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#11
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![]() "Donald K" wrote in message ... Dark Phoenix wrote: My pH is waaaay over that... but... doesn't the copper sulfate kill the plants, too? It does a number on terrestrial plants. Think chemotherapy. -- "A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort." -Herm Albright I get it. Take it to death's door, but not through it. BTW, I love your quote. -- Laurie, Dark Phoenix Error. Install universe and reboot. |
#12
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![]() "Donald K" wrote in message ... Dark Phoenix wrote: Until I found out they could carry flukes, and thus be a probable cause of the bacterial infection I'm still fighting after two months, I was leaving them to cruise the algae. They made neat patterns in it. Remove goldfish. 100% water change. Nice and clean. Add loaches (clown or weather). Wait a week or so. Put those cute little loaches back in their own tank, replace goldfish. See those cute little barbels? Specially designed to get snails out of their shells... Heh, heh, heh. -D Hmm. I wonder if the LFS would let me borrow a couple? I've spend enough money there! ;-) -- Laurie, Dark Phoenix Error. Install universe and reboot. |
#13
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wrote in message
... uh... not sure cause I have used copper sulfate like stuff to kill fungus on my orchids. Ingrid You need more drainage or more air movement, this helps greatly. ![]() -- **So long, and thanks for all the fish!** |
#14
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![]() "Dark Phoenix" wrote in message ... "Donald K" wrote in message ... Dark Phoenix wrote: Until I found out they could carry flukes, and thus be a probable cause of the bacterial infection I'm still fighting after two months, I was leaving them to cruise the algae. They made neat patterns in it. Remove goldfish. 100% water change. Nice and clean. Add loaches (clown or weather). Wait a week or so. Put those cute little loaches back in their own tank, replace goldfish. See those cute little barbels? Specially designed to get snails out of their shells... Heh, heh, heh. -D Hmm. I wonder if the LFS would let me borrow a couple? I've spend enough money there! ;-) -- Laurie, Dark Phoenix Error. Install universe and reboot. Odd though, I know a local LFS that uses goldies to exterminate the snails.. I myself use Yoyo's, but I have been wondering if they have not been eatting my african fry... I have an AQ 300 filter block full of the bloody things.. Yet the itself is clear.. The occupents would be a small koi, goldies and guppies ( hanging in the weeds ).. No snails inside the tank, just the fliter... Tim.. |
#16
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look up black spot disease of fish, among other diseases carried by snails. more
diseases are known in humans, a more intense area of scientific investigation. Ingrid ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#17
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Ingird,
I can not believe the misinformation that you give out all the time. You want to blame snails for just about everything. The temperate version of Black spot disease has a secondary host as a Mollusk not a snail, the tropical form of black spot disease is associated with a specific snail that occurs in Malaysia but has made its way to isolated areas of Florida due to the tropical fish trade. The other forms of Black spot disease are associated with Marine (sal****er) Cold water fish, Marine (sal****er) tropical fish and probably do not need to be discussed here on the Goldfish list. Golly geee. One of these days you might think about doing some reading before you start relating this misinformation. Tom L.L. ---------------------------------------------- wrote: look up black spot disease of fish, among other diseases carried by snails. more diseases are known in humans, a more intense area of scientific investigation. Ingrid ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
#18
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Laurie,
Who told you they could carry flukes. There is only one fluke species where a snail is a secondary host and this occurs regional in the mountainous regions of the Northwest, and requires a specific species of snail for it to occur, so unless you live in the mountains of Washington or Oregon state, I doubt if you got flukes from a snail. Most of the flukes that bother Goldfish have nothing to do with snails as intermediate hosts. Snails can get bacterial infections, but chances are if they have a bacterial infection they got it from your fish, which can carry diseases and will only show up when the fish becomes stressed, which is why it is important to quarantine fish a month before adding them to your local population of fish and during this month you and do a pre-treatment of drugs on the fish to get rid of the buggers. If you are actually worried about this you need to take the fluke or the suspect infect fish to the lab to get it analyzed professionally than trying to get guesses from the internet. A good microscope can also see the little buggers also, but let me say, that very few diseases in aquariums or ponds are transmitted via snails and it is only via very rare cases that it is seen. You need to get the "Fancy Goldfish" Book by Rick Hess and Dr. Johnson. It is very informative and actually has picture to help identify problems. HTH Tom L.L. ------------------------------------ Dark Phoenix wrote: "Chris Oinonen Ehren" wrote in message ... I wouldn't call them mystery snails, since that term is usually associated with apple snails, and I doubt an apple snail (usually about the size of a cherry or bigger) came in on your plants without you knowing. Regarding your stowaway snail: Why don't you just squish it? As you become aware of more of them, you can squish them, too. Sounds like you are worried about them being carriers of some kind of disease--if that is the case it is too late for removing those plants to do you any good. (Can an animal carry parasites while still in the egg?) I'd wait and see if any more snails appear. That might have been the only one. You don't want to tear everything apart "just in case"--that won't do your fish any good. I believe there is some kind of chemical dip you can use on new plants so that no snails/eggs survive on them, but I can't remember the name of it. Might want to use something like that in the future. Hmm... we know what apple snails are; why are they called mystery snails? And no, these aren't apples or ramshorns. I do squish them- well, I take the out and toss them to the chickens. Little escargot treat. I'm just tired of thinking I've got the tank de-eviled, and then finding... more of them. Are these things born pregnant??? Have babies while they're still invisible to the naked eye??? Until I found out they could carry flukes, and thus be a probable cause of the bacterial infection I'm still fighting after two months, I was leaving them to cruise the algae. They made neat patterns in it. |
#19
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in article , at
wrote on 5/16/04 11:15 PM: look up black spot disease of fish, among other diseases carried by snails. more diseases are known in humans, a more intense area of scientific investigation. Ingrid ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. Here's what I found at http://www.biosci.ohio-state.edu/~pa.../uvulifer.html "Several members of this genus cause "black spot" in fish --- the best known species is Uvulifer ambloplitis.* The life cycles of most members of this genus are similar.* The definitive host is most often a bird, and the parasite's eggs are passed in the bird's feces.* The first intermediate host is a snail, and the second intermediate host is a fish.* The fish is infected when cercariae penetrate the skin.* The cercariae lose their tails and transform into a stage called the "neascus larva" or "neascus metacercaria."* The definitive host is infected when it eats an infected second intermediate host. These encysted metacercariae often turn black and are visible on the fish's surface -- hence, "black spot" in fish.* Heavily infected fish are often discarded by fishermen, although they pose no threat of infection to humans." So, the life cycle goes snails eat eggs from bird poop, snails pass the parasite on to fish, and fish are eaten by birds completing the cycle. Snails that are wild-caught, or raised in situations where they may get access to bird poop (outdoor culture ponds, etc.) can pick up the parasites and pass them on to fish, while snails that have no access to bird poop, that have lived for generations inside various aquariums, can't pass on the parasites. Because I keep snails, I have done google-research (research lite) on a number of different parasites that snails can carry and pass on to fish and humans. What I have found over and over is that only snails that live outdoors pick up these parasites. Snails cannot give these parasites to each other, and the parasites I have researched do not get passed on in the snails' eggs. An uninfected snail can not pass on these parasites. So while it would be a good idea to keep snails out of your outdoor ponds so as to interrupt the potential parasite life cycle, in an aquarium the life cycle is already interrupted, due to the lack of birds. You always need to know your sources of plants and animals. It would make sense to treat any new plant you got in a 10 mg/liter potassium permanganate solution to kill any snails or snail eggs especially since you don't want them. And if you got any snails that you wanted it would make sense to know their source & history, and quarantine them for awhile like any other new addition knowing that they could potentially be a source of problems. In snails with a fast life cycle it makes sense to culture them separately and only introduce the young to your aquarium. That said, after more than 20 years of keeping many various species of snails, aquarium cultured and wild caught, I have never seen any of these parasites in my fish. -- Chris |
#20
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Tom L. La Bron wrote:
Ingird, I can not believe the misinformation that you give out all the time. You want to blame snails for just about everything. The temperate version of Black spot disease has a secondary host as a Mollusk not a snail, the tropical form of black spot disease is associated with a specific snail that occurs in Malaysia but has made its way to isolated areas of Florida due to the tropical fish trade. The other forms of Black spot disease are associated with Marine (sal****er) Cold water fish, Marine (sal****er) tropical fish and probably do not need to be discussed here on the Goldfish list. Golly geee. One of these days you might think about doing some reading before you start relating this misinformation. Tom L.L. ---------------------------------------------- wrote: look up black spot disease of fish, among other diseases carried by snails. more diseases are known in humans, a more intense area of scientific investigation. Ingrid Tom, I agree with you. I have and had alot of apple snails for years. I am a fan of www.applesnail.net I'm not to crazy of the pest snails ie tadpoles, red ramshorn but having all of these I never had a fish catch anything from them. Only problem I had once was my Goldfish got a red ramshorn caught in his mouth, I picked him up and gently worked the snail out of his mouth, that really scared me. But after awhile all the snails disapeared. I assume the fish ate the small snails and eggs. I picked the big ones out and I never keep my apple snails with my goldfish cause he will try and get thier "feelers" Or knock them off the glass. kay |
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