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I've read alittle about this problem with the neons...I was curious if
cardinal share this malady as well? Thanks all.....-ED |
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-ED wrote:
I've read alittle about this problem with the neons...I was curious if cardinal share this malady as well? Thanks all.....-ED Yes. It can infect many fish. Below is the entry on NTD (Plistophora hyphessobryconis) from a research article. Cheirodon axelrodi Schultz is an older scientific name for the cardinal tetra. The whole paragraph is a bit of a Latin workout. ;-) "P. hyphessobryconis Schäperclaus, 1941; Paracheirodon inessi (Myers) and Hemigrammus erythrozonus Durbin were the original hosts; also found in Hemmigrammus ocellifer (Steindachner), Danio rerio (Hamilton-Buchanan) (Opitz 1942), Hyphessobrycon flammeus (Meyers) (see Stefens, 1956), H. callistus callistus Boulenger, Cheirodon axelorodi Schultz, Hasemania nana (Reinhardt), Barbus lineatus Duncker, Brachydanio nigrofasciatus (Day), Opisthogramma seitzigi (see Steffens, 1962), Hemigrammus pulcher Ladiges, Hyphessobrycon rosaceus Durbin, Xiphophorus helleri Heckel (see van Duijn, 1956), Hyphessobrycon heterorhabdus Ulrey (see Sterba, 1956), Carassius auratus auratus L. (see Canning & Lom, 1986), C. auratus gibelio Bloch and Phoxinus phoxinus (L.) (see Richert 1958); skeletal muscles, in heavy infections other organs and tissues. (W, common)." From: JiÅ™Ã* Lom, A catalogue of described genera and species of microsporidians parasitic in fish, Systematic Parasitology, Volume 53, Issue 2, Oct 2002, Pages 81 - 99. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to email me. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
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On Tue, 02 May 2006 18:49:04 GMT, Altum
wrote: The whole paragraph is a bit of a Latin workout. ;-) "P. hyphessobryconis Schäperclaus, 1941; Paracheirodon inessi (Myers) and Hemigrammus erythrozonus Durbin were the original hosts; also found in Hemmigrammus ocellifer (Steindachner), Danio rerio (Hamilton-Buchanan) (Opitz 1942), Hyphessobrycon flammeus (Meyers) (see Stefens, 1956), H. callistus callistus Boulenger, Cheirodon axelorodi Schultz, Hasemania nana (Reinhardt), Barbus lineatus Duncker, Brachydanio nigrofasciatus (Day), Opisthogramma seitzigi (see Steffens, 1962), Hemigrammus pulcher Ladiges, Hyphessobrycon rosaceus Durbin, Xiphophorus helleri Heckel (see van Duijn, 1956), Hyphessobrycon heterorhabdus Ulrey (see Sterba, 1956), Carassius auratus auratus L. (see Canning & Lom, 1986), C. auratus gibelio Bloch and Phoxinus phoxinus (L.) (see Richert 1958); skeletal muscles, in heavy infections other organs and tissues. (W, common)." Betcha can't say that 3 times in a row fast. Or slow! -- Mister Gardener -- Pull the WEED to email me |
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![]() -ED wrote: I've read alittle about this problem with the neons...I was curious if cardinal share this malady as well? ......... I guess it depends on where or what you read. Take a look here http://freshaquarium.about.com/cs/di...eondisease.htm and a few others that say the same. I have to agree, in the years I was into the pet shops, we had neon tetra disease (NTD) wipe out whole shipments of neons, and spread to other tanks of fish, mainly tetras, but never spread to the cardinal. ............... Frank |
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Frank wrote:
-ED wrote: I've read alittle about this problem with the neons...I was curious if cardinal share this malady as well? ......... I guess it depends on where or what you read. Take a look here http://freshaquarium.about.com/cs/di...eondisease.htm and a few others that say the same. I have to agree, in the years I was into the pet shops, we had neon tetra disease (NTD) wipe out whole shipments of neons, and spread to other tanks of fish, mainly tetras, but never spread to the cardinal. ............... Frank There's a REASON I went to the scientific literature. There is no peer review process on sites like About.com. The "expert" there can publish any information and/or misinformation they choose. As long as there are plenty of hits so the ads pay, About.com doesn't care much about content. Notice the complete and total lack of references to any fish disease papers or books on that page. It also incorrectly states that angels can get NTD. I got curious about NTD and cardinals when I gradually lost a shoal of them earlier this year to a disease that caused white patches and whirling. It started when I bought a few newly imported fish. Internet sites said all sorts of ridiculous stuff and none of them agreed so I did some careful research in the scientific literature. I learned that many fish can get some sort of microsporidian infection and that there are dozens of species of microsporidia. Some are rarer than others. I also found that article I posted when Gill had the sick neons showing very clearly that Flavobacterium can mimic NTD in cardinals and neons. Back to the original question, according to experts with microscopes neons and cardinals can both be infected with Pleistophora hyphessobryconis. So can most other tetras and many cyprinids. Angels can get another parasite with different morphology, and bettas a third. The microsporidians don't appear to freely cross-infect unrelated species the way parasites like ich and costia do. You must be aware that the absence of cross-infection in your shop does not mean it can't happen. Consider the possibility that the wild-caught cardinals in your store had some immunity to NTD while the farm-raised neons and other tetras didn't. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to email me. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
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Altum wrote,
according to experts with microscopes neons and cardinals can both be infected with Pleistophora hyphessobryconis. So can most other tetras and many cyprinids. It's hard to argue with a microscope, but there must be somewhat of a resistance for the statement to come up so often and in so many sites. Consider the possibility that the wild-caught cardinals in your store had some immunity to NTD while the farm-raised neons and other tetras didn't... Most of the time I bred the cardinals for our stores. I would suspect that it's the tank raised cardinals that would have more of a resistance to NTD than the wild or pond raised cardinals... About the only time I see what looks to be NTD, is in the big chain stores with central filtering. Quite often one can see a neon tank down with the disease, but the cardinals will be looking good. Then again, most of the time I beleave the symptoms are misdiagnosised as some bacterial infections mimic NTD. If Nalidixic Acid or protiozin treatments are successfull (as with most of the time), the disease was misdiagnosised. I sold to other stores other than our own - a few times the owners of the stores would close a tank due to NTD, which to date is untreatable. They would give me the tank of neons, which *most* of the time, when treated were cured, so was nothing but a bacterial infection. Like those stores, most people misdiagnosis the symptoms, thus won't even treat, but trash the fish. Like I said, most cardinals are tank bred now, while neons are still brought in from the wild - mabe some gene therapy going on here (?) ................... Frank |
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Consider the possibility that the wild-caught
cardinals in your store had some immunity to NTD while the farm-raised neons and other tetras didn't... Most of the time I bred the cardinals for our stores. I would suspect that it's the tank raised cardinals that would have more of a resistance to NTD than the wild or pond raised cardinals... About the only time I see what looks to be NTD, is in the big chain stores with central filtering. Quite often one can see a neon tank down with the disease, but the cardinals will be looking good. Then again, most of the time I beleave the symptoms are misdiagnosised as some bacterial infections mimic NTD. If Nalidixic Acid or protiozin treatments are successfull (as with most of the time), the disease was misdiagnosised. I sold to other stores other than our own - a few times the owners of the stores would close a tank due to NTD, which to date is untreatable. They would give me the tank of neons, which *most* of the time, when treated were cured, so was nothing but a bacterial infection. Like those stores, most people misdiagnosis the symptoms, thus won't even treat, but trash the fish. Like I said, most cardinals are tank bred now, while neons are still brought in from the wild - mabe some gene therapy going on here (?) ................... Frank Are the neons more tempermental (lack of better words) in their breeding habits while in captivity?..-ED |
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ED wrote,
Are the neons more tempermental (lack of better words) in their breeding habits while in captivity? I found cardinals were much easyer to breed - My breeders were tank bred, but supposable so were the neon breeders I ordered, twice............. Frank |
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Frank wrote:
Altum wrote, according to experts with microscopes neons and cardinals can both be infected with Pleistophora hyphessobryconis. So can most other tetras and many cyprinids. It's hard to argue with a microscope, but there must be somewhat of a resistance for the statement to come up so often and in so many sites. Fair point. It's probably a combination of moderate resistance and urban legend. Consider the possibility that the wild-caught cardinals in your store had some immunity to NTD while the farm-raised neons and other tetras didn't... Most of the time I bred the cardinals for our stores. I would suspect that it's the tank raised cardinals that would have more of a resistance to NTD than the wild or pond raised cardinals... About the only time I see what looks to be NTD, is in the big chain stores with central filtering. Quite often one can see a neon tank down with the disease, but the cardinals will be looking good. Then again, most of the time I beleave the symptoms are misdiagnosised as some bacterial infections mimic NTD. If Nalidixic Acid or protiozin treatments are successfull (as with most of the time), the disease was misdiagnosised. I sold to other stores other than our own - a few times the owners of the stores would close a tank due to NTD, which to date is untreatable. They would give me the tank of neons, which *most* of the time, when treated were cured, so was nothing but a bacterial infection. Like those stores, most people misdiagnosis the symptoms, thus won't even treat, but trash the fish. Like I said, most cardinals are tank bred now, while neons are still brought in from the wild - mabe some gene therapy going on here (?) ................... Frank Hmmm... If fish farms have occasional NTD wipeouts, the remaining fish could be more resistant. A few generations and maybe the fish are resistant with no tinkering at all. Interesting that you had wild neons and tank-raised cardinals. Everywhere I have lived it has been the other way around. Stores around here put the newly imported cardinals into RO water with only a tiny amount of minerals to help them recover from shipping. Unfortunately, it is up to the customer to acclimate them to our tapwater. There are some really interesting articles on cardinal tetra exports as a cottage industry in Brazil. 80% of fish shipped from the Rio Negro in Brazil are cardinals. Cardinal tetra farming gives small villages a sustainable income that doesn't rely on deforestation. Unfortunately, commercial breeding of cardinals is starting to damage the industry. http://www.idrc.ca/en/ev-67642-201-1-DO_TOPIC.html http://www.fao.org/NEWS/1999/990901-e.htm http://www.ofish.org/data-area.asp?aid=9818&gid=4838 -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to email me. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#10
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Altum wrote,
Interesting that you had wild neons and tank-raised cardinals... I ordered both - at the time, tank raised cardinals were a lot easyer to come by than tank raised neons. Stores around here put the newly imported cardinals into RO water with only a tiny amount of minerals to help them recover from shipping. Unfortunately, it is up to the customer to acclimate them to our tapwater.... That's how the larger chain stores around here do it, not only with cardinals and neons, but all the fish. ................... Frank |
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