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#1
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![]() For the last several years I had two GF in a 50 gallon tank -- both were feeders I bought when they were small, and both grew to a nice size. One had the most beautiful fins, white and long and lacy. Recently the other fish died and I replaced it with another small feeder. Of course my fear was that the large fish would eat the small one, but the small fish hid in the plants for several days, eventually getting large enough or confident enough to swim around freely. Now I see to my dismay that the small fish is eating up the fins of the big one. I hate the idea of disposing of the small fish and I hate the idea of letting nature take its course and I don't really have the room to set up a whole new tank so I can separate the fish. But those are my options, I guess. Any suggestions?? |
#2
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Let me add some more history, just to see if it sparks a response.
Like I say, I kept these two GF, both on the order of 7-8" in a 50 gallon tank. I swap out 5 gallons a day, every day. My filter isn't much, but I figure given I am adding clean water at a pretty fair rate I don't need the best in the crowd. About a year out of nowhere I started getting some kind of growth in the tank. It's like a brown algae, which I guess means it might be a fungus, though in fact I think I have read that there are brown algae -- they carry enough brown pigment to overpower the chlorophyll. That's what it looks like, but it doesn't seem like the fish are eating it. After a year or so one of the big fish died. Perhaps there was a connection -- I think the GF fish were about ten years old, which might be getting on for a GF or it might be the first blush oif adolescence, I dunno. After the first fish died I noticed that the second started to look "old" -- slow and lethargic and quiet. It sits on the bottom of the tank a lot doing nothing, which it didn't use to do. Perhaps it is getting old or perhaps the brown algae killed the first fish and is now burdening the survivor. On the other hand the feeder fish I just got, the fin eater, could not have been livelier. Any of this ring a bell with anyone?? |
#3
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you broke a cardinal rule. never add new fish to old tank without quarantine.
http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/c...e%20new%20fish you need to check your water parameters. nitrates are probably way high. start changing out 15 gallons every day. add salt to the tank. http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/d...rtmnt.htm#salt the brown stuff is diatoms. completely harmless altho some nice green algae would be better. need better light. what are you feeding? get some freeze dried krill or daphnia and just feed a pinch at a time. Ingrid fhapgood wrote: Now I see to my dismay that the small fish is eating up the fins of the big one. I kept these two GF, both on the order of 7-8" in a 50 gallon tank. I swap out 5 gallons a day, every day. My filter isn't much, About a year out of nowhere I started getting some kind of growth in the tank. It's like a brown algae, which I guess means it might be a fungus, though in fact I think I have read that there are brown algae -- they carry enough brown pigment to overpower the chlorophyll. That's what it looks like, but it doesn't seem like the fish are eating it. After a year or so one of the big fish died. Perhaps there was a connection -- I think the GF fish were about ten years old, which might be getting on for a GF or it might be the first blush oif adolescence, I dunno. After the first fish died I noticed that the second started to look "old" -- slow and lethargic and quiet. It sits on the bottom of the tank a lot doing nothing, which it didn't use to do. Perhaps it is getting old or perhaps the brown algae killed the first fish and is now burdening the survivor. On the other hand the feeder fish I just got, the fin eater, could not have been livelier. Any of this ring a bell with anyone?? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/ sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?...s=Group+lookup www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website. I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan |
#4
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On May 3, 7:44 am, wrote:
you broke a cardinal rule. never add new fish to old tank without quarantine. I don't understand the connection with what I wrote. How would a quarantine have prevented the small fish from eating the fins of the larger?? you need to check your water parameters. nitrates are probably way high. Again, I'm missing the connection. Are you saying that high nitrates stimulate fin eating??? That's amazing. But I'm probably misunderstanding you somewhere. |
#5
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Ingrid (aka Dr. Solo ) has been known to throw out some bizarre crap
and try and pass it off as knowledge, when all it s is bona fide crap. Don;t pay her any attention. Nonone else does. Wait for a reply by Reel McKoi if you need an answer........and a correct answer or elsae go to Koishack or koiphen.com and post the questn there where there is not a large influx of wanna be fish gurus like Solo.....but there is folks that keep idiots lilke Solo in check! Ever wonder why she does not post there isf she knows what she cxlaims to know afterall her knoweledge would be welcomed if that was the case..... On 4 May 2007 16:39:28 -0700, fhapgood wrote: On May 3, 7:44 am, wrote: you broke a cardinal rule. never add new fish to old tank without quarantine. I don't understand the connection with what I wrote. How would a quarantine have prevented the small fish from eating the fins of the larger?? you need to check your water parameters. nitrates are probably way high. Again, I'm missing the connection. Are you saying that high nitrates stimulate fin eating??? That's amazing. But I'm probably misunderstanding you somewhere. ------- I forgot more about ponds and koi than I'll ever know! |
#6
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one GF doesnt just eat the fins of another GF. the fish being picked at has to be
diseased. new fish bring in disease, give the disease to fish already in the tank. high nitrates leads to fin erosion, so the fins are eroded, not eaten. Ingrid fhapgood wrote: On May 3, 7:44 am, wrote: you broke a cardinal rule. never add new fish to old tank without quarantine. I don't understand the connection with what I wrote. How would a quarantine have prevented the small fish from eating the fins of the larger?? you need to check your water parameters. nitrates are probably way high. Again, I'm missing the connection. Are you saying that high nitrates stimulate fin eating??? That's amazing. But I'm probably misunderstanding you somewhere. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List at http://weloveteaching.com/puregold/ sign up: http://groups.google.com/groups/dir?...s=Group+lookup www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I receive no compensation for running the Puregold list or Puregold website. I do not run nor receive any money from the ads at the old Puregold site. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Zone 5 next to Lake Michigan |
#7
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The brown algae is harmless diamtoeous algae.
You need to put a filter in there to process ammonia and nitrite. If you cannot give the fish water free of ammonia and nitrite they will die. Get one of those air powered sponge filters, the round black ones with a weighted base. Once cycled they are good bio. If it really is a the fish eating fins, feed them more. but odds are espec with the 'new tank syndrome' algae blooms and deaths/behaviour. You are keeping it too clean. Grow some filter bacteria!!!! "fhapgood" wrote in message oups.com... Let me add some more history, just to see if it sparks a response. Like I say, I kept these two GF, both on the order of 7-8" in a 50 gallon tank. I swap out 5 gallons a day, every day. My filter isn't much, but I figure given I am adding clean water at a pretty fair rate I don't need the best in the crowd. About a year out of nowhere I started getting some kind of growth in the tank. It's like a brown algae, which I guess means it might be a fungus, though in fact I think I have read that there are brown algae -- they carry enough brown pigment to overpower the chlorophyll. That's what it looks like, but it doesn't seem like the fish are eating it. After a year or so one of the big fish died. Perhaps there was a connection -- I think the GF fish were about ten years old, which might be getting on for a GF or it might be the first blush oif adolescence, I dunno. After the first fish died I noticed that the second started to look "old" -- slow and lethargic and quiet. It sits on the bottom of the tank a lot doing nothing, which it didn't use to do. Perhaps it is getting old or perhaps the brown algae killed the first fish and is now burdening the survivor. On the other hand the feeder fish I just got, the fin eater, could not have been livelier. Any of this ring a bell with anyone?? |
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