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#1
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Hi,
I have 3 approximately 6 month old angelfish of which one has developed small holes in its fins right at the base where they join with the body. The two holes on the bottom fin showed up 3 days ago 4/25, the one on the top sometime in the last 9 hours while I was working. The large splotch in the middle I'm not sure if it's related or not but it's growing larger. The fish is languid without much appetite but still eats a little thankfully. I have a picture at http://www.archeus.org/images/hurtfish.jpg My tank is a 45 gallon tall, canister filter with activated carbon (Ehiem). Ph 6.8 Ammonia 0ppm Nitrite 0ppm I change about 5% of water twice a week, I changed about 15% of water last night as I moved water to a 10 gallon tank to prep it to put the injured fish in soon as the other angelfish are starting to pick at it. I feed them mainly flake food by tetra, but supplement it with some red wriggler worms I grow in a worm farm that's fed non-meat table scraps. Each angelfish has been eating about 2 worms per week, 1 per session and pretty small worms at that what they can eat in one bite. Also I put in a romaine lettuce leaf about 3 times a week which they eat up in a few hours. The only other occupants of this tank are 4 young 1 inch pictus catfish. Maybe related but don't know, right now I have serious green tank syndrome but haven't taken any chemical steps (just scrub tank glass with cloth to clean) to attempt to correct it because I noticed this disease. I'd appreciate it if anybody has an idea on what disease is afflicting that angelfish and steps to correct it. |
#2
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In article .com,
Capien says... Hi, I have 3 approximately 6 month old angelfish of which one has developed small holes in its fins right at the base where they join with the body. The two holes on the bottom fin showed up 3 days ago 4/25, the one on the top sometime in the last 9 hours while I was working. The large splotch in the middle I'm not sure if it's related or not but it's growing larger. The fish is languid without much appetite but still eats a little thankfully. I have a picture at http://www.archeus.org/images/hurtfish.jpg My tank is a 45 gallon tall, canister filter with activated carbon (Ehiem). Ph 6.8 Ammonia 0ppm Nitrite 0ppm I change about 5% of water twice a week, I changed about 15% of water last night as I moved water to a 10 gallon tank to prep it to put the injured fish in soon as the other angelfish are starting to pick at it. I feed them mainly flake food by tetra, but supplement it with some red wriggler worms I grow in a worm farm that's fed non-meat table scraps. Each angelfish has been eating about 2 worms per week, 1 per session and pretty small worms at that what they can eat in one bite. Also I put in a romaine lettuce leaf about 3 times a week which they eat up in a few hours. The only other occupants of this tank are 4 young 1 inch pictus catfish. Maybe related but don't know, right now I have serious green tank syndrome but haven't taken any chemical steps (just scrub tank glass with cloth to clean) to attempt to correct it because I noticed this disease. I'd appreciate it if anybody has an idea on what disease is afflicting that angelfish and steps to correct it. Just my opinion - the hump in the forhead suggests this is a young male. some AF will mature and start mating at around 6 months. The other 2 have paired and are trying to drive this male out of the proposed mating site. All of the injury areas appear to be fish bites. If I'm right, the pair will kill him in about 3 days to a week, then start mating. -- Jim Anderson ( 8(|) To eMail me, just pull "my_finger" |
#3
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Jim Anderson wrote:
In article .com, Just my opinion - the hump in the forhead suggests this is a young male. some AF will mature and start mating at around 6 months. The other 2 have paired and are trying to drive this male out of the proposed mating site. All of the injury areas appear to be fish bites. If I'm right, the pair will kill him in about 3 days to a week, then start mating. No, they're not fish bites. That is a fast-moving skin infection. I didn't reply earlier because I'm not sure what it is and was hoping Frank would chime in. I could be wrong, but I think it's Costia. The other possibility is a bacterial infection, but I don't see any reddening or inflammation in your picture. If Frank or NetMax also think it's Costia, treat your fish with a formalin/malachite green ich medicine and watch the other angels carefully. If you're not sure, use something a bit more broad-spectrum like acriflavine or eSha 2000 if you're in Europe. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to email me. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
#4
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Capien wrote,
small holes in its fins right at the base where they join with the body. The two holes on the bottom fin showed up 3 days ago 4/25, the one on the top sometime in the last 9 hours while I was working. The large splotch in the middle I'm not sure if it's related or not but it's growing larger....... Almost looks like a bacteria virus called Lymphocystis - if so, a tablespoon of salt per 5 gals. should make it disappear in a week... Otherwise looks to be a bacterial fungus, treated with an anti-fungus and antibiotic. Tetra makes (or made) a medicated food called Metronidazole that would work great, otherwise try treating with Hex-A-mit... I change about 5% of water twice a week..... Most likely what has brought on this infection. Uneaten foods and fish waste decompose and produce organic and inorganic compounds. What solid waste that is picked up by your canister filter is traped within the filters media, only to be dissolved as the water flow passes by. The dissolved pollutants are then pumped back into the tank as DOCs (dissolved organic compounds) which slowly accumulate. For an average pollutant load, a weekly 20% water change leaves about 30 days of accumulated DOC pollutants in the tank. That's the trouble with todays power filters/filter media, they keep water clear, even when they start to become polluted. Clear water does not necessary mean that the water is good! High levels of DOC pollutants create conditions that encourage disease, parasites, and opportunistic bacteria. If your tank isn't a planted tank, you should be doing at least two 20% weekly water changes with gravel vacs. With a well planted tank, you *might* get away with only one 20% weekly water change. Any less than that, your water quality deteriorates a little more with each passing week... supplement it with some red wriggler worms ........... Each angelfish has been eating about 2 worms per week.... As angelfish age, hole-in-the-head (HITH) disease becomes common and is beleaved to be due to poor water quality and a mineral/vitamin 'D' imbalance. Red earthworms have high levels of vitamin 'D' - feeding them twice a week is great, but feed them as much as they can eat per feeding........... Frank |
#5
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Thanks for those diagnosis/suggestions.
While carefully inspecting the other two anglefish I noticed the smallest (female?) has some slight red puffyness around her gills. To try and cover all the bases yall mentioned I moved approx. 10 gallons of water out of the main tank into a empty 10 gallon hospital tank (figured less stress than all fresh water). Setup empty small whisper filter for some small airflow. I put in some large plastic plants from the main tank and left them floating for some cover. And medicated it with Maracyn-Two by Mardel. I couldn't find the other suggested medications at my local petsmart and tommorow I'll range further and look for them. I moved the two sick anglefish, and left the largest and most aggresive one in the main tank who looks healthy. That should have the effect of breaking up the two possible males. I prepared a batch of new water and put it back in the main tank to replace what I took out for the hospital tank so it effectivly got a 20ish% water change. I typically add about half a tablespoon of Jungle brand aquarium salt at water changes. I didn't put a new dose in the hospital tank at the rate Frank suggest as I didn't know if there would be conflicts between the salt and the medication, is that a real concern or should I add the salt as well? My main tank isn't planted, I'll up the water changes signifigantly as suggested from now on. That should help the green tank too I'd imagine. Any other suggestions or ideas I'm all ears. Thanks for the help so far and I'll post some pics later as the treatment continues. I tried to get some of my hospital tank but they are all fuzzy and can't see much I'll try again in the morning. |
#6
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Capien wrote,
has some slight red puffyness around her gills... Like Altum, I didn't see any redness in your photo, so ruled out Costia right off the bat. Now that you are seeing redness, I would have to agree with Altum as it may very well be Costia. With Costia, the redness is blood spots under the scales. The red areas tend to start at the base of the pectoral fins and gill areas. Costia is a parasite infection and like Altum said, is treated with an anti-parasite medication such as QuickCure or Rid-Ich... I typically add about half a tablespoon of Jungle brand aquarium salt at water changes. I didn't put a new dose in the hospital tank at the rate Frank suggest as I didn't know if there would be conflicts between the salt and the medication, is that a real concern or should I add the salt as well? .... A tonic level of salt (1 tablespoon per 5 gals.) along with the medication treatments won't hurt a thing as for as the fish go. If it is a Lymphocystis virus, salt is needed. With Lymphocystis, the patches would be greasy looking (shiny) buff to white in color. Most of the time these patches show up on the fins and tail first, and cause no redness at all... I'll up the water changes signifigantly as suggested from now on. That should help the green tank too I'd imagine.... No, green water is an algae bloom - your looking at the algae spores. Water changes don't help, and many times even make the algae bloom even worse because of the silicic acid, phospate and nitrAte in the tap water. Algae blooms are caused by excess nutrients (DOCs) and to much light or direct sunlight. The spores can be filtered out with eather a diatom filter or a micron cartridge. An ultraviolet sterilizer will kill the spores as would a product called Acurel. You may be able to find Acurel at a garden supply as it is used in outdoor ponds also................. Frank |
#7
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On 28 Apr 2006 21:15:57 -0700, "Capien" wrote:
Thanks for those diagnosis/suggestions. While carefully inspecting the other two anglefish I noticed the smallest (female?) has some slight red puffyness around her gills. To try and cover all the bases yall mentioned I moved approx. 10 gallons of water out of the main tank into a empty 10 gallon hospital tank (figured less stress than all fresh water). Setup empty small whisper filter for some small airflow. I put in some large plastic plants from the main tank and left them floating for some cover. And medicated it with Maracyn-Two by Mardel. I couldn't find the other suggested medications at my local petsmart and tommorow I'll range further and look for them. I moved the two sick anglefish, and left the largest and most aggresive one in the main tank who looks healthy. That should have the effect of breaking up the two possible males. I prepared a batch of new water and put it back in the main tank to replace what I took out for the hospital tank so it effectivly got a 20ish% water change. I typically add about half a tablespoon of Jungle brand aquarium salt at water changes. I didn't put a new dose in the hospital tank at the rate Frank suggest as I didn't know if there would be conflicts between the salt and the medication, is that a real concern or should I add the salt as well? My main tank isn't planted, I'll up the water changes signifigantly as suggested from now on. That should help the green tank too I'd imagine. Any other suggestions or ideas I'm all ears. Thanks for the help so far and I'll post some pics later as the treatment continues. I tried to get some of my hospital tank but they are all fuzzy and can't see much I'll try again in the morning. Glad you got some good answers. Keep up with the posting of pictures, they really complement the messages. I'm following your progress closely. -- Mister Gardener -- Pull the WEED to email me |
#8
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Well the fish displayed in the picture died a few hours ago
![]() Another of the three that I talked about with the red gills now has some very small holes in the same places. I have tried taking pics but none turn out well enough to see the injury/disease. Any ideas on how to take good pictures? My first attempt I'm thinking was dumb luck. The third anglefish seems healthy and happy and is still in the main tank doing fine. He appears to be a different brood or subspecies? than the other two. Black with no gold and his fins are much more full veil and just overall growing faster than they did. Continuing the medication and started the salt thearpy as well. The other sick fish doesn't have much appitite but I'm pretty sure she ate a little before I cleaned out the leftover flakes. |
#9
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Capien wrote,
Well the fish displayed in the picture died a few hours ago ![]() That is a little to quick for it to be Costia - I would treat for a bacterial infection with a broad spectrum antibiotic such as oxy-tetracycline, erythromycin, or maracyn and feed a medicated food twice a day for 10 days. I would also keep up the anti-parasite medication as there may be a scondary infection of parasites.............. Frank |
#10
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Here is a new picture of the remaining sick fish. It's still not
perfectly clear but it's best I could get so far. http://archeus.org/images/hurtfish2.jpg Doing all the things you list, broad spec anti-biotic, anti-parasite, and medicated anti-biotic food plus the salt treatment ![]() the best and I'll update with progress. |
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