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Having some serious problems with fish deaths at the moment, and really
running out of ideas on how to stop the deaths. Problems started a couple of weeks ago, when I had a couple of golden mollys die the same day. My immediate reaction was to do a partial water change, (30%ish), and cleaned the pump filter using tank water (I never use untreated tap water). As a precaution, I have been putting a general purpose antibiotic, Myxazin for the last week, and after each partial water change, I have added some cycle (Nutrafin) Anyway, since then, the fish have been going on a regularish basis. By the end of last week, another 3 mollies had gone. I did a Nitrite test, and it looked pretty reasonable (0.3 or thereabous). Since then, I have lost all 5 neon tetras. Yesterday, I did another partial water change (30%), and put some cycle in. None of the deaths, I have seen the run-up, but today, I found one of the fish (tangarine tetra) having trouble keeping balance, swimming all over the place, finally resting in the plants. A poke would send it off into a untrolled frenzy. I took the fish out, and put it in a seperate tank. A few hours later, another one exhibited the same problem, I moved that toa seperate tank also. Both fish have now met their maker... Anyone have any other suggestions. Uptil the fish die, they all seem healty enough, eating and swimming fine, with none of the obvious symptoms.. Need help before the remaining 8 or so established fish go the same way as the others... Whats interesting, is that these fish seem to be dying in order of "newness", followed by type. -- ------------------------------------- http://www.rockhangouts.com ------------------------------------- |
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On Thu, 06 Apr 2006 23:53:14 +0100, Black Shuck
wrote: Having some serious problems with fish deaths at the moment, and really running out of ideas on how to stop the deaths. Problems started a couple of weeks ago, when I had a couple of golden mollys die the same day. My immediate reaction was to do a partial water change, (30%ish), and cleaned the pump filter using tank water (I never use untreated tap water). As a precaution, I have been putting a general purpose antibiotic, Myxazin for the last week, and after each partial water change, I have added some cycle (Nutrafin) Anyway, since then, the fish have been going on a regularish basis. By the end of last week, another 3 mollies had gone. I did a Nitrite test, and it looked pretty reasonable (0.3 or thereabous). Since then, I have lost all 5 neon tetras. Yesterday, I did another partial water change (30%), and put some cycle in. None of the deaths, I have seen the run-up, but today, I found one of the fish (tangarine tetra) having trouble keeping balance, swimming all over the place, finally resting in the plants. A poke would send it off into a untrolled frenzy. I took the fish out, and put it in a seperate tank. A few hours later, another one exhibited the same problem, I moved that to a seperate tank also. Both fish have now met their maker... Anyone have any other suggestions. Uptil the fish die, they all seem healty enough, eating and swimming fine, with none of the obvious symptoms.. Need help before the remaining 8 or so established fish go the same way as the others... Whats interesting, is that these fish seem to be dying in order of "newness", followed by type. Well since the last post, another has gone. I have taken the very radical step of moving all the still healthy looking fish to a temporary tank (well large plastic 40L box), with 50% of the water from the old and 50% treated tap water. put the heater and exiting pump filter from the tank in there with it. This was suggested by a fish keeper mate at work, as the last ditch emergency course of action, which I feel I have gotten to. Will clean the main tank ASAP, replace the gravel with sand (was going to do this eventually anyway, and re-introduce the fish (if they are still alive by then). Any tips, comments, advice greatly apreciated. -- ------------------------------------- http://www.rockhangouts.com ------------------------------------- |
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On Thu, 06 Apr 2006 23:53:14 +0100, Black Shuck
wrote: Having some serious problems with fish deaths at the moment, and really running out of ideas on how to stop the deaths. Should have mentioned, it's a 55Litre tank. ------------------------------------- http://www.rockhangouts.com ------------------------------------- |
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On Fri, 07 Apr 2006 02:08:36 +0100, Altum
wrote: Cleaning the display tank is a very good idea - especially since you wanted to anyway. Are you going to disinfect it? Don't know, should I??? Need direction.... How do I eradicate whatever it is that's killing these fish? |
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Black Shuck wrote:
On Fri, 07 Apr 2006 02:08:36 +0100, Altum wrote: Cleaning the display tank is a very good idea - especially since you wanted to anyway. Are you going to disinfect it? Don't know, should I??? Need direction.... How do I eradicate whatever it is that's killing these fish? Are there ANY symptoms other than sudden death? If you had a better idea what was happening, you might be able to use a med that leaves your filter intact. With no idea, you might want to sterilize. Unfortunately, it will kill whatever is left of your biofiltration (probably not much after the acriflavine). First, remove the old substrate that you intend to replace. Then disinfect. Finally, set the tank back up and use Cycle (or I prefer BioSpira) to help get the filter going. I usually use potassium permangante. Kordon's Permoxyn or Jungle Clear Water are two brands. For a tank with no fish, I add double the package dose and leave it overnight with the filter running. If it goes brown in the first few hours, I add more. Then rinse everything until the water runs clear. Dilute permanganate (pale pinkish-purple) is a good dip for live plants. Leave them in for 20 minutes and rinse well. Permanganate may also help your fish in the Q-tank - it can kill bacteria and parasites on skin and gills and has a different spectrum of action than Myxazin. You treat fish for four hours with the dosage on the bottle, add dechlor to inactivate it, and then change some water and put in fresh carbon. It's strong stuff so never mix it with another med. Salt kills most FW bacteria, is really easy to rinse off, and leaves no toxic residue. Put at least 3% salt (30 grams/liter) into the tank and run it overnight. In US measurements, it's a heaping 1/2 cup per gallon - I don't know the metric equivalent but a cup holds about 250 ml. Any cheap salt from the grocery store will work. Naturally, it kills plants. Finally, you can use 5% bleach. It will kill EVERYTHING in under a half hour. You have to be extremely careful to get all of the residue out of the tank and off all the equipment, either by completely drying everything or rinsing and using dechlor. Supposedly plants can survive a brief bleach dip, but I've never tried. Whew! long post. HTH - just pick the method that looks easiest. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
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On Fri, 07 Apr 2006 01:08:36 GMT, Altum
wrote: Black Shuck wrote: On Thu, 06 Apr 2006 23:53:14 +0100, Black Shuck wrote: Having some serious problems with fish deaths at the moment, and really running out of ideas on how to stop the deaths. Problems started a couple of weeks ago, when I had a couple of golden mollys die the same day. My immediate reaction was to do a partial water change, (30%ish), and cleaned the pump filter using tank water (I never use untreated tap water). As a precaution, I have been putting a general purpose antibiotic, Myxazin for the last week, and after each partial water change, I have added some cycle (Nutrafin) Anyway, since then, the fish have been going on a regularish basis. By the end of last week, another 3 mollies had gone. I did a Nitrite test, and it looked pretty reasonable (0.3 or thereabous). Since then, I have lost all 5 neon tetras. Yesterday, I did another partial water change (30%), and put some cycle in. None of the deaths, I have seen the run-up, but today, I found one of the fish (tangarine tetra) having trouble keeping balance, swimming all over the place, finally resting in the plants. A poke would send it off into a untrolled frenzy. I took the fish out, and put it in a seperate tank. A few hours later, another one exhibited the same problem, I moved that to a seperate tank also. Both fish have now met their maker... Anyone have any other suggestions. Uptil the fish die, they all seem healty enough, eating and swimming fine, with none of the obvious symptoms.. Need help before the remaining 8 or so established fish go the same way as the others... Whats interesting, is that these fish seem to be dying in order of "newness", followed by type. Well since the last post, another has gone. I have taken the very radical step of moving all the still healthy looking fish to a temporary tank (well large plastic 40L box), with 50% of the water from the old and 50% treated tap water. put the heater and exiting pump filter from the tank in there with it. This was suggested by a fish keeper mate at work, as the last ditch emergency course of action, which I feel I have gotten to. Will clean the main tank ASAP, replace the gravel with sand (was going to do this eventually anyway, and re-introduce the fish (if they are still alive by then). Any tips, comments, advice greatly apreciated. Are there any external symptoms at all? Look for reddening at the mouth or fin bases, thickened slimecoat, ulcers, white patches, spots or sores. Take a flashlight once it's dark and look for the telltale tiny dusting of velvet on the backs of the fish. (Although Myxazin should have killed velvet...) Flavobacterium can cause wipeouts like you're describing with few or no external signs. Velvet can too, if you miss the sometimes subtle symptoms. Can you get antibiotic food where you live? Salt might be good to use instead of Myxazin, since it doesn't seem to be working. You could try PimaFix too. According to Pimafix literature, it appears like it was designed to work best in tandem with Melafix. They're really not too clear on this, but I would use both together. -- Mister Gardener |
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Mister Gardener wrote:
On Fri, 07 Apr 2006 01:08:36 GMT, Altum wrote: Flavobacterium can cause wipeouts like you're describing with few or no external signs. Velvet can too, if you miss the sometimes subtle symptoms. Can you get antibiotic food where you live? Salt might be good to use instead of Myxazin, since it doesn't seem to be working. You could try PimaFix too. According to Pimafix literature, it appears like it was designed to work best in tandem with Melafix. They're really not too clear on this, but I would use both together. The examples in the patent used PimaFix alone, including the study where they got a little bit of efficacy against Flavobacterium. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
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On Fri, 07 Apr 2006 12:16:29 +0100, Mister Gardener
wrote: On Fri, 07 Apr 2006 01:08:36 GMT, Altum wrote: Black Shuck wrote: On Thu, 06 Apr 2006 23:53:14 +0100, Black Shuck wrote: Having some serious problems with fish deaths at the moment, and really running out of ideas on how to stop the deaths. Well still none the wiser as to whats gone wrong. Lost another fish in the night, and my Pleco jumped out the temporary tank (there is no lid for the plastic box I am using as a temporary tank). Found the Pleco at 2AM, when I went downstairs to get a glass of water. Thought he was dead, but spring to life when I grabbed his tail, so I put him back home in the tank, and put a towel over the tank to stop him jumping out again. He was still alive this morning, but dead when I got home from work today. I can only assume it was the carpet surfing incident that did him in. Have emptied and cleaned the old tank with salt, filled the bottom with aquarium sand (washed in tap water). Filled the tank with water, and added chlorine tap water treatment. Letting the tank settle, and will move the pump/filter and fish back tommorrow. 1 question. I only have 1 tank heater, and it's currently in my temporary tank. I know I need to get the main tank temp matched before I move the fish back. I was planning on using boiling water from the kettle to get the temprature correct before I move the fish. Will this be OK? Anything else I should do? Was going to put tank cycle in, once everything is back in place, then cross my fingers, and see if my 5 remaining fish can survive the stress of all this.... -- ------------------------------------- http://www.rockhangouts.com ------------------------------------- |
#9
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Black Shuck wrote:
Well still none the wiser as to whats gone wrong. Lost another fish in the night, and my Pleco jumped out the temporary tank (there is no lid for the plastic box I am using as a temporary tank). It's so hard when there are no symptoms other than sudden death. I take it you checked for velvet. That leaves bacterial or viral diseases and most of the virulent viruses tend to stick to related fish species. Found the Pleco at 2AM, when I went downstairs to get a glass of water. Thought he was dead, but spring to life when I grabbed his tail, so I put him back home in the tank, and put a towel over the tank to stop him jumping out again. He was still alive this morning, but dead when I got home from work today. I can only assume it was the carpet surfing incident that did him in. That's terrible news. I hate losing jumpers. I just lost a shubunkin from my pond who jumped when I had to change a lot of water. Have emptied and cleaned the old tank with salt, filled the bottom with aquarium sand (washed in tap water). Filled the tank with water, and added chlorine tap water treatment. Letting the tank settle, and will move the pump/filter and fish back tommorrow. Sounds good. 1 question. I only have 1 tank heater, and it's currently in my temporary tank. I know I need to get the main tank temp matched before I move the fish back. I was planning on using boiling water from the kettle to get the temprature correct before I move the fish. Will this be OK? It's fine. I've done it with hot tap water. Anything else I should do? Was going to put tank cycle in, once everything is back in place, then cross my fingers, and see if my 5 remaining fish can survive the stress of all this.... Um... The only things I can think of are obvious. Acclimate your fish to the new water and keep the ammonia and nitrite low through the cycle by changing water. Your cycle may be slower, but it will help with the stress. Good luck. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#10
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Mid posted.
"Black Shuck" wrote in message news ![]() wrote: On Fri, 07 Apr 2006 01:08:36 GMT, Altum wrote: Black Shuck wrote: On Thu, 06 Apr 2006 23:53:14 +0100, Black Shuck wrote: Having some serious problems with fish deaths at the moment, and really running out of ideas on how to stop the deaths. Well still none the wiser as to whats gone wrong. Lost another fish in the night, and my Pleco jumped out the temporary tank (there is no lid for the plastic box I am using as a temporary tank). Found the Pleco at 2AM, when I went downstairs to get a glass of water. Thought he was dead, but spring to life when I grabbed his tail, so I put him back home in the tank, and put a towel over the tank to stop him jumping out again. He was still alive this morning, but dead when I got home from work today. I can only assume it was the carpet surfing incident that did him in. Have emptied and cleaned the old tank with salt, filled the bottom with aquarium sand (washed in tap water). Filled the tank with water, and added chlorine tap water treatment. Letting the tank settle, and will move the pump/filter and fish back tommorrow. 1 question. I only have 1 tank heater, and it's currently in my temporary tank. I know I need to get the main tank temp matched before I move the fish back. I was planning on using boiling water from the kettle to get the temprature correct before I move the fish. Will this be OK? Just make absolutely sure you don't allow the boiling water to come anywhere near the aquarium glass as thermal shock breaks glass easy - I can't emphasize this more as I get the gist of things that if you did get a crack in the glass/leak that you wouldn't have a place to put your fish at the very least for awhile and I shudder to think what would happen to them (maybe put them in a big tupperware-like tote until you could get another tank?), anyways - good luck and later and read up on the nitrogen cycle if you haven't already - also - if you can afford it get an ammonia test kit, nitrite test kit, nitrate test kit, ph test kit, general hardness test kit, carbonate hardness test kit, and use those and post here your results. The general consensus here (according to what I have read about your thread already) is that your tank isn't cycled yet and the ammonia emitted by your fish is causing ammonia/nitrite build up which kills fish. And nitrAte will do the same after it builds up to critical levels (different fish seem to have different thresholds with nitrAte). I guess you MIGHT have cycled your tank already but I thought I would reiterate what others here were saying already. Also - I WAS losing a guppy or 2 every 2 days (and there were no sings of what killed them other than the high nitrIte readings I was getting with my test kit) before I reduced my stock of fish in one tank and I am sure what killed them was the previously high nitrIte levels. Good luck and later! Anything else I should do? Was going to put tank cycle in, once everything is back in place, then cross my fingers, and see if my 5 remaining fish can survive the stress of all this.... -- ------------------------------------- http://www.rockhangouts.com ------------------------------------- |
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