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#1
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I've got four small white balloon mollies in a ten-gallon planted tank
at 79 degrees F which has been running for a few weeks now. I used a good percentage of water from our main tank to start this one up, which I think may have helped me so far avoid an ammonia or nitrite spike. Both ammonia and nitrite levels are virtually zero, and I've done a weekly 10% water change this afternoon. But one of the mollies is quite lethargic- spending a lot of time near the bottom in one corner or another. She (he?) becomes briefly active at feeding time but then goes down to the bottom to rest again. There is no visible sign of disease that I can see- bright white colour, no signs of ich or injury. The other three are fine. So what can I do to help this molly? Many thanks, Ian. |
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Ionizer wrote:
I've got four small white balloon mollies in a ten-gallon planted tank at 79 degrees F which has been running for a few weeks now. I used a good percentage of water from our main tank to start this one up, which I think may have helped me so far avoid an ammonia or nitrite spike. Both ammonia and nitrite levels are virtually zero, and I've done a weekly 10% water change this afternoon. But one of the mollies is quite lethargic- spending a lot of time near the bottom in one corner or another. She (he?) becomes briefly active at feeding time but then goes down to the bottom to rest again. There is no visible sign of disease that I can see- bright white colour, no signs of ich or injury. The other three are fine. So what can I do to help this molly? Many thanks, Ian. First, add 1 tsp/5 gal salt if you have none in the tank. That shouldn't hurt your plants and other fish and a bit of salt helps mollies tremendously. The other thing you could try is feeding an antiparasitic food (guessing parasitic over antibacterial because mollies tend to get parasites). I saw one made by Jungle today at PetSmart that looked pretty good. Maybe NetMax will have some better ideas. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
#3
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"Elaine T" wrote in message
om... Ionizer wrote: I've got four small white balloon mollies in a ten-gallon planted tank at 79 degrees F which has been running for a few weeks now. I used a good percentage of water from our main tank to start this one up, which I think may have helped me so far avoid an ammonia or nitrite spike. Both ammonia and nitrite levels are virtually zero, and I've done a weekly 10% water change this afternoon. But one of the mollies is quite lethargic- spending a lot of time near the bottom in one corner or another. She (he?) becomes briefly active at feeding time but then goes down to the bottom to rest again. There is no visible sign of disease that I can see- bright white colour, no signs of ich or injury. The other three are fine. So what can I do to help this molly? Many thanks, Ian. First, add 1 tsp/5 gal salt if you have none in the tank. That shouldn't hurt your plants and other fish and a bit of salt helps mollies tremendously. The other thing you could try is feeding an antiparasitic food (guessing parasitic over antibacterial because mollies tend to get parasites). I saw one made by Jungle today at PetSmart that looked pretty good. Maybe NetMax will have some better ideas. -- Elaine T Not really. I sometimes raise the water temperature to see if it makes any difference, but otherwise I think you've covered all the bases (as usual ;~). Balloon mollies are at such a physical line-bred extreme of organ compression, that there is a high(er) level of mortality. This means ailments are more often mutagenesis-related rather than pathogenic, which really dampens my efforts and energy at devising treatments, and if anything, it pushes me more towards 'homeopathic' remedies such as isolating the fish in an Epson salt mix (unconstipate them), sea salts and changes in temperature. -- www.NetMax.tk |
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"Ionizer" wrote in message
... I've got four small white balloon mollies in a ten-gallon planted tank Many thanks, Elaine and NetMax. I did another partial water change yesterday, adding a bit of salt as Elaine recommended. Twenty-four hours later as I write this, all four balloons are in the air. The lethargic one isn't 100%, but seems noticeably more active than when I first posted. Tomorrow, I'll head over to the local SuperPet and have a look for the antiparasitic food Elaine mentioned. It couldn't hurt, right? I think I'll also see what other food they have available- perhaps all of our fish would benefit from something other than the flakes we've been giving them since we first set up our main tank at the beginning of April. Many of our fish, according to my Googling, appreciate freeze-dried bloodworm, tubifex and brine shrimp in their diet. If nothing else, they've all been through a lot and deserve a treat. Regards, Ian. |
#5
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Ionizer wrote:
"Ionizer" wrote in message ... I've got four small white balloon mollies in a ten-gallon planted tank Many thanks, Elaine and NetMax. I did another partial water change yesterday, adding a bit of salt as Elaine recommended. Twenty-four hours later as I write this, all four balloons are in the air. The lethargic one isn't 100%, but seems noticeably more active than when I first posted. Tomorrow, I'll head over to the local SuperPet and have a look for the antiparasitic food Elaine mentioned. It couldn't hurt, right? I think I'll also see what other food they have available- perhaps all of our fish would benefit from something other than the flakes we've been giving them since we first set up our main tank at the beginning of April. Many of our fish, according to my Googling, appreciate freeze-dried bloodworm, tubifex and brine shrimp in their diet. If nothing else, they've all been through a lot and deserve a treat. Regards, Ian. Treat foods are great to vary your fish's diets. If you want to treat mollies, try algae flakes or maybe some cucumber. They love veggies. I'm glad to hear they've perked up. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
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