FAQs on the Blue, Three-Spot, Gold/en, Opaline,
Even Albino! Gouramis, Yes, The Same Species, Trichogaster
trichopterus, Disease/Health: Diagnosis
FAQs on Trichogaster Disease:
T.
trichopterus Disease 1,
T. trichopterus Disease 2,
T. trichopterus Disease
3, T. trichopterus Disease 4,
FAQs on Trichogaster Disease by Category:
Environmental,
Nutritional,
Social,
Infectious,
Parasitic,
Trauma,
Treatments
Related Articles:
Anabantoids/Gouramis &
Relatives, Genera Ctenopoma &
Microctenopoma,
Betta splendens/Siamese
Fighting Fish,
Related FAQs:
Trichogaster
trichopterus 1, Trichogaster
trichopterus 2, T. trichopterus
ID, T. trichopterus Behavior,
T. trichopterus Compatibility,
T. trichopterus Selection,
T. trichopterus Systems,
T. trichopterus Feeding,
T. trichopterus Reproduction,
Gouramis 1,
Gouramis 2,
Gourami Identification,
Gourami Behavior,
Gourami Compatibility,
Gourami Selection,
Gourami Systems,
Gourami Feeding,
Gourami Disease,
Gourami Reproduction,
Betta splendens/Siamese
Fighting Fish,
|
|
Young blue 3 spot Gourami 7/30/18
hello I own a 55 gallon tank with 3 zebra Danios 1 goldfish comet and
one gold male Gourami adult and one blue female Gourami adult and had
recently bought 3 young gouramis female about 2.5 inches big. no
problems in the water ph 7.1 no ammonia problems etc. two filters one
sponge and one regular. water stays around 78 degrees.
<All sounds fine.>
I added my 3 new gouramis in slowly the way your supposed to and I've
had them 2 weeks and one of the baby blues started swimming funny like
backing up every few seconds while it's standing still if you get what I
am saying
<Do you mean he is swimming normally, but uses his fins to swim
backwards?
That's normal. If you mean he's staying on one place, but rocking side
to side, sometimes with his pectoral fins clamped closely onto his
sides, then that isn't normal. It's sometimes called "shimmying" or "the
shimmies" and is a strong sign a fish is stressed.>
and then over the next few days a bulge appeared on its right side she
didn't eat for a 2 days then started eating again only a little but I'm
assuming because very hungry and today the bulge popped and poop was
coming out brown from the bulge on her side
<You mean the 'poop' is something coming out of a wound on the side of
the fish? This is extremely serious, and honestly, the fish is unlikely
to recover. If the 'poop' is simply faeces coming out of the vent,
that's normal, and fish do get constipated at times.>
and I quickly QTed her I can't find the condition online I've been
searching for a remedy hoping maybe I can save her or if there might be
a problem now for my other fish. help. please.
<If we're dealing with constipation here, then read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/gldfshmalnut.htm
If the burst wound was in the muscle on the side of the fish, then I'm
less optimistic. Quarantining certainly; excellent water quality; and
above all effective antibiotics will be needed to have any chance of a
wound this deep recovering. I have seen fish recover from muscle
injuries like this, but it takes a lot of careful looking after.>
thanks
<Good luck, Neale.>
Re: young blue 3 spot Gourami 7/30/18
hello.
<Hello,>
thank you for the quick reply.
<Welcome.>
and as for the swimming it's weird she stays in one spot but slightly
backing up not going anywhere her fins are no clamped on the sides or
pectoral strings ate not clamped but her dorsal stays down but yes the
bulge is on the side in between the fin and tail area
<Understood.>
and it burst and the stuff coming out looks exactly like the color of
food they eat
<This is very bad.>
a tanish red color it actually looks just like a long feces string but
your right it's coming out of the muscle
<If you're lucky, it's just a pus or bacterial discharge of some sort.
As/when the wound heals, this should stop. But if the digestive tract
has been punctured, and there's a steady flow of partially digested food
out of the wound, this fish isn't going to heal. Not without help from a
vet, anyway. If that's the case, I would honestly perform euthanasia
here. Let me have you do some reading, here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/euthanasia.htm
The clove oil method is cheap, effective, and much more humane than
other methods used by aquarists.>
I assume on her side and she's is only swollen on the one side the bulge
actually went down some but occasionally stuff still is coming out of
the hole but not as much as yesterday. she is trying too eat but only
getting a small flake or 2 down and spits the rest out and today is
sitting at the bottom of the qt tank but not gasping for air.
<Do not overfeed. Indeed, it might be worth not feeding for a few days
to see if that stops "stuff" coming out of the wound. If it is food
coming out of the wound, as I say, euthanasia is the best choice.>
I had read online something that this might be that could be dangerous
for humans if infected and contagious for my other fish
<Unlikely to infect you. This sort of wound honestly sounds
opportunistic.
In other words, it was caused by either the environment or physical
damage, and as such, isn't contagious. But if conditions in the tank are
harmful somehow, other fish could indeed get sick.>
so I did a water change last night for my main tank and added marine
salt hoping to kill any bacteria if that's the case.
<Salt will not kill bacteria.>
thanks so much for you insight I ha e been collecting Gourami s and
other small tropical fish for 2 years now so I'm still quite new at the
illnesses with different fish
<Glad you're enjoying the hobby. Fish diseases are usually caused by
some problem with the tank, so it's always a good idea to review the
aquarium in terms of size, filtration, tankmates, diet, etc. Bad luck
sometimes comes into play, but a wise fishkeeper looks at their tank
critically. Good luck!
Neale.>
Trichogaster repro.? Constipation? What? 7/28/15
asking a question about my gold Gourami my female Gourami is pregnant and there
is no male Gourami to build a bubble nest what to do .
asking a question about my gold Gourami my female Gourami is pregnant and there
is no male Gourami to build a bubble nest what to do
<Female Gouramis don't get pregnant. Your Gourami is either constipated or has
Dropsy. The former is caused by poor diet, typically too much flake and not
enough fibre (fresh greens, frozen brine shrimp, that sort of thing).
Dropsy is a bacterial infection caused by a poor environment. Do read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/gldfshmalnut.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/dropsyfaqs.htm
Cheers, Neale.>
I checked and she has eggs
7/28/15
<How? How can you tell if a female Gourami has eggs inside her? True, females
will appear a little more convex around the abdomen when 'ripe' and ready to
spawn, but this isn't particularly noticeable. If she looks swollen, like she's
swallowed a ball, then she has some other problem.
Constipation or else Dropsy, this latter characterised by the scales rising up
from the body, very noticeable when viewed from above ('pine cone appearance').
99 times out of 100, when casual fishkeepers say their egg-laying fish is
pregnant, it's wishful thinking. Cheers, Neale.> do I use it properly? Pictures
included below. Thank you.
<Bob may have some ideas. Cheers, Neale.>
<<Epsom salt. B>><<No pix anywhere>>
Female gouramis 2/10/13
I have a 2yo 29 gallon, very heavily planted, lots of drift wood, and
gravel, 3 female blue gourami's and 1 male, a high fin plecostomus,
<Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps; needs a tank three times bigger than 29
gallons. Surely it's pretty big by now… 20 cm/8 inches or more… should
be if more than a year old, and adults get to some 50 cm/20 inches.>
an albino bristle nose plecostomus,
<Ancistrus sp.; a much better alternative.>
2 peppered Cory's and 2 albino Cory's, and 8 hatchet fish my tank has a
40gl submersible filter and is kept at 80 degrees,
<Slightly too warm for the Corydoras.>
I have not checked my ph in a VERY long time as everyone has seemed
extremely healthy
<So what is the pH now…? Changes in pH can occur in tanks between water
changes, and these can stress your fish.>
and lively and I do %20 water changes every other week with purified
water. First let me say, I do not want fry!! I asked for 4 females at
the pet store and at the purchase time they did in fact all look like
females but were a lot smaller/younger, anyway to the point my 3
females have looked FULL of eggs for about 2 months now and I had been
hoping they would just eventually come out...obviously that's not the
case, what do I do? Can this be dangerous? I have rationed food thinking
they were just fat, and there was no change and wouldn't the male be fat
also if that were the case? How do I help my females to get rid of their
eggs without fertilizing them with the male? Should I get rid of my male
would this stop this from happening again in the future? Would getting
rid of my male immediately make the females drop their eggs? I don't
want to loose all my gouramis!
~Erica~
<Gouramis don't get pregnant, they lay eggs, but is natural for females
to seem slightly fuller than normal when they're holding the eggs
anything up to a few days prior to spawning. If you have one or more
females that appear dramatically swollen though, like they've swallowed
a little ball, then they're either madly overfed or have Dropsy. If
they've been overfed, then the male could be fat-looking too, as would
other, random fish in the tank. If it is ONLY one or two fish that are
swollen and the others are all naturally lean, then Dropsy is more
likely. Other symptoms of Dropsy include a pinecone-like appearance when
viewed from above, lethargy, a disinterest in food. Given your tank is
likely overstocked, possibly severely, environmental stress would be the
most likely reasons for Dropsy. Do read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/dropsyfaqs.htm
Treatment is possible; combine Epsom salt therapy with suitable
antibacterial medication (like eSHa 2000) or antibiotic (Maracyn 2 seems
as good as any). Do note regular salt won't help, and neither will doing
nothing -- left alone, Dropsy is invariably fatal. It's a sign of organ
failure, which clearly isn't welcome! Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Female gouramis
First, I'm not completely ignorant (in fact i believe i never once in my
first email sad "pregnant" i said eggs, many times)
<Ah, meant only in the general sense that female Gouramis may swell up
with eggs for a few days prior to spawning but not for weeks, months at
a time… so they shouldn't look "pregnant" for long, if at all.>
and have done a lot of research on the breeding habits and egg laying
process of gourami fish (before getting them and decided i did not want
to do it hence the asking for 4 females) I have not found anything on
what to do if you don't want fry and the females became full of eggs!
<There's zero chance of Gourami fry surviving if you don't make an
effort to rear them. They are tiny, need infusoria to feed upon.>
(you assumed my fish are sick and did NOT answer ANY of my questions)
<Oh, did try to. If three fish are all swollen up, and have been so for
more than a couple days, and you're sure overfeeding and/or constipation
aren't factors, then do assume Dropsy or something similar.>
The 3 females are the only "fat" fish in my tank,
<Worrying indeed.>
I have decreased feeding when I first noticed it and nothing changed in
there appearance, they are still VERY active and interested in food as
is the rest of my tank
<This is promising, and means treatment should work.>
and they do not look like pine cones,
<Which doesn't rule out Dropsy. In any case, something *is* amiss, and
you should proceed from that. Egg-binding is possible, I suppose, but
it's (extremely) rare in fish. Epsom salt can help here. But I'd be more
toward something else being wrong. Are these Dwarf Gouramis? These are
particularly prone to bacterial and viral infections.>
if I treated and nothing changed in their appearance would you then
believe me that my fish are NOT sick?
<You don't need to convince me of anything. It's about working through
the probabilities, from most to least likely explanations, and where you
can't pin down exactly what's wrong, you can at least treat for things
so you can "tick them off" the list.>
wouldn't the salt effect my Cory's?
<Do note I said Epsom Salt, not aquarium salt, and no, doesn't harm
Corydoras.>
My pH looks to be just above 7, using a testing strip from a local pet
store, which if I remember right and through all my reading, is good for
every fish species In my tank.
<Ah now, don't fixate on pH. It actually doesn't matter much; Corydoras
are fine between pH 6 and 8. What matters is hardness, that's the bit
fish "feel". All that matters for the fish is that the pH is stable.>
On another note The plecostomus is not as old as the tank, I didn't buy
the plecostomas's until recently, after there was plenty of Algae in the
tank for them to eat
<Do need more to eat than algae. Hikari Algae Wafers are a good balanced
diet, rich in both algae and shrimp meal.>
(I plan to upgrade as the tank grows, in about 6mo and both Plecos are
currently about 3in)
<Cool. But do bear in mind how large Pterygoplichthys gibbiceps will
get, and plan accordingly. Anything smaller than 75 US gallons would be
pointless (and dirty and smelly). Gorgeous fish though; kept two in a
200-gallon aquarium at university. So if you have the space and
prodigious filtration (they defecate like its an Olympic sport) they're
excellent companions for large community fish.>
~Erica~
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Female gouramis
I have a 55 with a NASTY eel
<What kind of eel? Spiny Eels won't be mean enough to damage a Plec too
large to swallow whole.>
in it and a feather fin catfish? the high fin plecostomus will
eventually end up there when it's big enough that I don't feel my eel
will harm it and it will only house those 3 fish and those alone…
<I agree, but 55 gallons is a push for this many large fish.>
When I move into a larger space (hopefully with the next year) they will
be upgraded to a 240 Plexi glass i have in storage
<Ah, now you're cooking!>
and from there i will try to figure out what fish can be housed with the
eel (that KILLS everything)
<Not an adult Pterygoplichthys…>
and the gourami tank will be transferred from the 30 to the 55...so in
short I do have a plan for how large the Pleco will get.
<Cool.>
My fish get (what i think) is a very good diet I actually pride myself
on how colorful and healthy my fish are and i get many compliments on my
gouramis! My tanks get Mysis shrimp, brine shrimp, omega one shrimp
pellets, Tubifex worms, omega one veggie rounds, cucumber, peas,
lettuce, blood worms, earth worms (cut up) live Molly babies I breed
myself, of course not all at once every feeding. But they never get the
same thing two days in a row. With the exception of the omega one veggie
rounds (all the fish LOVE these and fight over them)
<Your fish eat better than mine. Better than me, even.>
Now regarding the Three spot gouramis
<A tough variety, rarely problematic.>
I've decided to try to breed them as I feel the females are in fact full
of eggs, and I have had "egg binding" happen before with Bettas, (this
is why I'm concerned it has happened to my gouramis being that there was
no "safe place" for the male to make a bubble nest and for the females
to expel her eggs) I've made a "dead spot" in my tank using plants where
the current is almost nothing at the surface (my male is already showing
interest within the 30min of me doing this) my plan (if they breed) is
to collect the eggs and use them to feed my eel. Hopefully this works...
I'd really like to not lose my gouramis...
<Epsom salt can really help with egg binding. It's a muscle relaxant
among other things, around 1-3 teaspoons per 5 gallons/20 litres should
do the trick.>
With the tank and gouramis being 2yo with no previous problems... Why
would a problem arise from seemingly nowhere?
<Egg binding is difficult to predict. It's very rare in fish. So it's
hard to predict what would cause it. Genetics may be a factor, or age,
or diet, or some combination of factors. That all three females are
exhibiting egg binding at the same time is VERY odd and to be honest I'm
not convinced. Some slight fattening up as per sexual maturity and prior
to spawning seems more likely… do need to see a photo of these fish if
possible. Would settle my mind whether this is really a problem or not.>
Water changes have never bothered them or the water much, they get a
good diet and I keep the filter clean (in fact just got the new 40gl
submersible a few weeks ago) and they are kept at a consistent temp, the
only thing that has changed recently is the brand new filter...
~Erica~
<Cheers, Neale.>
Female gourami
They look full of eggs to me...these were just taken and he looks
healthy (not fat) to me. I would imagine If it were over feeding he
would look as plump as the females
~Erica~
<These fish do not look unusually fat or otherwise. I would do nothing
more than increase fibre content of diet (brine shrimps are good) while
using Epsom salt as described before. This won't harm any other fish,
may do some good as a laxative. But provided fish remain active and
interested in food,
I would consider these fish healthy. Cheers, Neale.>
|
|
Re: Female gourami, no reading, using WWM
2/10/13
How much Epsom salt would you suggest for a 30gl tank
<1-3 teaspoons per 5 gallons/20 litres. It's as well to assume your tank
doesn't contain 30 gallons; knock 10-15% off for rocks and gravel, i.e.,
your tank likely holds 25.5-27 gallons. So calculate on the basis of these,
more conservative figures.>
and how do I "administer" it (i.e.: just pour it in)
<Dissolve calculated quantity in a small jug of warm water. Pour into
aquarium in stages, perhaps 5-6 portions across an hour.>
~Erica~
<Cheers, Neale.> |
Lumps on 3 spotted gourami 7/19/12
Hi
<We ask that folks limit their graphics file sizes to hundreds of Kbytes...
yours are seven megs...>
My female 3 spotted Gourami has developed some lumps in the last month or
so. The one side is much bigger than the other, please see attached photos.
I have a male too, but he seems fine. They share the tank with Sword Tails,
Clown Loaches, Kuhli Loaches, Cherry Barbs and Pleco's. All the other fish
seems fine. She hasn't stopped eating and still swims around, though not as
much as before.
Please help me to identify what is wrong with her and tell me how to fix it?
Please let me know if you need any more information.
<Have seen these anomalous bumps several times; only read that they're
attributed to "Sporozoan" infestations... and never seen successfully
treated. You might try Metronidazole/Flagyl lacing foods; but I'm not
hopeful. I don't consider that they're "catching" and don't seem to
disimprove the overall health of their host fishes...>
Kind regards
Liezle van der Westhuizen
Hawkes Bay
New Zealand
<Welcome. Bob Fenner, San Diego, CA, US>
|
|
Re: Lumps on 3 spotted gourami 7/20/12
Hi
<Liez>
Thank you for the quick response and sorry about the size of the pics!
I'll try your suggestions and let you know if the outcome is positive.
Regards
Liezle
<I thank you. BobF>
|
Re: Sick Golden Opaline Gourami 1/20/12
Hi again!
<Alicia>
I think you may be right about the bacterial infection. I've
started a treatment of Maracyn and Maracyn Two, to over the gram
negative and gram positive bacteria.
<Good>
I gave them a dose last night, and so far, no one has kicked the
bucket.
Oddly enough, the Quick Cure didn't seem to do much beyond
turn the water blue. The gourami stayed the same through two
courses of treatment. The biofilter seems to still be in working
order, but I supplement it when I do my weekly water change with
Safe Start.
<Thank goodness>
I'll keep you posted! Thank you for your advise and the
articles. Your site is always very informative!
Alicia
<Thank you, BobF>
Gourami problem 1/2/12
I have stumbled across your excellent website late this evening
and wondered if you could please give me some advice ?
<Surely.>
I was given 3 large gouramis
<Trichogaster trichopterus; males of this
species can be extremely aggressive. Despite being widely sold, I
don't recommend them.>
and 3 Corydoras
<By contrast, these are excellent fish, but do keep more than
5 of each species of Corydoras. Bronze and Peppered Corydoras are
the two easiest to keep and widely sold. Prefer coolish
conditions, 22-25 C/72-77 F, and don't do well
overheated.>
in a bit of a rush when someone moved house and I wasn't
really prepared.
As a novice to be honest the filter was too small and I
hadn't realised that you needed to change the tank water so
often
<What do you mean "so often"? When the tank is
matured, so after 6 weeks of running with an ammonia source (such
as small daily pinches of food) the aquarium only needs 20-25% of
the water changed every week or two. Compared to a dog or cat,
this is minimal effort pet-keeping. But no, you can't ignore
a fish tank for months at a time.>
and the quality did go down even though there weren't many
fish and it never looked dirty/cloudy. I took a water sample to
our local aquatic centre and found out everything when
one gourami got a ragged pectoral fin and bit of white
rot and a clouded eye.
<Fighting and/or water quality issues. Finrot is common when
you have non-zero ammonia and nitrite levels. Fighting creates
wounds, and these make Finrot even more likely.>
When the stripey one got what looked like a bite in it's tail
I decided to take action and invest properly in a new big tank as
I really enjoyed this new hobby ! I read that the best therapy is
to make sure the tank water is correct
<Yes; or rather, of water quality isn't right, any amount
of medication won't help.>
so I have now set up a nice tank with a new filter and when I
test the water with the tetra strips the water quality seems all
fine.
<I need numbers!>
In total there are the 3 gouramis, 5 platy type live-bearing fish
(?), 3 Corydoras and 1 Plecostomus in 120L tank.
<Would return the Plecostomus as soon as you can. It
doesn't belong here and will reach at least 30 cm/12 inches
in the first year and 45 cm/18 inches within two years. If you
must have an algae-eater, get a Bristlenose Plec, Ancistrus spp.,
as these are small (10 cm/4 inches is typical) and very easy to
look after. But do also be aware algae-eaters aren't
essential and don't help that much. Snails (specifically,
Nerite Snails) are much better, and fast-growing plants best of
all.>
The stripey's tail bite took ages to heal up and when I
decided to get the larger tank they all had places to hide and
weed to hide in and all seem much happier now especially with the
new 5 confident fish. (I've attached a pic as I'm not
sure what they are !)
<The dumpy-looking things with the Mickey Mouse markings on
their tails are Platies. Keep at least two females per male, or
else just females. Males have a tube-like anal fin, whereas that
of the female is triangular. Nice fish, and like the Corydoras,
need to be kept slightly cooler than average.
Must have hard, alkaline water -- not soft, acidic water.>
Anyway, the tail has started to heal but the skin around it
started to take on a black discolouration. The tail fin itself is
still ragged. Also the black colouration is now spreading along
the lower anal fin. However, strangely the fish has started to
get back it's bright spots of orange within the black which
is heartening and does eat OK (tropical fish flakes and frozen
tropical food like blood worms or larvae). I thought it could be
something like a black velvet disease but the skin isn't
fluffy. I looks like the dark area might separate from the other
and fact it's "spreading" is a bit worrying.
<A mix of Finrot and Fungus; treat for both. In the US,
Seachem ParaGuard for example treats both; here in the UK, I use
a product called eSHa 2000.
Otherwise use an antibiotic and an antifungal at the same time.
Don't waste time with tea-tree oil products at this point (so
no Melafix, Pimafix, etc.); while these might be worthwhile at
preventing infection when a fish has been damaged but is
otherwise fine, once symptoms of infection become apparent, you
need to use something more reliable.>
It likes to hide more and I think it's a female. There is one
other larger blue female (smaller rounded dorsal fin) and a large
orange male (long pointed dorsal fin) both of which seem healthy
now. The blue's pectoral fins have all repaired now that the
new tank is clean and water quality good.
Please, please could you have a look at these pictures and tell
me whether I should be treating the stripey gourami ? Is the
reddish colouration a worry around the gill flap as it looks
slightly sunken ? Or should I wait and see, given that the
colouration is coming back ?
Many thanks
Amanda
<Treat now. Also review fish stocking, and add/remove fish as
required.
Cheers, Neale.>
|
Re: Gourami problem --
1/3/12
Neale, you are fantastic ! Thank you so much for your advice
!
<Glad to help.>
There is so much information around and too many forums where
everyone is having a guess and not much concrete info for a
novice like me.
<There's much to be said for buying one or two really good
books, and trusting that book, at least for the first year or
two.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/bksfwbrneale.htm
I happen to like Baensch's Aquarium Atlas vol. 1 as a good
primer, but there are other options as well, some written for
absolute beginners, others for more ambitious starters.>
I'm really enjoying finding out about everything though... I
do change about 20% of the water usually every week and check the
strips (those Tetra 6 in 1 strips) against the bottle colours
(NO3 25, NO2 0, GH 8, KH 6, pH6.8, Cl2 0.8); it's very hard
water where I live).
<Which is fine, good even. Hard water tends to be very stable,
so pH fluctuation can be something you can ignore. Merely choose
fish species that like hard water. But looking at your aquarium
readings above, 8 degrees dH for general hardness and 6 degrees
KH for carbonate hardness aren't especially high, and your
water should be fine for a wide variety of fish. I'd not go
with livebearers (platies, guppies, etc.) because your pH is
acidic for some reason, but barbs, tetras, gouramis, Corydoras,
etc. should all be fine.>
When I said "large" Gouramis they are about 4.5"
long nose to tip of tail. I now realise there are even bigger
ones so I may have misled you'¦.
<No, I do know how big this species gets. Yours is about full
grown.>
I think the snails are a good idea too but will wait to get these
until after sorting out the stripey problem with the eSHa.
<Wise. Nerite snails are excellent algae eaters and don't
breed in freshwater, but they are quickly killed by copper, so
it's a good idea to settle in all your fish and make sure
they're healthy before adding these snails. Same goes for
shrimps and most other invertebrates.>
I'm enjoying the plant life as well as the fish so don't
want to go in for loads of fish but I do want to keep the few
I've got healthy and happy - good to know the Corydoras were
a good hardy choice but they are getting quite big (around
2" but possibly stopped growing now).
<Depends on the species. Most get to between 5-8 cm, 2-3
inches.>
Thank you very much once again. It's so nice to get some
positive advice that I can act upon. I've ordered the eSHa
2000 and just off to sex the platies and look up Bristlenose
Plecs !!
<Cool.>
Thank you once again and I'm hopeful with a bit of TLC I can
get the fish healed up.
Best wishes and Happy New Year !
Amanda Wright
<Thanks for the kind words. Cheers, Neale.>
|
Golden Gourami is acting paralyzed
9/17/11
I don't know what to do. I have searched for any kind of answer to
explain what might be going on with my Golden Gourami. It was perfectly
fine this morning, but tonight it has started acting as though it is
paralyzed.
<Is it lying down on its side? Or the right way up but simply not
swimming normally?>
It will not use its back fins for anything. It manages to get to the
top of the tank and will attempt to eat but cannot stay up long.
Besides all that the fish looks healthy. I haven't had a fish die
on me in two or three years. All the other fish in this tank are
perfectly fine, and I checked everything I could with the water and
they all came back good. Can you please help me.
<This is a tough one. Fish lose the ability to swim normally for a
variety of reasons. Do the usual things: Review water temperature,
chemistry and quality. Check the social behaviour of the other fish.
Think about toxins, including airborne ones like paint fumes. Physical
damage like swimming into the hood when alarmed can cause damage to the
spine. In the meantime, keep a close eye on the fish, but don't
medicate unless you're sure there's a disease, and I'm not
sure there is. Some details on the aquarium and tankmates would help
with diagnosis. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Golden Gourami is acting paralyzed 9/19/11
It is not laying on its side , it keeps moving but when it tries to go
toward the surface it will flip upside down or spin in circles. The
other fish are two blue Gourami, two Opaline Gourami, a kissing Gourami
and two brown knives. These are in a 55 gallon tank
<Does sound serious'¦ like the fish has been poisoned.
Review environment, toxics as discussed before. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: re: Golden Gourami is acting paralyzed 9/19/11
Thanks for all your help. My golden Gourami ended up not making it,
will keep an eye out on other fish though.
<Glad to help. Do review conditions in the aquarium, and hold off
buying any more fish for at least 6 weeks. Cheers,
Neale.
gold Gourami 9/15/11
Hello Neale, Chris here. Two quick questions for you. My Gold Gourami
has red muscle near the front fins, is this natural or is there
a problem here?
<It's not unusual for many fish to have a red band along the
"join" between the body and the fin. Obviously inflammation
indicates irritation, but if the fish is otherwise normal, and the red
is the colour of the blood rather than inflammation, it's
normal!>
Also when having live plants, is it necessary to use a Co2 system for
them to thrive?
<Yes and no. There are many plants that will only grow under bright
light, and most of these also need CO2 as well. The brighter the light,
the more CO2 a plant needs, and above a certain light intensity, there
isn't enough CO2 in the water coming from the fish alone. On the
other hand, there are plenty of plants that can muddle through with
just the ambient CO2 from your aquarium fish. These tend to be the low
to middling light plants often recommended to beginners -- hardy
Cryptocoryne species, some of the Amazon swords, Vallisneria, Java
ferns, Anubias, etc. So yes, if you choose carefully, you can have a
lush green aquarium without CO2, but the Amano-style tanks with the
more demanding plants generally rely on CO2.>
thanks again, Chris.
<Cheers, Neale.>
|
3-spot Gouramis dying suddenly, tiny pinholes in their heads
and losing weight.-- 9/5/09
I've already been looking for help on other forums for this problem
for a few days, so here's a compilation of all the info I can think
of.
<OK.>
I have a community tank (see info at bottom of email) which I recently
(2 months ago) added 6 Gouramis. 2 adult Blue 3-spot gouramis. 2
juvenile blue 3-spots, and 2 juvenile gold variant 3-spots. They were
quarantined for a month before adding them to the main tank.
They've been in the main tank for 2 months now, with no apparent
problems until this past week or so.
<Oh?>
I have just had two of my blue 3-spot gouramis die within a day of each
other. (Sept 2nd) They had seemed a bit "off" for a couple
days, so I was keeping an eye on them, and they were eating, but just
kinda listless and a bit pale. One was an adult blue, and the other was
a juvenile blue.
They didn't seem to exhibit any other symptoms before they just
died -- just a bit "out of it" and pale. Appetites were fine,
and there were no breathing problems. I started paying closer
attention, checking for possible bullying, but was unable to see any
signs of it - all is peaceful in that regard.
Now I have two other gouramis (one gold juvenile, one blue juvenile)
exhibiting the same listlessness and slightly paler than normal. On
closer examination, they both seem to have tiny pin-prick sized holes
all over the tops of their heads above their eyes.
<The holes are similar to what we call "Hole in the Head"
disease, a problem usually found among cichlids, so far as freshwater
fish go. It's likely caused by the Hexamita parasite in most cases,
though dietary issues may also be responsible.><<Agreed.
RMF>>
There's no redness or fuzz or other signs of infection, their
appetites are ok, they're not having breathing problems or spending
inordinate amounts of time in any one area. One of them looks a bit
thin. Their poo seems normal though, so I don't think it's an
intestinal parasite.
<"Intestinal parasite" covers a lot of ground! It's a
term bandied about by aquarists without any real understanding; in fact
most fish have intestinal parasites of some sort, it's just that
normally they don't cause problems. Among cichlids, it's now
assumed Hexamita is ubiquitous, but only becomes problematic when
things like water conditions or diet are wrong.>
This has happened very quickly. Within about a span of 2 - 4 days from
onset of symptoms to death... Sudden weight loss, despite good
appetites, then very pale coloring, (no - not excess slime). Then
somewhat listless, just not as active as normal, then dead. However, I
had not noticed the pinholes in their heads previously, so I don't
know how long it is from when the holes happened until the other
symptoms started. They don't turn into large pits or sores.
They're not in any sort of line or particular pattern, just looks
like someone pricked their heads all over with a needle or something,
right through their scales and stuff. No inflammation or redness, just
pin-pricks. It's very strange looking.
<Sounds very odd.>
My other gold juvenile looks ok so far, as does my other adult blue
Gourami. (as of Sept 2nd)
Update Sept 5th: the above mentioned two have died - one last night,
one today, about three days after I noticed them getting listless
Further update Sept 5th: The remaining two Gouramis, (one adult, one
juvenile) appear healthy and active and properly colored at this time.
The adult appears to have a single pin-hole above one eye. The juvenile
has none so far.
None of the other fish in the tank are affected. This is only seeming
to affect the gouramis.
<Could be viral, I suppose. Viruses are essentially untreatable
among aquarium fish, and in many cases target very limited ranges of
species, sometimes just one species. There aren't many in the hobby
that are recognised, but doubtless there are numerous viruses out there
we've not out names to.>
I had them in quarantine the first month I had them, and they've
been in the tank for 2 months now, and just now showing symptoms this
week.
None of the other fish in the tank (all other inhabitants are 3yrs old)
are affected. No other fish losses in 2+ years from this tank.
<Very odd indeed.>
(Previous tank history: Fish losses over 2 years ago -- 2 angels and a
handful of guppies over 2 years ago. We had 2 Angels in this tank a
couple years back. They were pretty aggressive with all the other fish
in the tank. The guppies just sort of disappeared, don't know if
they were eaten or not.
<Will be eaten by Angels, given the chance, as well as things like
Pimelodus pictus catfish.>
Both Angels passed away after about 4 months with similar symptoms as
above, after having them for about 4 months. No apparent affect on any
other tank inhabitants. We gave up on guppies because I was reading
that they just aren't too healthy anymore when purchased from most
fish stores, and because I think they were getting eaten anyhow, and
got the tetras instead. We didn't replace the angels at the time,
because we couldn't decide what else we liked, but didn't want
more angels after seeing the aggression. I don't know if
there's any connection, seeing as it's been several years, but
the symptoms are just similar. )
Tank info:
55gal, 3+ years old established 2006.
Filtration: Eheim 2217 canister + Penguin 1140 powerhead w/sponge
prefilter (sponge and ceramic media - no carbon.)
Decor: heavily planted, pea-gravel, driftwood and volcanic rock.
Feeding: Variety of flake, pellet, and frozen foods (Tetra flakes &
granules, bottom feeder wafers, frozen veggie/algae, frozen brine
shrimp, frozen krill, frozen bloodworms, cucumber chunks, peas,
etc)
Water: 25% w/c weekly w/ Prime water conditioner dry ferts (PMDD &
GH Booster) 2x's weekly for plants & pressurized co2
PO4: 5ppm Fe: 1ppm KH: 7 drops/120ppm GH: 10 drops/180ppm ph: 6.6ish
(depending on time of day & co2) NitrAte: 5ppm-ish NitrIte: 0
Ammonia: 0
Inhabitants: 2 3-spot gouramis (was 6) (Purchased 3 months ago - 1
month QT, then 2 months in tank -- was 4 juvenile and 2 adult) (No
other new additions of either fish or plants since that time.) 3 yoyo
loaches (3 years old) 12 Serpae tetras (2+ years old) 2 pictus cats (3
years old) Malaysian Trumpet Snails. Red Ramshorn snails.
Any suggestions and ideas would be helpful. Thanks.
<Really, I'm drawing a blank here. There's nothing obviously
wrong. Hexamita is the most likely cause of pits on the head, but
it's triggered more often than not by high levels of nitrate, and
that doesn't seem to be a problem here. A viral infection is a
possibility, and if that's the case, there's nothing you can do
beyond isolating sick fish and hoping for the best. You might consider
possible external sources of poisons, e.g., paint fumes, given that
Gouramis are air breathers and more sensitive to such things than your
other fish. Have cc'ed Bob Fenner to see if he can think of
anything that might be amiss. Cheers, Neale.> <<I suggest
treating for general Protozoan and worm complaints here... a
"cocktail" of one time use of Metronidazole/Flagyl,
Levamisol, and likely Praziquantel. RMF>>
Re: More: re: 3-spot Gouramis dying suddenly, tiny pinholes in their
heads and losing weight. (RMF?) 9/6/09
Thank you so much for your responses. I had looked at hole in the head
in my searches, but it just didn't sound quite right, since they
look like pin-pricks, and they don't look at all like the pictures
I've been able to find of HITH.
----<...It's likely caused by the Hexamita parasite in most
cases, though dietary issues may also be
responsible.><<Agreed. RMF>>
Which part are you agreeing with? The Hexamita or the dietary
issue?
<<<I assume Bob's agreeing with the relationship between
diet and Hexamita. Do review, for example, Bob's comments on
Hexamita and marine fish, where the case is fairly compelling that
Hole-in-the-Head plagues marine fish because of the absence of fresh
green foods.>>>
If it's the dietary issue, is there anything you can tell from my
list below that I'm missing in their diets?
<<<Well, the thing to do is review the diet and think about
whether your fish are getting enough a varied diet. Personally, I
don't rate flake and pellets terribly highly, not because
they're bad, but because people tend to rely on them too much. Once
opened, they stale quite fast, at which point vitamin content is lost.
About half the diet can be dried, the rest should be either fresh foods
or good quality wet-frozen foods. You will find much on WWM re: this
topic, so would suggest you browse these sections at your
leisure.>>>
Regarding the "intestinal parasites", that is what I meant,
is that I didn't think they were "causing problems".
Sorry I wasn't more specific on that.
---<Really, I'm drawing a blank here. There's nothing
obviously wrong. Hexamita is the most likely cause of pits on the head,
but it's triggered more often than not by high levels of nitrate,
and that doesn't seem to be a problem here. A viral infection is a
possibility, and if that's the case, there's nothing you can do
beyond isolating sick fish and hoping for the best. You might consider
possible external sources of poisons, e.g., paint fumes, given that
Gouramis are air breathers and more sensitive to such things than your
other fish. Have cc'ed Bob Fenner to see if he can think of
anything that might be amiss. Cheers, Neale.>
Yes, I was drawing a blank as well, and it's very frustrating.
There's been no fumes or poisons of any sort that I am aware of --
I also am sensitive to those kinds of things, so I don't keep those
kinds of things around. I can go ahead and do another water change to
be sure, however I just did my weekly water change two days ago.
Also, as of this morning, one of the remaining two is starting to look
pale and thin. Just since last night. The head and belly area are
normal size, and it looks as if from the pectoral fins backwards has
suddenly gotten emaciated. And there are more pinpricks over his
head.
----<<I suggest treating for general Protozoan and worm
complaints here... a "cocktail" of one time use of
Metronidazole/Flagyl, Levamisol, and likely Praziquantel.
RMF>>
Is this something I should treat the whole tank with?
<<<Yes.>>>
Is it possible the other fish, although seemingly unaffected, could
carry and spread this if it is a parasite?
<<<Certainly fish can carry pathogens without developing
symptoms, just as some people can carry viruses and bacteria and not
get sick, but when they contact other people, they make them sick. So,
a whole tank approach makes sense here. My gut feeling is that whatever
is doing the rounds will kill all your Gouramis, in which case
eschewing this family of fish for the next 6-12 months will be in
order. But Bob's suggestion is a good one, though it will have
little/no benefit against viruses, it will catch most worm and
protozoan parasites.>>>
I appreciate the time you've taken with your responses. Thank
you.
<<<Glad to offer such help as I can. Cheers,
Neale.>>>
Re: More: re: 3-spot Gouramis dying suddenly, tiny pinholes in their
heads and losing weight. 9/6/09
Thank you again for your quick response.
<No problem.>
I don't use flake/pellet foods frequently. They get these about
once a week only. So that makes up about 1/7th of their diet. Otherwise
they get a mix of frozen brine shrimp/bloodworms/veggie diet (spinach,
romaine & red-leaf lettuce, Spirulina algae) daily. The frozen food
is vitamin enriched. They also get chopped cucumber 2-3 x's weekly,
which they and the loaches both love. They also munch on the wisteria
and Anacharis and several other of the softer plants that I keep in the
tank. Sometimes I add a lettuce leaf in there, or some peas, or chopped
zucchini.
<Sounds like a fine diet. So, probably not the issue at fault
here.>
Will do [the medications].
<Good.>
I have the same gut feeling [about impeding doom for Gouramis]. This is
rotten. I will go ahead and treat the whole tank with the recommended
"cocktail", and will avoid the Anabantoid family for a while.
(On a side note, our other tank which houses a few Otos, a clown Pleco,
and my Betta named Sammy, is doing just fine so far. I hope he
doesn't get sick, since we've recently shared plants between
tanks. I'm really attached to him, we've had him for almost 4
years.)
<I'd certainly encourage you to keep things like nets and
buckets separate between the two tanks. At the least, use an equipment
steriliser if you do need to share equipment (your retailer likely uses
such products, and can recommend such). Mind you, 4 years is a GREAT
age for Betta splendens, so well done there.>
Thank you again, for all your help. It is much appreciated.
<Good luck with your fishkeeping, and I hope this disease
doesn't harm your remaining fish. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: More: re: 3-spot Gouramis dying suddenly, tiny pinholes in their
heads and losing weight. 9/6/09
Neale and Bob,
<Grayce>
I just wanted to write again, separate from my inquiry, to let you know
how much I appreciate what you are doing on this site. I know how hard
it can be to deal with the frustrated, the willfully ignorant, and the
just plain "newbies" in fishkeeping.
<Ahh, such is life itself. But on the other hand/end, what a joy to
be able to share, experience through others, even if just vicariously,
invidiously, their learning, enjoyment of themselves, the living
world>
I've been in the hobby for 10 years, and I currently help out on a
few fishkeeping boards, trying to help others not make the same
mistakes I made when I started out. (It is tremendously amusing to read
some of your replies in the FAQs because you say so many of the things
that I have wanted to say to people but haven't... Maybe I should
start. )
<Heeee! Try it and see>
I just recently (in the past year or so) branched out further into live
plants (aside from the basic java fern, Anacharis, wisteria) and
it's really increased the pleasure I get from the hobby. (Yeah, the
basics are still pretty, but they weren't challenging anymore
*grin* )
It's definitely been a challenge to play with some of the more
difficult plant setups.
My first fish was a Betta that I purchased shortly after my daughter
got the privilege of taking her classroom Betta home for the weekend to
care for. It was in one of those tiny little hexagonal plastic things.
I started researching to find out more about them, and soon found out
that there's a lot more to taking care of them than I thought. I
have been fortunate in that I tend to research first, then act, so I
knew from the first that water quality is the most important thing.
The only sick fish I ever had out of all my tanks were the many Bettas
from PetSmart or Wal-Mart that I purchased already knowing they were
ill, and one shoal of clown loaches 9 years ago from PetSmart which
had Ich and taught me just how important having a QT tank was! And then
those Angels 2 years ago, that seemed to die of the same symptoms my
Gouramis are now experiencing.
<Mmm, I've read your last two corr.s with Neale... and have a
favour to ask. Would you soak some of the terrestrial greens you
mention in a glass of tapwater for a couple days... and measure the
nitrate of the water? Actually, I want to go further now that I've
become a bit more aware of your background and encourage you to give up
on these greens (including the Spinach) entirely... they are a possible
suspect here>
Many of the Bettas ended up living 3 or 4 more years, and one lived to
be 5 and another 7 years old!
<Wowzah, the last is a world record!>
The 7 year old one was Sammy the 1st. He traveled with me from Arizona
to Georgia 4 years ago, and passed away 6 months after the move.
Eventually, I ended up with about 17 various tanks (about half of them
Betta tanks, the rest were a mix of species tanks and community tanks)
and I was hooked for life.
Sadly, I had to give away most of them when I moved out of state 4
years ago. However, I'm back on track to rebuild my collection,
albeit on a smaller scale now that I'm in a studio instead of a 3
bedroom.
<Easier to keep clean!>
So while I know a great deal about the care and keeping of fish in
general, and I know how to treat the basic diseases (between treating
the Bettas, and helping others on the fishkeeping forums), every so
often something comes along to stump me. I just didn't expect it to
be in my own tank!
<Happens>
It may sound selfish, arrogant, and/or morbid of me, but I'm
actually glad that I'm not the only one stumped on this. It makes
me feel less "newbie-ish". I'll be the first to admit how
much I don't know, even after 10 years. *grins*
<I am indeed an old-timer in the ornamental aquatics fields, and I
encounter "stumpers" most every day...>
Thanks again for you advice and help. If I can ever be of assistance in
answering any of the myriad "newbie" emails I'm sure you
get every day, I'd be more than happy to help.
Thank you.
Grayce
<And you for sharing. Oh, I'll send this along to Neale as well.
BobF>
Re: More: re: 3-spot Gouramis dying suddenly, tiny pinholes in their
heads and losing weight. 9/6/09
Ok, let me make sure I'm understanding your request:
<Mmm, I've read your last two corr.s with Neale... and have a
favour to ask. Would you soak some of the terrestrial greens you
mention in a glass of tapwater for a couple days... and measure the
nitrate of the water? Actually, I want to go further now that I've
become a bit more aware of your background and encourage you to give up
on these greens (including the Spinach) entirely... they are a possible
suspect here>
Are you talking about having me thaw and soak the frozen veggie
diet?
<Mmm, no... the romaine and red lettuce. From your email below:
BobF>
>>"Otherwise they get a mix of frozen brine
shrimp/bloodworms/veggie diet (spinach, romaine & red-leaf lettuce,
Spirulina algae) daily."<<
These are the commercial preparations in the frozen blister-packs.
Sometimes I get San Francisco Bay brand, sometimes Hikari, sometimes
Ocean Nutrition, and sometimes another brand that I can't think of
the name of right now. I know the San Francisco Bay brand that I use a
lot has the lettuce and spinach. The Hikari brand uses the Spirulina
brine shrimp. There's one called Discus formula that has kelp and
Spirulina and a lot of vitamins that I use sometimes. And another
called Goldfish diet that I use a lot, that has Anacharis, romaine
lettuce, krill hydroslate, zucchini, carrots, and bloodworms, along
with a bunch of vitamins. I mix different formulas frequently, for
variety and to try and make sure they're getting everything,
considering the mix of fish I have.
I don't think I've ever seen any of it hit the bottom. Even the
loaches and pictus cats are right up there at the top being greedy
every day at feeding time, and they don't settle down until
they've picked through all the plants and everything to make sure
they didn't miss any yummies. They are not so enthusiastic,
however, on their one day a week of dry food. Heh.
I'll usually get the "freshwater multipack" and then mix
in one of the other formulas along with it each day. Any lettuce or
other fresh food that I add is organic, and thoroughly rinsed before
adding to the tank.
I'm not sure I'm following the thought process in soaking the
frozen fish food for a couple days. After a couple days, it will start
to decompose, releasing ammonia, right? Theoretically, in straight tap
water, it shouldn't affect the nitrate reading in a couple days
worth of decay, would it?
I have nitrates existing in my tap water at a level of 5ppm. I have to
supplement the nitrates in my tank for my plants daily to keep it above
0, in addition to the PMDD and GH booster 2x's weekly. In so doing,
I test daily for nitrates, to get an idea of how much I need to add
each day.
I'm happy to do the test and see what happens, but I guess I'm
confused as to what you are expecting the results to be?
Thanks!
Re: More: re: 3-spot Gouramis dying suddenly, tiny pinholes in their
heads and losing weight. 9/6/09
<Mmm, no... the romaine and red lettuce. From your email below:
BobF>
That's what is in the frozen San Francisco Bay brand veggie mix.
See the following:
""Emerald Entree
Artemia franciscana, mysis, krill, plankton, spinach, romaine
lettuce,
red leaf lettuce, Spirulina algae, menhaden oil, sodium alginate,
Vitamin premix: wheat flour, Vitamin A acetate, cholecalciferol
(source
of vitamin D3), vitamin B12 supplement, riboflavin, niacin, calcium
pantothenate, folic acid, Menadione sodium bisulfate complex,
pyridoxine hydrochloride, thiamine Mononitrate, biotin, inositol,
L-ascorbyl-2-polyphosphate, betaine, d-alpha mixed tocopherols
(source
of vitamin E)""
<Ahh, I see... there's likely very little pollution from this
source. Am familiar with the co., owner... very competent and ethical
folks. BobF>
Sick Gourami 12/7/08 Hi! First, I have
to apologize for my English as it is not my mother language
(I'm from Croatia, Europe). <No problems. Your English is
certainly much better than my Croatian.> 3 months ago I bought
4 Trichogaster trichopterus. The Trichogaster that I want to ask
a question about had a small white bump at the base of the dorsal
fin which was damaged, but I didn't see it until I got home.
I put it in quarantine and treated it with 2 cycles of a wide
spectrum medicine called Medimor by Aquarium Muenster
(combination of Ethacidrinlactat, Tertamethyl-thioninchlorid and
Acraflavinchlorid). Didn't help. So I changed the water,
waited a week or so, and tried with Sera's Baktopur
(Acriflavine, Methylene blue, phenyglycol) and Mycopur
(Acriflavine, cupric chloride, cupric sulfate). <These are
various antiseptics, widely sold in Europe because antibiotics
aren't available in pet stores. To be brutally frank, they
only work up to a point, and aren't substitutes for
antibiotics at all. While useful for external infections during
the early stages, they won't cure everything, and won't
fix serious problems.> No use. Then I tried salt baths which
(I think) made the problem worse because those spots spread all
over her body, but then it might be from the stress. The disease
doesn't seem to be infectious, all other fish are fine (I put
her back into the main aquarium, because the small quarantine
surely wouldn't help, and was lucky, I know I shouldn't
do that). She has a very good appetite, swims well, doesn't
hide, doesn't scratch against objects, doesn't have
clamped fins, her faeces are fine. The spots are between 1mm and
4 mm big, they look like white lumps sticking out of her body and
there are about 15 of them (I hope the photos will help although
they're not very good), the skin around them looks pinkish.
Her skin on other parts of the body also looks a bit damaged, but
her fins (apart from the dorsal which didn't grow back) are
all ok. I read everything I could find, posted a question on
forums but I can't seem to find anything that looks like
this. Maybe Lymphocystis? <Could be; certainly, gouramis do
contract Lymphocystis on occasion, though not commonly. It could
be something else though. Perhaps another virus? It doesn't
look exactly like Finrot, though I'd be treating for
Finrot/Fungus before anything else. In Europe, I recommend a
product called eSHa 2000 for this; it's economical and very
effective, and seems to fix a lot of different problems,
including Finrot, Fungus and Columnaris.> The aquarium is 10
months old Juwel Rio 180, 180 l. It has 2 big Ancistrus and a lot
of their babies, 7 Kuhlii loaches, 4 Microgeophagus altispinosa,
2 Siamese algae eaters, 2 small Botia histrionica and those
Trichogasters. Water properties are stabile at: temp 25 C; pH
7,5; KH 10; GH 15, nitrites 0; nitrates 25. <One thing I would
consider is physical damage. Certain algae-eating fish will
"suck" at the bodies of other fish. In doing so, they
pull up the scales, exposing the flesh underneath. The skin
becomes infected, often looking "bubbly". Isolating the
injured fish and treating for Finrot/Fungus will help, but long
term the fish causing the damage will need to be rehomed. I'd
be watching your Ancistrus, Crossocheilus, and Botia in
particular.> I do 15 % water change weekly, with water that
was left for 24 hours and treated with Nutrafin's Aqua+. I
feed the fish with Nutrafin's Staple food in flakes, frozen
bloodworms and frozen daphnia and my own frozen food prepared
from cooked peas, carrots, hardboiled egg, bloodworms, powdered
Spirulina algae ( I plan to add some garlic next time), and
gelatin powder, all squashed into a paste. Please help as I (and
everybody else I asked) have no idea what to do. Thank you!
Morana
<Hope this helps, Neale.>
|
|
Re: sick Gourami
12/9/08 Hi Neale, thanks for the quick response. Which
antibiotic would you recommend? Because I can buy an antibiotic
from my pharmacy if I say it is for my pet, or I can ask my vet
to write a prescription. <In my fish medication book, a
variety of antibiotics are recommended for ulcer-type infections:
Furazolidone (20 mg/l), Nifurpinol (0.1-0.2 mg/l) and
Oxytetracycline hydrochloride (20-100 mg/l). Use whichever, added
to the aquarium water, and always remember to remove carbon from
the filter while medicating fish. Use for 7-10 days, after which
do a decent (25-50%) water change, and repeat medicating as
required.> But if it is a virus, it won't help anyway.
<Quite.> Oh, those Botia are in the aquarium since
Saturday, so it couldn't be them, and I never saw either
Ancistrus or Crossocheilus picking on her. <May happen at
night, when you're at work... In any case, when I had
Otocinclus catfish doing this to a large Awaous goby, it was many
weeks after noticing the damage that I actually saw the fish
"in the act"!> She is now in a 30 l quarantine tank,
I'm treating her for fungus and Finrot, although not with
eSHa because it is not available here, but I will try to buy it
on the net. <Hope this helps, Neale.>
|
Three Spot Gourami Gold Variation, dis.
11/26/08
I have a 55 gallon tank with 6 Gourami (2 gold, 2 blue, and 2
Opaline).
A rainbow shark and a Pleco. All the Gourami are female and have
appeared healthy until about 3 days ago. I first noticed then that the
one of the gold Gourami was not eating. The fish appears thin now and
almost bloated in the chest area. There are no other symptoms that are
physically noticeable. The other 5 appear healthy still and eat
voraciously. The rainbow and Pleco also appear healthy. The gold in
question has been in the tank about 3 weeks. It is not gulping air or
swimming odd other than swimming less than it used to. It just kind of
sits in the middle of the tank and occasionally going to the surface
for air. The other gouramis leave it alone and periodically chase each
other. The ammonia and nitrate are zero and the nitrates are at about
10 ppm. I have tried feeding brine shrimp and normally feed tetra min
tropical flakes. I have also done water changes and tried placing the
fish in water with aquarium salt added for an hour all to no avail. Any
help or ideas you can give me would be appreciated.
Dave
<Sad to state, but all these sports of Trichogaster trichopterus
have/show periodic "breakdown" syndromes... as yours seem to
be displaying... There are some records of effective treatments,
involving the use of gram negative and positive antibiotics... In the
West, the ingredients in Maracyn I and II esp.... I encourage either
just simple waiting or
treatment per your perusal here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/ttricdisf.htm
Bob Fenner>
Re: Three Spot Gourami Gold Variation 11/26/08
Thank you for your response. If he makes it through the thanksgiving
holiday I will get some Maracyn and hope for the best.
I find your site a great resource. Keep up the good work.
<Thank you David. Happy holidays to you and yours. BobF>
Blue Gourami Sick? 10/05/08 I have had a 20 gallon
tank for about a month and a half now. Since I've had it, it's
included 2 blue Gourami, 1 Pleco, 2 African dwarf frogs, 1 angelfish, 5
zebra Danios and 2 apple snails...also 1 neon tetra (the other 4 went
'missing'). Over the past week I have noticed that one Gourami
has turned VERY dark blue, doesn't seem to be eating, keeps its
mouth open most of the time and is very inactive. The other Gourami is
still light blue/white and is constantly harassing the dark blue one
(nipping at it). Is the dark blue Gourami sick? Should we put them in
separate tanks? If so, should they remain separate forever? I have
tested tank levels (KH, pH, NO2 and NO3 are all ok), GH is high and
we've had a very hard time trying it to lower... can't seem to
change it. We've changed out some water, added dechlorinator....
Please advise. <Hello Tiana. I can't answer this question easily
without numbers. That you say hardness, pH, nitrite and nitrate are
"OK" means, I'm afraid, nothing to me. Lots and lots of
aquarists have only the vaguest ideas about what these should be. One
issue in this community is temperature. Neons and Danios and Apple
snails need fairly cool conditions, around 22-24 C, whereas Angelfish
and Gouramis will be better at between 26-28 C. A middle value of 25 C
might work, but frankly at least one reason people experience such bad
luck with Neons is they keep them far too warm. (It's also worth
mentioning here that Neons are also known as Angelfish food, so that
combo isn't one I'd put money on...) Next up, Trichogaster
trichopterus Gourami can, do change colour. Sometimes its genetic,
sometimes follows on from nerve damage (oddly enough), and sometimes
it's a sign of stress or disease. The fact your Gourami is
"gasping" concerns me; usually fish only do this when
stressed somehow. There's no data here for me to diagnose the
problem, but I'd recommend you review the needs of Trichogaster
trichopterus and act accordingly. Give me some numbers and perhaps a
photo, and I can perhaps comment further. Do recall that male
Trichogaster trichopterus (which have longer dorsal fins than females)
are territorial and will fight in small tanks like yours. It is
possible the dark Trichogaster trichopterus is being bullied and trying
to hide away from the dominant male. Do always read up on the social
behaviour of fish PRIOR to purchase to avoid this sort of problem: it
is well known that Trichogaster trichopterus is aggressive. Finally,
unless you're an expert fishkeeper, LEAVE pH AND HARDNESS ALONE. It
is incredibly easy to severely stress, even kill, your fish by
manipulating water chemistry. All your fish will adapt to moderately
hard water with a basic pH (say, up to pH 8.0, 20 degrees dH) though
the Neons won't be thrilled about it. Inexperienced aquarists tend
to have no idea about how to change water chemistry safely, and what
kills their fish is CHANGES in pH and hardness happening rapidly. So,
back away from that topic. Instead concentrate on water quality, diet,
and social behaviour as the keys to successfully keeping your community
healthy. Cheers, Neale.>
Gold and Blue Gourami's are acting odd.
8/13/08 Hello, I have 45 gallon tank and currently there are
10 fish in it. Two of them are Gourami's (gold and blue) and
they are acting differently. I used to have two other
Gourami's (both gold) but sadly one received TB
(tuberculosis) and died, <Almost certainly didn't have
TB... who told you this?> and the other one we suspected was
pregnant but also soon died. <Gouramis don't get pregnant,
and certainly didn't die because of it!> Now the last
remaining gouramis are not eating as much, hiding in different
places, and they keep rising to the top. I checked the water and
everything is normal, but just in case I gave the water a 50%
change. What surprises me the most is that the blue Gourami and
the two deceased gouramis survived through a terrible case of
Ick, where every fish but them died. So could you please tell me
what is happening to my fish??Thanks,Scared4Gouramis
<There's no information here to work with. You say the
water is "normal". Meaning what? Let's review, you
need 0 ammonia, 0 nitrite, and ideally less than 50 mg/l nitrate.
The pH should be between 6 and 8, but must be stable whatever it
is. The hardness is not critical, but 5-20 degrees dH is
acceptable. Don't use salt, and don't use water from a
domestic water softener. Almost certainly if you have a bunch of
fish dying for no obvious reasons, or varying reasons, then your
problem is WATER QUALITY. Review, get back to me with the water
test results, and we can help further. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Gold and Blue Gourami's are acting odd.
8/14//08 Hi, Sorry about the lack of information, the nitrite
and ammonia levels are at 0, pH is 7, and nitrate is low. As for
how I know that the Gourami received TB is that it started to
swim upright, stopped eating regularly, had a crooked spine, and
kept trying to swim to the top( which I thought was for air, even
though we have a curtain of bubbles flowing.) <No, that's
not confirmation of Fish TB. For a start, Fish TB is mostly a
marine fish problem. It's very scarce among freshwater fish.
Back when I started keeping fish in the 80s people often blamed
Fish TB for "mystery deaths" but we're now much
wiser about things like viruses and other sources of infection
among freshwater fish. Now, Trichogaster spp. gouramis are pretty
robust, but you can be unlucky and get one with Hexamita or some
other protozoan/bacterial infection. Happens to the best of us.
All gouramis breathe air, and they do so all the time. Completely
normal. In fact, making it difficult for them to breathe air,
e.g., but too strong a water current, will kill them.> Also I
would like to rephrase what I said about my other Gourami, she
was growing larger in the midsection but she was still eating and
swimming around. <Probably just fat! But they do swell up
somewhat with eggs once mature. Do take care not to overfeed
them, and these are omnivorous fish so some plant material (e.g.,
Sushi Nori, Spirulina flake, tinned peas) is essential to avoid
constipation, a very common cause of sickness.> I had called a
local specialty aquarium store and described the symptoms to them
and they gave me the "verdicts". I was unsure about the
diagnosis on my so called "pregnant" fish so I look up
some things and I found out that the rotting eggs could usually
float around on top as fuzzy white strips. <Never heard of
this. Can't comment. Sounds unlikely though.> Also I found
a small bubble nest. <Cool!> Now for the other fish (my
surviving Gold and Blue), they are not coming out to eat and are
hiding. <When fish become nervous, it's one of two things:
there's something frightening them, like a predator or bully,
or there's something wrong with the water. In the case of
something scaring them, Trichogaster trichopterus is a bullying
species. The dominant male WILL attack other males and
unreceptive females. That's why I don't recommend them as
community fish or fish for beginners. Your water quality sounds
fine, assuming that it's always at the values you give. Do
test at different times of the day just to be sure. Also be aware
that extrinsic factors like paint vapours and cooking fumes can
poison fish, especially air breathing species like Gouramis.
Anything added to the tank should also be reviewed: I've
poisoned fish by adding wood I thought was safe but had actually
been recently sprayed with pesticide.> As for the water
changes I change the water once a week 30-50% changes.
<OK.> So with all the information now, can you tell me what
is happening to all my Gourami's??~Scared4Gouramis <Not
easily, no. My suggestions are above. I suppose you could treat
with a broad spectrum antibiotic such as Maracyn, but beyond that
observe, review living conditions and compare them with what you
learn is appropriate for this species. Cheers, Neale.>
|
Blue Gourami trouble swimming Hi Wet Crew, I have a 33 gal
tank (3 yrs). pH is around 7 and temp @ 74 degrees.
Penguin dual BioWheel filter, plants etc. I change
about 1/3 of the water every three weeks. <Hello, Jorie
here...sounds like your tank is well-established and stable -
good deal.> Fish are 2x Blue Gourami, 1x Black Angel, 1x
Chinese Algae Eater (who doesn't seem to eat algae), <LOL!
I've got a Siamese Algae Eater who pretty much eats
everything *except* algae!> and 1 or 2 glass
shrimp. All my fish seem to be fine except for one of
the Gouramis. It has trouble swimming and quite often
just sits on the bottom with it's tail spread on the bottom
of the tank. It is eating, but struggles when
swimming. There are no abnormal spots or any visible
fungus growth. It's been doing this for about a
week now. <First off, I'd suggest putting the affected
fish into a QT tank just in case it has something capable of
spreading to the others. Also, if he's
experiencing trouble swimming, a more peaceful environment
without other fish to eat his food, potentially bully him, etc.
would be good. Since there are no visible signs of illness except
for the trouble swimming, could he have somehow injured
himself...one of his pectoral fins, for instance? This once
happened to a molly of mine and it rendered her pretty much
incapable of swimming. It could also potentially be
constipation...is the fish pooping normally? You should be able
to better determine this once the fish is in QT. Fasting and/or
feeding a frozen, thawed pea works well for treating
constipation, if that's the problem. Finally,
worst case scenario, it could be swim bladder disorder, which can
be caused by bacterial or viral disease. After
you've ruled out the other ideas above, you may want to
consider treating the fish with a broad-spectrum antibiotic (but
only in the QT tank!) I would resort to this as a
"last ditch" effort...hopefully the fish is somehow
injured and just needs some healing time in his own
tank. And, by the way, if you do notice that one or
more fins are damaged, missing, once the fish is in QT, you could
add MelaFix to the water to aid in the affected part's
regeneration.> Thought the water change I did on the weekend
might help, but I was wrong. The tank does seem to be
producing a lot of algae - water has a slight green tinge and b4
I changed the water and cleaned, there was algae visible on the
glass. Any ideas? <With regards to the algae, I'd suggest
cutting down on feeding and stepping up the water
changes. I have a 29 gal. tank and I change 5 gallons
of the water every weekend. When I have algae bloom
problems, I'll even do 5 gal. twice per week. Also, is the
tank in direct sunlight? This will cause algae outgrowths.
Finally, what type of lighting is in this tank? Have the bulbs
been switched recently? You could always add more plants (you
mentioned this was a planed tank), as they'll use up more of
the nutrients the algae needs to survive.> Thanks, Derek Horne
<You're welcome. Good luck, Jorie.>
Re: Blue Gourami trouble swimming Hi Jorie, Thanks for
the help. I bought a small tank (5.5 gal) and half
filled with fresh water and half with water from my existing tank
(balanced up the salt as well, of course). Put in a
couple of peas - they are gone now. <Sounds good, Derek...glad
to hear it.> The Gourami didn't seem to be
damaged at all, nor did he seem constipated - seemed a bit thin
actually - and didn't appear to be eating much. It
seemed to be having trouble breathing, so I put in these drops
for fungus. I was told it wouldn't hurt him even
if he didn't have fungus issues. Anyway, he seems
to be doing much better now. Swimming a lot stronger
etc. I'll keep him separate for another few days
to see what happens.\ <Glad to hear he's
improved. Please consider keeping him separated for at
least a couple of weeks, more conservatively (and the choice I
would opt for) a month. If all's still well, then it's
definitely time to re-unite him with his fishy friends.>
Thanks again for your help!!!! Sincerely, Derek <Glad I could
help. Best, Jorie.>
|
Happy aquarium with 1 sick golden Gourami 3/30/07 Hi I
am Isabelle from Mauritius and I am quite new to fish keeping.
<Hello Isabelle... I have never been, but intend to visit, dive the
Mascarenes one of these years...> First of all thank you guys for
the website!!!!!! I have downloaded recently the FAQs and I must admit
that its really useful. Thanks again! I have a 200 litres fresh water
tank. Bio sponge filter rock and plastic plants setting. No heater
working cause we are in summer and it's warm. <Mmm, still a good
idea to leave it in, and plugged in... set to a low temperature... Just
"in case" the water gets too cold... Won't cost you any
electricity if it doesn't...> The inhabitants are: 1 Black Angel
(female and DOMINANT), 1 (Lace Angel female), 2 Blue Gourami (males), 3
Golden Gourami (2males and 1 female), 2 pairs of platys and a pair of
white mollies. They all seem to be happy so far except that I have a
problem with the little male golden Gourami of about 7cm I introduced
along with a female about a month ago. The female is growing fast and
seem to be cheerful with the other golden male Gourami (no babies so
far). But the little male hasn't grown at all. <Mmm... well,
males of the Trichogaster genus do tend to grow slower, stay
smaller...> He is pretty thin and most of the time lay down on the
gravel on one side. He can barely keep his body straight even when he
tries to feed from the gravel. <Oh, this is not good> When he
does his tail can touch his head, he is kind of folded. He goes time to
time to the surface to eat micro pellets, I have bought for him and for
some oxygen. Please can you tell me what's wrong with him and what
should be done? <I think this individual may be
"defective"... perhaps genetically poorly endowed... does
happen with fishes much more than the case with mammals... A good
percent don't "make it" at a later stage of neuronal et
al. development...> I would also like to have a piece of advice. I
would like to introduce a male or two of Angels so as to experience
breeding. I would appreciate to know the steps to follow as I fear to
have a battlefield in my aquarium. <Mmm, really... to have a useful
divider handy... to partition off the breeders from the rest of your
fish livestock... or another system to move either set to> The
dominant female has her tube down as well as the other one. She
sometimes is mischievous and kind of bite the other female. And at
times they are side by side as nothing. I plan to set a second tank for
the breeding. <Oh, good> The third and last question is that I
plan to leave the country for 2-3 weeks and would like to know if
it's possible to leave the aquarium like this or if there is
something I can do to prevent any disease breakout. <If all is fine,
stable... no worries. I would train someone in your absence to do water
changes, some minimal feeding... and have at least Net access... should
they think something is awry> I have a person who can come to feed
the fishes daily but doubt if he can do water
change'¦'¦ Please advise if possible. Thanks in
advance Kind regards, Isabelle <Merci, Bob Fenner>
Re: Happy aquarium with 1 sick golden Gourami 3/30/07
Hi Bob, <Isabelle/Alain> Many thanks for your reply. <Welcome
my friend> Great to hear you want to come to this part of the
planet. And who knows if you can get to Mauritius for vacation, but
also get people here to know the wonderful work you guys are doing!!!
Keep in touch! <Our dear friend, Peter... who has lived with us some
fourteen years, had a farm implement (tractors...) business in
Swaziland for some fifteen years... and used to get out to play soccer
and rugby on Mauritius and Reunion... We have chatted many times re
going there (and Rodriquez) to dive, tourist about... visit with folks
at the new aquarium there...> If you think something can be done to
get people to know your work here, etc would be happy to help. <Ahh,
thank you... Mainly linking, doing your bit to help others...> In
fact, I have started to talk about your website. Not much, but it might
help some novice like me... sorry but it's even more work for you
guys :-) <Heeeee! No worries> My LFS told me the same thing as
regards the sick male Gourami. Still I didn't want to lose
faith.... Well guess it should be so.... <Don't lose faith...
Remember... very, make that VERY important... such negative thinking
leads to closing of your mind to infinite possibilities... Do not allow
yourself to sink, turn to such a waste of precious resources> I got
the heater back in the tank just in case.... <Ah, good> Think I
will try breeding Angels when I get back, they are my favourite. You
are all doing a wonderful job and please keep this up because God knows
it's hard when you feel helpless in front of the tank...... Kind
regards, Isabelle <Mmm, do also search a bit re the use, application
of Epsom Salt here... I do sense this might be useful. Bob Fenner>
Re: Happy aquarium with 1 sick golden Gourami
3/31/07 Bonjour Bob! <Isabelle!> So it won't be your
first visit!!! <Mmm, will be mine, not Pete's> Well I do
encourage you and your folks to come back anytime!! Let me know!
<Ah, appreciate this> Thanks for your encouraging words. It's
just that I wonder if the little guy is suffering. Don't have the
courage to put him down. <I understand...> Don't worries I
don't lose faith in fish keeping, these little guys help me a lot
out of stress! I think all the fish keepers will agree at least when
hooooooo trooooubles in the tank!!!!! Many thanks for the advice on the
Epsom salt. In fact, I have started to collect maximum info from the
FAQs on Fresh water Angels and doing some research work too. Actually
anthemia for hatching the baby brine are not available on the market.
My LFS guy suggested green water. I must first set the breeding tank I
think before jumping with both feet in this adventure, especially if I
have to leave the country for some weeks... <I see> But I will
surely try to make either the Angels or Gouramis to spawn. I think I
will like to watch them grow and turn into these amazing fishes.
<Agreed> Anyway, I think you will here me sooner or later,
especially when in trooooooubles..... Thanks again for your quick
replies. Kind regards, Isabelle <Welcome my friend. Bob
Fenner>
Dead Gourami 5/25/07 Hello, I have a
30 gallon tank it has been running for the better part of a year.
In it I have 2 rainbow sharks (they are trying to spawn!), <Neat!
Oh, they may be just playing... or fighting!> 3 adult
mollies (2 of which are very pregnant) 12 molly fry, 1
guppy, 5 cardinal tetras, 1 bulldog Pleco, five gold barbs, 1
Kuhli loach, 3 mystery snails, 1 female gold Gourami (the
male died this morning), some floating plants & a few that are
rooted in gravel. I test the water quality every two days & do 25%
water changes every 7-14 days. The water quality is good ,
although slightly acidic. I use a BioWheel filter. The temp is 78
degrees. About 2 weeks ago I noticed that my male Gourami
was looking a little fatter than usual, so I decided to
watch him & make sure he was alright. Over the next
few days he started having difficulty swimming & would
lay at the bottom of the tank. (he wasn't being bullied
by any other fish) his stomach continued to get bigger , he
stopped eating , & today I found him dead at
the bottom of my tank. My question is, is this a common
occurrence with this type of fish? <Actually, yes...
Trichogaster and Colisa genera Gouramis are "not what they used to
be"... and too often suffer such maladies...> I've never
had any other problems with him. I had been feeding him
tetra flakes & once a week I give them dried baby
shrimp. So nothing crazy in his diet. I also was wondering
if this could be something contagious? <I do hope not... In most
cases, an individual will die as you relate here... For importers
though, whole batches can go mysteriously... Bob Fenner>
Thanks in advance. -Jenni
Blue Gourami - fin trouble! 7/28/07
Hi there. My husband and I are quite new to keeping tropical freshwater
fish, so a little help in diagnosing a problem with our blue Gourami
would be appreciated. Have searched the net and have found your site
and are hoping for some help. <OK, will do my best.> We have a 35
Gallon tank, have checked all water parameters and they are fine. In
fact we have baby fish (in a baby net 2 weeks old) which are thriving
at the moment, so the water is fine. <Can you define
"fine"? You see, not all tropical fish want the same things.
Some want warmer water, others cooler. Some want an acid pH, others a
basic pH. Some want hard water, others soft. Some are intolerant of low
levels of pollution, others will put up with it for a while. So we need
numbers -- at the very least, pH, hardness, nitrite, and temperature.
These 4 are usually pretty good indicators of conditions in the
aquarium, and are the essential ones every aquarist should have to
hand.> A couple of weeks ago we noticed our Blue Gourami had a small
white (pin head) spot on its side fin. <Almost certainly
Whitespot/ick. Treat on sight, because it is extremely contagious.>
Its appetite and activity levels are normal. We asked the LFS and they
said to keep an eye on it and that if it multiplied or the fishes
behaviour changed we would possibly need to treat for White Spot.
<Not brilliant advice.> Nothing changed for a week then another
white spot appeared on the opposite side fin! <It's Whitespot.
It spreads.> This one has since become red and inflamed. This fish
had a red spot near the base of its tail a few weeks ago, but this
disappeared after a couple of days. We have checked the red lump and it
does not seem to be a parasite (nothing to remove) just a red small
lumpy mass. Is it a tumour? The fish is absolutely fine in
himself...eating fine and swimming normally. Tumours are rare in
freshwater fish, though they happen. The red inflammation is unrelated
to the Whitespot. Almost certainly you have water quality issues, and
what you're seeing is the simultaneous appearance of Finrot (the
red) and Whitespot. These are both extremely common in new aquaria.
They must be treated immediately because both have the potential to
cause fatalities.> He has been chasing my Gold Gourami about so is
this maybe an injury sustained during courtship? They do get quite
frisky! <No, he's not courting. He's fighting. Blue and gold
Gouramis are the same species (Trichogaster trichopterus) and the males
are legendarily aggressive and nasty fish. You would not believe the
number of times I've been asked to help out where someone has an
aquarium with this fish causing havoc. It's what they do. Males
have orange pelvic fins (the "feelers") and extra-long dorsal
fins, so are usually quite easy to sex.> No other fishes in the
aquarium seem to be having any problems. We have 6 Danios, 2 goldfish,
1 Plec, 2 red Indian Gourami and a Japanese Weather loach who is a real
character!! <An interesting selection of fish. I happen to be a
great fan of weather loaches, so I'm sure he is fun to watch.>
All the fish are non aggressive and we have a lovely pleasant tank.
<Famous last words...> I am just worried about Bluey. I really
hope that you can help us. <Done my best. Hope this helps.> Many
thanks Louise & Ady <Good luck, Neale.>
Re: Blue Gourami - fin trouble! 7/29/07 Hi
Neale, <Hello Louise,> Should I treat the Whitespot and the fin
rot at the same time? Or give the tank chance to recover between the
two medications? <This depends on the medication used. In general
though you need to complete one treatment before doing another. In this
case, I'd tend to treat the Whitespot first and then the Finrot.
Between each "course" of treatment, do two 50% water changes
(one one evening, the other the next morning) so that you flush out
most of the first medication used. Oh, and one last thing: make sure
you remove carbon before using any medication. To be honest, I'd
recommend not using carbon at all unless you have a specific need for
it. The space in the filter where carbon goes is better used by extra
biological filter media.> Does this affect the filter, <No, not
if you follow the instructions.> And are there any tips on what I
should be looking for in the water chemistry, just in case I have
missed a test kit? <Not really sure what you mean here. What you
want are values within the range tolerated by the fish in question. So
a blue Gourami is good between pH 6 and 8, so if you have pH 7.5,
that's fine. Likewise they're good at medium hardness levels,
around 5-15 dH being about right, so if you have hardness 12 dH,
that's fine too.> Water temp is 27 degrees, ammonia within safe
levels indicated on test tube kit, as was nitrate and nitrite levels.
<Ah, now this is where things unwind. There is NO "safe"
range of either ammonia or nitrite. For your fish to be healthy, both
must be ZERO. While the test kit might suggest anything up to 0.5 mg/l
ammonia and 1.0 mg/l nitrite is acceptable, this is only true during
the cycling phase, and even then, it severely stresses the fish and can
kill them. At the least, it makes them more vulnerable to ambient
pathogens -- Whitespot and Finrot for example. So if your test kits
show ANY nitrite or ammonia, then you have problems; likely the tank is
either immature, overstocked, overfed, or under-filtered. Nitrate is
the ONLY one of these things that has a safe range. In general, up to
50 mg/l is safe for standard tropical fish, though rather less, around
20 mg/l, for more delicate things like dwarf cichlids and discus. In
other words, don't tell me you think the ammonia, nitrite, and
nitrate are "safe", tell me what the exact numbers are. If
they're not 0, 0, and <50 mg/l, then they're not safe.>
All very low levels, water hardness is a problem in this area but the
LFS said all the fish we have can deal with it. <Water chemistry is
almost never the issue people think it is. Admittedly, there are some
species than need either soft water or hard water. Mollies and other
livebearers need hard water and are sickly when kept in soft water. But
a lot of the standard stuff like Gouramis, barbs, Corydoras, Plecs,
loaches, etc., adapt just fine to a wide range of conditions. Any
aquarium book will suggest values for any given species, and it's
always a good idea to choose your fish by selecting species that will
do well in your local water conditions. If your water is very hard and
has a high pH, then choosing things like Rainbowfish and livebearers is
the way to go.> We condition any tap water we use and cycle
regularly. 20% water change every 2 weeks. <OK. Conditioning the
water is good. Adding Cycle (or any other bacteria supplement) is
pointless. Once the filter is established, it is self-maintaining.
Adding more bacteria is kind of like adding more grass seed every week
to a lawn. All the filter bacteria want is to be left alone and that
every month or so you gently clean the media in a bucket of aquarium
water (not fresh water!) to dislodge some of the silt and detritus. But
that's it. As for water changes, you need to raise your game. 50% a
week is a good amount. Water changes cost almost nothing to do, but
they make such a big difference to the health of the fish.> Gravel
clean every 3/4 weeks. Plastic plants only, internal filter, 200w
heater, kept lit for about 8 hours a day minimum. <All sounds
fine.> Many thanks, Louise <Good luck! Cheers, Neale>
Is there hope for my Gourami
8/15/07 Help! First I have a 30 gallon tank and all the reading
are where they are suppose to be. I have 3 angels and Gourami in
this tank. I don't know if this has anything to do with it but
7 weeks ago I gave my fish some frozen blood worms, within a week
my Gourami started to twist out of shape. <I... see this> I
went to a local mom and pop fish store and they weren't exactly
sure what was wrong and gave me some cure all capsules. <Were
there but such things> The Gourami started to straighten back
out during the treatment. About a week later he started twisting
again. I went to a different pet store where the people were a
little more knowledgeable about fish (or so I thought). When I told
him about the Gourami becoming disfigured he said that I should put
it out of its misery. I bought instead some antibiotic for the tank
thinking this might help. It did but as soon as treatment ended he
started to twist again. Help! I don't know what to do. He is
still eating and swimming but I feel so bad for it. He is getting
skinnier also and staying towards the top of the tank. None of the
other fish are having symptoms. Can he be saved? Do you know what
is wrong with him? <There are a few known "causes" of
such spinal curvature... all are incurable at present as far as
I'm aware... I would sacrifice (euthanize) this one animal
(please read here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/euthanasiafaqs.htm )
and take care to wash your hands... as Mycobacteria may be involved
here. Bob Fenner> |
|
|
|