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![]() "Tynk" wrote in message ups.com... On Oct 30, 7:34?pm, "Bill Stock" wrote: I've got a horrendous outbreak of BGA in my Goldfish tank. It's gotten so bad it plugs the filter screens every week and now the sink drain is plugged. So I plucked the large Sword out of my office tank (20 G) and put in a bowl of gravel in the GF tank. I'm hoping it's big enough to outgrow the GF nibbling and reduce the Nitrates. It was getting way too big for the office anyway. The first day I put it in the tank they hid in the other corner away from the large green thing. But now they have discovered that it's covered in Snails as they cruise through the leaves. I was informed that they did not want their food today. No wonder, they've been eating Escargot all day. In the past they've pretty much destroyed everything I put in the tank with them; they either eat it or dig it up. It does not matter that they are not supposed to like that variety of plant. I was watching them swim by the plant tonight and they were giving me the "who us, eat your plant" look. LOL. We shall see. Sorry I didn't read your post until now, but the subject (sword plants) isn't where my knowledge is. Outside the house...I have a gorgeous flower garden...inside the house and fish tanks....I can kill the *un-killable* plants. = / However, your problem with BGA (Cyanobacteria) is easily cured Maracyn (1) or any straight erythromicin antibiotic. However, it has to be that one, not some other antibiotic. If you are having nitrate problems, you need to up your water changes, gravel vacuuming, and figure out why. What size tank is it, and how many (sizes too) Goldies do you have in it? When it comes to Cyanobacteria, you have 2 options. Kill it or battle it. To kill it, you treat it with antibiotics, just like any other bacterial infection. To battle it, you'll need to keep pristine water, starve it of nitrates, no sunlight, turn your lights off for longer periods of time, and check your phosphate level. Cyano feeds off all 3, but only needs one to keep it thriving. Yes Erythromycin will kill off BGA. Oddly enough I gave my filters a thorough cleaning (discovered the intake tubes were partially blocked) and the BGA has all but gone. BGA hates current too. It was hiding some other type of algae, like string algae, only shorter. There are 3 GF, one 8", one 6" and one 3+". I used to have two small ones, but he died of dropsy a few weeks ago. I have no gravel and they get bathed every week (50% water change). Giving them the plant has caused a Columnaris outbreak, likely due to some sort of parasite. They're on Kanamycin now and doing better. Potassium Permanganate (I've got a lifetime supply) has been suggested, but it always kills the biofilter. |
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![]() "Bill Stock" wrote There are 3 GF, one 8", one 6" and one 3+". I used to have two small ones, but he died of dropsy a few weeks ago. I have no gravel and they get bathed every week (50% water change). Giving them the plant has caused a Columnaris outbreak, likely due to some sort of parasite. They're on Kanamycin now and doing better. Potassium Permanganate (I've got a lifetime supply) has been suggested, but it always kills the biofilter. Question, how big is the tank? I'm sure you have lots of filteration going on but if your tank is at pretty close to max capacity, probems like this erupt over and over. I'm not suggesting you kill any of the fish if overloaded, just checking options here. I've heard the suggestion of 10g per inch of goldfish for perfect health and based on anticipated growth, that would mean a 200g tank (rediculous, I agree). I hope though you have something like a 70g going there? |
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