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Argh! Tetra Disease
My 55 gal has been hit with NTD, Cardinals and Glowlights all gone, only
my little zebra danios left. Do I have any other options to rid my tank of this disease short of tearing it all down? SS |
Argh! Tetra Disease
SS wrote in news:lTHxg.245733$IK3.7409
@pd7tw1no: My 55 gal has been hit with NTD, Cardinals and Glowlights all gone, only my little zebra danios left. Do I have any other options to rid my tank of this disease short of tearing it all down? Are you sure it is Neon Tetra Disease? The scale of death suggests F. columnaris bacteria to me. NTD is not limited to tetras; it can affect barbs, rasboras, angelfish, and probably many others. NTD is caused by an internal sporozoan parasite. No one really knows how it is transmitted, but many suspect that it is through ingestion of infected tissue (i.e. the eating of dead infected fish). The progression of NTD is generally slow and it can take a relatively long time for a fish to die after the first appearance of symptoms. There is no effective treatment other than to remove and euthanize the affected fish before the disease spreads to other fish--this generally controls the spread of the disease quite well. An internal columnaris infect looks superficially like NTD but the time between the appearance of symptoms and death of the fish is much shorter and spread of the infection is generally much faster. F. columnaris can be treated using anti-bacteria chemicals or by using gram-negative antibiotics. |
Argh! Tetra Disease
dc wrote:
SS wrote in news:lTHxg.245733$IK3.7409 @pd7tw1no: My 55 gal has been hit with NTD, Cardinals and Glowlights all gone, only my little zebra danios left. Do I have any other options to rid my tank of this disease short of tearing it all down? Are you sure it is Neon Tetra Disease? The scale of death suggests F. columnaris bacteria to me. NTD is not limited to tetras; it can affect barbs, rasboras, angelfish, and probably many others. NTD is caused by an internal sporozoan parasite. No one really knows how it is transmitted, but many suspect that it is through ingestion of infected tissue (i.e. the eating of dead infected fish). The progression of NTD is generally slow and it can take a relatively long time for a fish to die after the first appearance of symptoms. There is no effective treatment other than to remove and euthanize the affected fish before the disease spreads to other fish--this generally controls the spread of the disease quite well. An internal columnaris infect looks superficially like NTD but the time between the appearance of symptoms and death of the fish is much shorter and spread of the infection is generally much faster. F. columnaris can be treated using anti-bacteria chemicals or by using gram-negative antibiotics. Thanks for the info, I never knew about internal columnaris. The deaths spread like wildfire, a matter of hours. They started getting white areas that just kept growing until it covered all transparent areas on the fish. Also lost one z.danio. Can anyone recommend a gram-negative antibiotic? Most of the stuff I've seen is gram-positive. Thanks SS |
Argh! Tetra Disease
"SS" wrote in message news:oN1yg.246403$Mn5.112640@pd7tw3no... Thanks for the info, I never knew about internal columnaris. The deaths spread like wildfire, a matter of hours. They started getting white areas that just kept growing until it covered all transparent areas on the fish. Also lost one z.danio. Can anyone recommend a gram-negative antibiotic? Most of the stuff I've seen is gram-positive. ========================= Furicin and Furinace should get both gram negative and gram positive bacteria. I think I got the spelling correct. Foster & Smith and I believe That Fish Place both carry it. -- KL.... Aquariums since 1952. My Pond & Aquarium Pages: http://tinyurl.com/9do58 ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö ~~~~ }((((({* |
Argh! Tetra Disease
SS wrote: Thanks for the info, I never knew about internal columnaris. The deaths spread like wildfire, a matter of hours. They started getting white areas that just kept growing until it covered all transparent areas on the fish. Also lost one z.danio. Can anyone recommend a gram-negative antibiotic? Most of the stuff I've seen is gram-positive. Nitrofurazone and Kanamycin Sulfate are an excellent combination for columnaris also known as flexibacter. Pimafix has also been shown to be extremely effective for this and is non antibiotic. Here is a site that lists many antibiotics and wheter they are gram negative or positive and what they are effective against. http://aquarium-medictions.blogspot.com/ Carl |
Argh! Tetra Disease
carlrs wrote:
SS wrote: Thanks for the info, I never knew about internal columnaris. The deaths spread like wildfire, a matter of hours. They started getting white areas that just kept growing until it covered all transparent areas on the fish. Also lost one z.danio. Can anyone recommend a gram-negative antibiotic? Most of the stuff I've seen is gram-positive. Nitrofurazone and Kanamycin Sulfate are an excellent combination for columnaris also known as flexibacter. Pimafix has also been shown to be extremely effective for this and is non antibiotic. Here is a site that lists many antibiotics and wheter they are gram negative or positive and what they are effective against. http://aquarium-medictions.blogspot.com/ Carl Great site! Thanks Carl! SS |
Argh! Tetra Disease
doxycycline
"SS" wrote in message news:lTHxg.245733$IK3.7409@pd7tw1no... My 55 gal has been hit with NTD, Cardinals and Glowlights all gone, only my little zebra danios left. Do I have any other options to rid my tank of this disease short of tearing it all down? SS |
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