress, and he
appears to be in pain. What is going on here? <What's the water
chemistry? Be under no illusions here: Mollies MUST HAVE hard, alkaline
water around pH 7.5-8.2, hardness 15+ degrees dH. They are infinitely
healthier in brackish water around SG 1.003 upwards. They are extremely
intolerant of ammonia, nitrite, and even nitrate. Being herbivores,
they will not stay healthy given a non-herbivorous diet. All these
things are amply discussed in the literature and here at WWM.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/mollies.htm In small tanks
they never do well because of their sensitivity to rapid pH changes and
nitrate accumulation. Even 20 gallons is too small for them, especially
given some varieties will reach 10-15 cm in length. Recommend not less
than 30 gallons if you want even half a chance of keeping Mollies
properly.> I left him in the tank to watch to see if the culprit is
the other molly attacking him, but she never touches him. She swims
near then darts away. Within a few hours this molly is dead. So I have
now just one molly and my cories. Now today I notice that her mouth is
swollen and pink. Her lips are bumpy rather than smooth, and she is
acting weird. <Could be Mouth Fungus (also known as Columnaris) but
equally easily Finrot or even incipient Fungus. Extremely common when
Mollies are kept in freshwater conditions. Just to make this point
clear to all our readers -- Mollies just aren't "good"
freshwater aquarium fish, and inexperienced aquarists should NEVER keep
them thus. Stick them in a brackish water tank and they're tough as
nails, and in saltwater tanks can be used to cycle filters from
scratch! All good clues to what these fish actually want, as opposed to
what we sometimes try to foist onto them.> Just sitting stationary
in one corner near the heater. <Likely "the Shimmies",
again, very common.> I've never seen a problem like this, nor
seen mollies act so violently. <Unlikely the Mollies killed the
Gouramis, though adding new fish to an overstocked aquarium could
easily tip the balance such that the "surplus" fish died.
That said, male Mollies are mutually aggressive, and again, that's
why they need BIG TANKS.> Can you please give me some advice, for it
looks like I'll be restocking soon for all my fish have died. I am
at a loss. Help! Thank you!!! <Please, first thing you do is grab a
pH and hardness test kit and establish what your water conditions are.
Then go read a book of fish species, and when you see a species you
like, cross-check its requirements with what you have in your tank. If
you have soft, slightly acidic water, then tetras and barbs will be
fine, but livebearers and many cichlids won't be appropriate. Do
see here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwlivestk.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwlvstksel.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwlivestocking.htm Now,
I'll tell you that in a mere 12 US gallons your choices are
extremely limited for all kinds of reasons to do with activity, adult
size, sensitivity to pH changes, and so on. Avoid anything above 2.5-3
cm in length, and don't pick anything noted for being either
aggressive or an active swimmer. Neon tetras, gobies, Kuhli loaches,
pygmy Corydoras species, shrimps and snails are all good choices for
very small tanks.> Joanne from New Jersey <Cheers, Neale.>
Sick Molly... env., mis-mixed with
goldfish 12/07/2007 First I would like to thank all of you.
Any time I have a question some one always answers me. So thanks. Now
onward. I have a 10 gallon tank. I have 3 mollies and 4 goldfish. Now I
know they like different water situations and found this out after the
fish were bought and put together (need to do my homework, I know).
However, every fish was doing fine but now ALL my mollies have what
appears to be fluffy white spots on them. Not sure if it's a
bacteria or a growth...what can I do? Also is the water contaminated
now to, so if something does end up happening to my molly's will it
contaminate the next fish? Thanks so much. Laura <Hello Laura. The
Mollies have Finrot and/or fungus and need to be treated with a
combination Finrot/fungus medication. This is extremely common when
Mollies are kept in freshwater. In addition, Mollies are acutely
sensitive to Nitrate, and Goldfish are veritable Nitrate factories! So
you WILL need to separate them. Please do read our article on Mollies
and act accordingly:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/mollies.htm Hope this helps,
Neale.>
Molly Flashing 11/28/2007
Hi. I have a 10 gallon aquarium that I use for Molly fry. I've
noticed that the fry like to bounce off the rocks in the tank.
They're not rubbing their bodies, just a quick rub of the head
area. Most of the fish in the tank do this at some point. They all
appear healthy, are growing and feeding vigorously. We have only lost
two babies out of approximately 50 that have passed through the tank
since July. Is this behavior normal or a sign of a parasite? Thanks,
Joyce <Hello Joyce. Are you adding marine salt mix to the aquarium?
And what's the water chemistry? Mollies (and indeed most other
fish) scratch their bodies when they are irritated. Sometimes this can
be a sign of illness, specifically parasites that attack the skin
and/or gills. But it can also be an indication of water chemistry
issues, particularly excessively low or high pH levels. Just to recap,
Mollies need very hard (ideally over 20 degrees dH) water and a pH of
not less than 7.5 and ideally around 8.0. While not all Molly keepers
agree, there's a widely held view that adding marine salt mix to
the aquarium is beneficial. Wild Mollies are common in brackish water
habitats, and when kept without salt in the water it is common (if not
universal) that Mollies become more sensitive to infections such as
Finrot and fungus. Salt also reduces the toxicity of nitrate, which
Mollies appear to be extremely sensitive to. Marine salt mix (as
opposed to generic aquarium or tonic salt) contains carbonate salts
that raise the hardness and prevent acidic conditions in the aquarium,
and this also has a dramatically beneficial effect on Molly health.
From my experience, the vast majority of instances where people have
Molly problems, those people are keeping them in tanks without marine
salt mix. I'd recommend adding 3-6 grammes of marine salt mix per
litre of water, and then seeing how your fish do. Cheers,
Neale.>
Re: Molly Flashing 11/28/07 Hi
Neale. Thanks for replying. I guess I should have listed the water
conditions in my first email. All levels are good, (PH around 7.9), our
water is naturally very hard and alkaline. <Excellent.> We do 20%
water changes once a week. <Ramp that up to at least 30% per week
and ideally 50%. Mollies do not like nitrate, and it seems to be one
triggering factor being ill-health.> I've heard that Mollies
prefer saltier water, but we have two small Corys in with them, so
don't want the Corys irritated. <Fundamentally Mollies and
Corydoras can't be mixed. End of story. It's a shame people
sell Mollies as "community fish" because they're not.>
What has me curious is that none of the fish seem stressed or sick.
They don't rub, just bounce off their heads. The two five month old
males that are in the tank are gorgeous and lively, but they too flash
off the rocks once in a while. I'm thinking if it was a parasite or
illness, these fish should show some sign of it by now. <I agree,
but what you're describing simply isn't normal. Hence the need
to try and narrow down the possible causes. Parasites on the gills
(typically Ick or Velvet) plus improper/fluctuating pH are the classic
causes of "flashing" behaviour.> So the water conditions
sound more likely, even though the numbers are good. <Do check the
ammonia and nitrate levels, if you can. While nitrite is the thing
people usually check first, with good reason, nitrate especially is
something that you have to watch with Mollies.> Hmm, will have to
investigate that possibility more carefully. Thanks for your help.
Joyce <Good luck, Neale.>
Male molly 2/12/07 I apologize now for
this question may sound like a windup or something purvey, I have a
black male molly who has been in the tank for nearly a month,
throughout this time he has basically been a sex-pest to a female molly
who he shares with a subordinate orange male, <A bad sex ratio for poeciliids...> until recently, she has been the only fish the male
has been able to harass; recently I have introduced two female molly/
platy crosses for him to harass. <Oh! Good> the other day I
noticed he (black dominate <dominant> male) was hanging round at
the bottom of the tank, 'hiding' nearly out of site,
<sight> when he moved and was visible, and this is why I
don't want to sound funny, his 'Gonopodium' (genitalia)
which normally sits back or extends round when he is copulating is now
permanently sticking out from his body at an odd angle. it also appears
that a small black lump on the end of his parts has appeared, though
this could be normal as it is his normal coloration. his character has
dramatically changed, he hides a lot and he avoids brushing
'it' on things in the tank. I would have used the forum chat,
but ppl might accuse me of being some sort of pervert. has he really
injured 'himself'? <Does read as such, yes> is this a
common problem? <Not atypical> what can I do? <Hope, be
patient...> I can send pictures if this helps but I have as yet been
unable to find anything on search engines which doesn't bring up
obscene porn or strange blogs mike <Thanks for sharing. Bob
Fenner>
Sick molly - disappearing Betta
7/9/07 Have been reading your website - but nothing seems to apply
exactly to what's going on with my fish. <OK.> We have a ten
gallon aquarium which we started with a male beta he lived there for a
few weeks with 4 plants in peace and harmony - then we brought home
from the store 2 Creamsicle sailfin mollies and a snail. One molly had
a pale patch of scales on it's head, but we had seen others in the
tank with the same markings so we thought it was a normal color
variation. After adding the new fish we noticed the larger female molly
without the pale spots was frequently attacking the other molly it
seemed to have ideas of attacking the beta - but of course the beta
wasn't having any of that! <A bad combination of animals. Apple
snails almost never mix with fish because they get nipped, and after a
while they die, polluting the tank. They're also subtropical -- not
tropical -- animals and get heat exhaustion in the long term. Mollies,
contrary to myth, do best in brackish water. Bettas (not betas) need
freshwater conditions, and are essentially incompatible with mollies.
Mollies are also far too big and active for a 10 gallon tank. So right
out of the starting gate there's problems. Did you do any research
before buying these animals?> The next morning we noticed the beta
had a split in his tail and the smaller female molly also had a piece
out of it's tail so we returned the aggressive (?the healthy one?)
fish to the store. <Hmm...> The betas fins continued to rot away
- but the molly's seems to be growing back for awhile. Beta
occasionally chases and nips at the molly still. <Did you do
anything to treat the damage? Adding finrot remedy after fin damage is
absolutely essential. Fish are swimming about a warm, bacteria-laden
soup and can't help but get infected if they're immune system
is at all compromised.> Now they both look awful - the beta's
tail is nearly gone - I don't see any white patches on the beta
though and he still flares at the mirror and swims around normally and
chases the molly. The molly has large chunks out of her tail, the pale
spot on her head is paler and I can make out a couple more pale spots
by her dorsal fin perhaps a bit pinkish? The scales on the top of her
head look uneven like sheets on an unmade bed - she has a red spot on
each gill though seems to be breathing normally - she is wasting away
very skinny and has no energy - sometimes floating or swimming around
listlessly with her nose up or being bumped into the floor of the tank
by the filter current. Her body occasionally twitches or shakes.
<The molly is obviously dying; she has a combination of
finrot/fungus plus something called "the shimmies" which is a
neurological condition brought on by poor healthcare. Doesn't
happen when they're kept in brackish water, but I guess that horse
has left the stable... She's dying, so may as well euthanise her
painlessly.> The both swim to the top and seem to be starving at
feeding time but then when I put the food in they don't seem to see
it and are lucky to get a piece before it floats away. <Maybe they
don't like the food you're giving them? Mollies are primarily
herbivores, so algae-based flake plus stuff like Sushi Nori are what
they need. Bettas feed on insect larvae, and (wet) frozen bloodworms
are the ideal for them.> Do you think it's columnaris introduced
by the new fish? Should we separate the molly and beta since the beta
is not as sick and treat them separately? <There's a whole bunch
of things going wrong here, but the problem is you, not the new fish.
You've bought a collection of incompatible fish, kept them in a
too-small tank, made no attempt to provide the correct water parameters
for the mollies, and apparently not treated for any of the
diseases.> Ammonia and nitrites are 0 - nitrates are 20 - temp 80 -
pH 8.2 <The pH is way too high for a Betta, and the nitrates way too
high for mollies. Bettas need around pH 7.0, mollies around pH 7.5-8.0.
Mollies in freshwater conditions need ZERO nitrates, but in
brackish/marine conditions are much less fussy.> 6 plants now and
the snail is fine except the beta has bitten off his antennae! <The
snail will die soon. When the antennae get nipped this is a sign the
apple snail is being harassed. As sure as God made little green apples
this poor old snail will be increasingly stressed. After a few months
it will die. Apple snails simply aren't good in tropical aquaria.
In subtropical aquaria maybe, but not tropical aquaria. Max temperature
is around 75 F long-term, but ideally a bit less even than that.> we
heard you could keep a beta with some other fish but ours doesn't
seem very sociable <Most Betta owners keep them in their own aquaria
or with peaceful bottom dwellers such as Corydoras and Kuhli
loaches.> also we will be moving cross country in a month - do you
have any tips for the best way to transport fish tanks in a car?
<Place fish into sealed bags or buckets about 1/4th filled with
water and the rest air. Insulate the packages with towels or something
similar to keep them warm. Your local aquarium shop may be able to
provide you with the polystyrene containers they receive fish in. These
are perfect for the job. Cheers, Neale>
Re: sick molly -
disappearing Betta 7/10/07 Hey Neale <Hello Ruth &
Eric,> Thanks for your assistance. <No probs.> I'm
surprised to hear that mollies shouldn't go in with bettas as we
actually did research it before buying them and several sites
specifically suggested mollies as good tank mates for bettas because
they both like hard hot water. <Well, no disrespect to the source
you read, but the fact I know better is why I write aquarium books and
for aquarium magazines. I don't make this stuff up to annoy people!
Mollies like water that is hard, preferably brackish, and with a pH
around 7.5 to 8. They do even better in seawater. In terms of
temperature, something around the 26C/79F mark suits them well. Bettas
are classic labyrinth fish and have evolved to live in hot, humid
places where their air-breathing 'labyrinth organ' helps them
get oxygen from the atmosphere because there isn't enough in the
water. Anything up to 30C/86F will suit them fine. In terms of water
chemistry the ideal is soft to moderately hard and around pH 7. In
other words, much like barbs and tetras.> However I think we should
have gotten the smaller short finned variety as soon as we put these in
the tank we could see the tank looked crowded. We have been adding 1
tsp of aquarium salt for each 5 gallons but probably should have been
more for mollies? <To be honest, this is like trying to make an
"happy medium" that will suit camels and penguins. It
can't be done. Mollies want a completely different aquarium to
Bettas. Mollies need lots of swimming space, a fairly strong water
current, plenty of depth, and they need to be kept in groups to avoid
aggression. Bettas live in swamps and hate strong currents, and they
need tanks with lots of plants so that they are always near cover.
Bettas are slow moving and feed at a snail's pace, Mollies wolf
down food as soon as they see it. Bettas are carnivores and like plants
for security, Mollies are herbivores that simply eat plants as food.
Adding MARINE salt mix (NOT "aquarium salt" or "tonic
salt") will help Mollies a great deal, but at the dose your
Mollies require for health, your Betta will be stressed, probably die.
So what can I say? There's really no way you can please both these
fish at the same time.> The water comes out of our tap with a very
high pH - maybe we should add a piece of drift wood to bring it down a
bit? <No, don't bother. Messing about with pH unless you know
what you're doing usually ends in tears. Much better to accept the
water conditions you have, and in future select fish suited to it. If
you have very hard and alkaline water, then stick with livebearers,
rainbowfish, cichlids, etc that enjoy such conditions. Your fish will
be healthy, happy, willing to breed, and easier to keep. Problem
solved.> The snail was more of an impulse purchase - we didn't
realize they don't like hot water! <Lots of people make this
mistake. Apple snails come from Florida, which isn't hot all year
round as you know, and in the wild Apple snails "aestivate"
during the summer. That is, they go into a resting phase. Without this
resting phase they simply "wear out". This is why so few
Apple snails last long in regular aquaria. For most people, they only
last a year, if that. Kept properly, they live for many years and reach
enormous sizes. One at the London Zoo had a shell that was bigger than
a tennis ball!> Or that the betta would nip his antennae.
<Yup.> He seems very happy he's so active and moving around
the tank all the time - the molly does not harass him. <Snails
aren't very smart, so don't expect to see any signs of stress
as such. It's not like a fish that goes and hides in the corner
when it's unhappy.> How can you tell if your snail is sick?
<Usually, they die.> Will they become sluggish? <Don't
bank on it.> Ours moves around like a little race car. <Yup!
I've kept and bred Apple snails and adore them. The babies are
amazingly cute. But there's no escaping the fact they need their
own quarters, or at least a subtropical aquarium with suitable
fish.> We had read that the best first step to treating fin rot was
to do frequent water changes and add salt so we tried that first.
<No idea why that was suggested. Salt can *prevent* secondary
infections setting in when used at a substantial dose (around 1 gramme
per litre upwards). But it cannot kill off an infection once one has
set in. Otherwise marine and brackish water fishes wouldn't get
finrot, but they do (though admittedly not commonly). Really, the only
cure for finrot, which is bacterial, is the use of an antibiotic or
antibacterial medication. There are many of these available. Dipping
freshwater fish into seawater for short periods can also help as a
therapy, but raising the salinity to that level in the actual aquarium
would be lethal. Apple snails, incidentally, are likely respond poorly
to most medications, so check before use or remove to another tank
during the treatment. Finrot almost always follows on from physical
damage and poor aquarium water quality, so check these factors as well
as treating the symptoms.> Last night before receiving your reply we
decided we had to do something so we got a divider to prevent the molly
from being harassed did another water change and added tetracycline to
the water. Now the betta looks quite happy and is enjoying his own
little partition of the tank where there's nearly no current
because of the divider. <Indeed. Betta may be happy, but the molly
won't be.> He's eating like a piggy and flaring at his
mirror I think he will be fine - I did notice some trailing white fuzz
from his fin today which makes me think maybe it's Flexibacter?
<Quite possibly.> The molly just looks worse though lying at the
bottom of the tank panting - I feel like we should give her every fair
chance to recover though. My brother thinks the tetracycline made the
molly worse and we shouldn't add any more of that - I think the
molly would have gotten worse anyway and that we should finish the
treatment to get rid of the stuff if they are going to have any chance
of recovering. <The tetracycline should be fine for the molly. The
problem is, and I keep coming back to this, but everything you do to
make a good aquarium for a betta makes a worse one for a molly.> We
actually did tons of research on this tank - but it seems like you get
different answers from every site you see so it's hard to know
which one is right! We read the articles on your website as well as
many others. <I've never written anywhere that Mollies are good
with Bettas. Within the hobby, I perhaps have a reputation for being a
bit hardline on this, but frankly I don't consider mollies
freshwater fish at all, at least not in the sense most aquarists mean.
Yes, they live in freshwater in the wild, but in aquaria Mollies kept
in brackish water simply do better, live longer, and are less
disease-prone than Mollies kept in freshwater. Period. End of
story.> Actually the article on wetwebmedia by Bob Fenner suggests
mollies as good tank mates for bettas. <Bob and I will have to agree
to disagree here.> We had a lot of algae in our tank and wanted
something that could gobble it up and the mollies had it clean in 2
days! <Yup, that's what mollies do. They're herbivores.>
We have flakes for the betta - maybe we'll go get some frozen
bloodworms too - we weren't sure what kind of meaty food to get him
since we read somewhere that the freeze dried ones aren't properly
disinfected and might put disease in the tank - and we have algae based
flake food for the molly - she seemed to like it but then she sometimes
would spit it out so maybe we should just try a different brand for her
- if she recovers that is. I think the betta perhaps just couldn't
get to the food because the filter was shuffling it away too fast - so
we'll feed with the filter off from now on. <I abhor freeze
dried foods with a hatred that cannot be described. I have yet to see
any fish prefer them to wet frozen foods, and I personally have never
kept any fish that would even eat them. I have no idea why people buy
them. Wet frozen foods are healthier and the fish much prefer them. So
do yourself a favour and skip the freeze dried rubbish.> Thanks for
your input and will be glad to hear any further comments. Ruth and Eric
<Bottom line, I think your Molly is doomed. Your intentions are all
laudable, but in this instance I think you received some flawed
information. Bettas are simply easier kept alone with ZERO tankmates.
If you want to keep Mollies, then set up a 20-30 gallon tank just for
them, and keep it at a brackish water salinity (SG 1.003 - 1.005 is
ideal). You will be STAGGERED at how much healthier mollies are under
such conditions. Also, consider buying a book. Web sites are all very
well but there's no quality control. But books from reputable
publishers in the field like TFH and so on will have stuff that's
been edited and fact-checked. Good luck. Neale>
Sailfin (Molly) with Fin Rot? No useful
info. 3/6/07 Help - my 4year old sailfin has seemingly
overnight lost half of his dorsal fin and now his tail fin is looking
ragged. I treated with Melafix <Worthless> a couple of days ago
but I think it's getting worse. Today I noticed a red tailed shark
also has a ragged dorsal fin. I haven't added any new fish for a
while - mainly African cichlids which have been in with him for a
couple of years. <Yikes... incompatible> I did add a Red Terror a
few months ago who has grown quite quickly. Could he be tearing up
these two or more likely fin rot? <Possibly, yes... more likely
stress induced... environmental> Unfortunately I don't have a
spare tank so if you think it may be aggression I will have to move
Terror on. Hope you can help, Thanks Lisa <Uh... where's the
boeuf? Information re your set-up, maintenance, water quality tests,
feeding... Please read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/mollydisfaqs.htm and
the linked files above... Bob Fenner>
What Were You Thinking??!! Hi my mollies have been die with
no clue as to why! Well I have 7 mollies 2 males and the rest female.
First one large molly (I think it way pregnant but I don't know how
to tell) fell to the floor of the tank and seem to have trouble
breathing and was upside down (belly up) and died soon after. No signs
of disease! Then one male yesterday did the same thing two weeks later.
The water is cloudy too. Now here the tanks set up: 5
mollies one male two females 10 Zebra Fish 3 gold fish 3
black Moor gold fish 6 neon tetras 1 peacock eel 5 guppies( just had 20
babies I keep in a small tank) 1 upside down cat fish 1 glass catfish 1
Raphael cat fish 3 silver hatchet 2 cat fish that I don't know
there names 2 plants of one kind 5 plants of there other 1 of one kind!
A bio filter 1 old fashion filter( plastic box with carbon and white
foam filter) 1 small tank filter 2 castles ¼ inch gravel All
this in a 10 gal. I don't know what I was thinking? Is this good or
bad? How do I keep my mollies healthy? How do I keep the others
healthy? Can all the animals live with one another? Help I have no clue
on anything? <I count 41 fish in a ten gallon tank!!! And another 20
fry in an even smaller tank! This is what you MUST do. Return all the
Goldfish, all the Catfish and the Eel! (OMG, an eel too!) Then out of
the rest, pick your favorite five. Return all the rest. If any of the
Catfish are Corys you can keep them, but they count towards the five.
All the others must go. You have no chance of them living let alone
being healthy. To say you are grossly overstocked is a gross
understatement. You can also keep the castles, but I wouldn't.
Don>
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