![]() |
hole in the head (x-posted to alt aquaria oscars)
Hi all,
I just purchased a used aquarium today. It is a 40 gallon and it has an oscar, a green terror, a convict cichlid, and a good sized pleco in it. The people that I bought it from told me that they only change the water every 3 to 4 months in it. I have never had cichlids before, but that does not seem right to me. They also said that the oscar is developing what looks to be hole in the head disease. From the pictures I've seen, I would also say that is what it is. They had the fish for 3 years, and they were fine. They also only feed one teaspoon of cichlid pellets every other day for the whole tank. These are big fish, and that doesn't seem like enough to me. I want to know how do I treat the hole in the head, should I feed them more, and also how often and how much water should I change. They have had quite a traumatic day today with the move and getting set up again (they still have the same water they have had for 3 months, we just moved their water also). Should I change it immediately or let them settle for a while? Sorry for all the questions, but these fish are gorgeous and I want them to be healthy and happy. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Sarah |
"Sarah Navarro" wrote in message ink.net... Hi all, I just purchased a used aquarium today. It is a 40 gallon and it has an oscar, a green terror, a convict cichlid, and a good sized pleco in it. The people that I bought it from told me that they only change the water every 3 to 4 months in it. I have never had cichlids before, but that does not seem right to me. They also said that the oscar is developing what looks to be hole in the head disease. From the pictures I've seen, I would also say that is what it is. They had the fish for 3 years, and they were fine. They also only feed one teaspoon of cichlid pellets every other day for the whole tank. These are big fish, and that doesn't seem like enough to me. I want to know how do I treat the hole in the head, should I feed them more, and also how often and how much water should I change. They have had quite a traumatic day today with the move and getting set up again (they still have the same water they have had for 3 months, we just moved their water also). Should I change it immediately or let them settle for a while? Sorry for all the questions, but these fish are gorgeous and I want them to be healthy and happy. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Sarah The more you feed big fish, the bigger they grow and the more waste they create. It's up to you how much work you want to put into it. Big fish are insatiable eaters, and very messy. I use a diatom once a month to try to keep the tank clean. Some will tell you that they change water constantly, and swear by it. I've kept fish for 40 years and rarely change water at all with no problems. -- JK Sinrod Sinrod Stained Glass Studios www.sinrodstudios.com Coney Island Memories www.sinrodstudios.com/coneymemories |
Be happy you don't have a 4' South American Redtail Catfish...
.... They lay out a human sized Cleveland Steamer every time they swallow an adult cat. |
"Sarah Navarro" wrote in message
ink.net... Hi all, I just purchased a used aquarium today. It is a 40 gallon and it has an oscar, a green terror, a convict cichlid, and a good sized pleco in it. The people that I bought it from told me that they only change the water every 3 to 4 months in it. I have never had cichlids before, but that does not seem right to me. They also said that the oscar is developing what looks to be hole in the head disease. From the pictures I've seen, I would also say that is what it is. They had the fish for 3 years, and they were fine. They also only feed one teaspoon of cichlid pellets every other day for the whole tank. These are big fish, and that doesn't seem like enough to me. I want to know how do I treat the hole in the head, should I feed them more, and also how often and how much water should I change. They have had quite a traumatic day today with the move and getting set up again (they still have the same water they have had for 3 months, we just moved their water also). Should I change it immediately or let them settle for a while? Sorry for all the questions, but these fish are gorgeous and I want them to be healthy and happy. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Sarah I don't mean to sound negative here, but the convict is the only one that is even close to being suitably sized for that tank, and even that is really pushing it unless you want to do maintenance on the tank everyday. There is no way you can keep those fish happy and healthy in that size tank. I would recommend taking all of the fish and trading them in on some that are more reasonable for that tank. Your fish has hole in the head because of the extremely poor water conditions in the tank do to the extreme overload. With that fish load you really need to do 30-50% water changes every day or two to keep the water halfway clean. Plus I find it very hard to believe that the fish are as old as the previous owner said and still be of a size that that can fit in that small of a tank, or even still be alive with water changes as infrequent as the previous owner said. In three years, even stunted oscars and green terrors will be 18" long. Those fish all put an extreme bio load on tanks and are not for rookies, they aren't like most fish. If you want to keep those fish, run out and buy a 150Gallon tank minimum. -- Margolis http://web.archive.org/web/200302152...qs/AGQ2FAQ.htm http://www.unrealtower.org/faq |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:26 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FishKeepingBanter.com