"Wildbilly" wrote in message
...
In article
,
ranchu wrote:
On Jan 24, 12:37 am, Wildbilly
wrote:
Dying fantail, up-side down on bottom of tank for five
days, and
breathing hard. I've changed the water twice, added 2 g
salt each time
to a twelve gallon replacement to a 20 gallon tank, and
added a teaspoon
of anti-ick medication, although there is no sign of
ick. There was
initially a sheen on the water, like oil. I've no idea
where it came
from, and that prompted me to exchange some water.
Any ideas?
--
"Fascism should more properly be called corporatism
because it is the
merger of state and corporate power." - Benito
Mussolini.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100119/...rrestin...http
://www.democracynow.org/2010/1/19/headlines
Wildbilly,
Sorry to hear of your problem. Sorry I am a little late,
but I have
stayed away from this group because of the problems that
have
occurred. I suspect that your fish has gone to the great
beyond, but
in case that is happens again, there are something that
you can do.
If the fish is breathing hard it is probably a gill
related problem.
Skip the salt, it is useless is these cases, plus,
because of so many
people having been misguided about the constant use of
salt it is
virtually useless against anything, except in such high
concentrations
that you are likely to kill your patient with the higher
salt
concentrations needed. Make sure you water is pristine
clean; Zero
nitrites and zero ammonia. Make sure nitrates are low
also and only
water changes can take care of this situation. Add one
or two air
stones that produce fine bubbles in high volume.
Beings the fish was breathing hard, it is probably a gill
problem like
I said before, so find a med that attacks gill problems
and treat you
fish according to the instructions. Like with people,
stay with the
regime until it has run its course. Do not short change
your patient.
God Bless you and yours and hoping you fish are fine
also.
Ranchu
Thanks for the response, Ranchu. I do appreciate it.
I apprecate it as well. Have an older white fan tail and he
is either snacking or sleeping on the bottom of his tank.
He's
pretty old for a good fish but I'd still like to keep him
around
for a bit longer.
I do have an extra 3.5 gal tank so I'm thinking that when I
clean
the water later today, that I will put him in his own little
tank.
At the least it should take some stress away for him
I'm new here but this post really caught my eye. Just the
post
I was going to write about and low and behol there it was.
Donna
in WA