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#11
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![]() Again, thanks for responding! Today I found another fish dead. :-( Again, I checked the water chemistry. pH 7.4, nitrite and ammonia negative, hardness as before. I added a little more lime to the filter and cleaned the pumps and checked to make sure the air pump and waterfall are working okay. I did find some aphids on a couple of the pond lily leaves. Removed those I found. I went to the website you recommended and did my best to do a post-mortem physical exam. I also checked a could of websites that tell you how to sex a fish. As far as I am able to judge (granted, I am really new at this) the fish appears to be female. I saw no bruising this time. The gills were not gloppy or gooey and the tissue didn't look like raw hamburger or anything. I guess it's hard to judge the color in a dead fish, but the color was a deep pink, about the color of healthy gums in people. The consistency of the belly felt normal, as far as I was able to judge. I couldn't express anything from the anal port. The mouth looked okay--no redness, no white strings. I was aware of a slime coat but it didn't feel particularly mucousy or thick on my fingers after I let go of the fish. The fins and tail looked okay, no evidence of trauma or unusual coloration or texture. The eyes looked normal as far as I could see. There were a few scales missing, but I don't know if that happened after the fish died or not. I don't know why my fish are dying. It's very scarey. Anybody have any thoughts about any anything else I ought to be doing? Thanks. Joan Internal spawning injuries and/or infected eggs would account for what you see. spawning bruises most certainly would look purplish. Ingrid |
#12
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Thanks
Joan ... Thanks for the specifics! Okaaay ![]() If it were me I would remove the lime and start (in the morning) to add baking soda --- [snipped for bandwidth] Hi! Thanks so much. I'm glad to know about the baking soda, and also about the rain. We have had a lot of rain lately. Joan |
#13
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![]() You can put the dolomitic lime in your filter instead of the sock. Oh that is a good idea! I never thought about adding it directly to the filter. It won't clog it up? but it seems it has done the job of adding a buffer. Baking soda may increase the pH quickly (not desirable), but it wont provide lasting stability cause the bicarb breaks down to CO2 and leaves the pond. That is where the dolomitic limestone comes in. It slowly releases on demand as needed, almost like having limestone in the pond. anything above 50 is OK, altho higher is better. Oh, okay. Thanks. I added some more today, directly to the filter. It is expected that pH is low in morning as the CO2 has been removed during the night by plants in the water. During the day CO2 and O2 levels increase with pH peaking right before sunset. But the more plants (algae) in the water, the larger the swing ... do you have green water? It could be if your water is green and warm then the plants are using up the oxygen... especially if you dont have sufficient oxygenation. Ah. Well, we have had an enormous amount of algae this year. It just started to come under some degree of control within the last month. The water itself isn't too green. But the algae have been clogging up the pumps a lot. We do have a good-sized air bubbler in the pond. It's about the size of a regular pump and it runs 24/7. Plus we have a waterfall that runs most of the day. So I think there should be plenty of oxygen, but who knows? Is there a way to find out? Should I be adding hydrogen peroxide to the water?? [snipped for bandwidth] Thanks so much for your input. Joan |
#14
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Try adding some activated carbon. Something is telling me that it may be
some kind of poisoning. It may be low level, but carbon will remove the poisons. There doesn't appear to be any other explanation that hits me, based on the information you have posted. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "JGW" wrote in message ... Again, thanks for responding! Today I found another fish dead. :-( Again, I checked the water chemistry. pH 7.4, nitrite and ammonia negative, hardness as before. I added a little more lime to the filter and cleaned the pumps and checked to make sure the air pump and waterfall are working okay. I did find some aphids on a couple of the pond lily leaves. Removed those I found. I went to the website you recommended and did my best to do a post-mortem physical exam. I also checked a could of websites that tell you how to sex a fish. As far as I am able to judge (granted, I am really new at this) the fish appears to be female. I saw no bruising this time. The gills were not gloppy or gooey and the tissue didn't look like raw hamburger or anything. I guess it's hard to judge the color in a dead fish, but the color was a deep pink, about the color of healthy gums in people. The consistency of the belly felt normal, as far as I was able to judge. I couldn't express anything from the anal port. The mouth looked okay--no redness, no white strings. I was aware of a slime coat but it didn't feel particularly mucousy or thick on my fingers after I let go of the fish. The fins and tail looked okay, no evidence of trauma or unusual coloration or texture. The eyes looked normal as far as I could see. There were a few scales missing, but I don't know if that happened after the fish died or not. I don't know why my fish are dying. It's very scarey. Anybody have any thoughts about any anything else I ought to be doing? Thanks. Joan Internal spawning injuries and/or infected eggs would account for what you see. spawning bruises most certainly would look purplish. Ingrid |
#15
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Thank you!
How much? How do I add it? Just dump it in the water? Put it in the filter? I have dolomite lime in the filter. Will it mix okay with that? Where do I get it? Drug store? Is that the same as activated charcoal? Thanks so much. Joan, worried about her fishies Try adding some activated carbon. Something is telling me that it may be some kind of poisoning. It may be low level, but carbon will remove the poisons. There doesn't appear to be any other explanation that hits me, based on the information you have posted. |
#16
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Filter charcoal, activated carbon, can be gotten at the fish store, or call
one of the water treatment companies. They use it to remove bad tastes from the water. I put several pounds of it in the leg of panty hose and drape it across the spill way of the water fall/ stream/ or filter return. At the fish store the price will be a little high, but if that is what it is, it will be worth it. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "JGW" wrote in message ... Thank you! How much? How do I add it? Just dump it in the water? Put it in the filter? I have dolomite lime in the filter. Will it mix okay with that? Where do I get it? Drug store? Is that the same as activated charcoal? Thanks so much. Joan, worried about her fishies Try adding some activated carbon. Something is telling me that it may be some kind of poisoning. It may be low level, but carbon will remove the poisons. There doesn't appear to be any other explanation that hits me, based on the information you have posted. |
#17
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call Jo Ann and discuss this with her. 1-251-649-4790. Ingrid
JGW wrote: Again, thanks for responding! Today I found another fish dead. :-( Again, I checked the water chemistry. pH 7.4, nitrite and ammonia negative, hardness as before. I added a little more lime to the filter and cleaned the pumps and checked to make sure the air pump and waterfall are working okay. I did find some aphids on a couple of the pond lily leaves. Removed those I found. I went to the website you recommended and did my best to do a post-mortem physical exam. I also checked a could of websites that tell you how to sex a fish. As far as I am able to judge (granted, I am really new at this) the fish appears to be female. I saw no bruising this time. The gills were not gloppy or gooey and the tissue didn't look like raw hamburger or anything. I guess it's hard to judge the color in a dead fish, but the color was a deep pink, about the color of healthy gums in people. The consistency of the belly felt normal, as far as I was able to judge. I couldn't express anything from the anal port. The mouth looked okay--no redness, no white strings. I was aware of a slime coat but it didn't feel particularly mucousy or thick on my fingers after I let go of the fish. The fins and tail looked okay, no evidence of trauma or unusual coloration or texture. The eyes looked normal as far as I could see. There were a few scales missing, but I don't know if that happened after the fish died or not. I don't know why my fish are dying. It's very scarey. Anybody have any thoughts about any anything else I ought to be doing? Thanks. Joan Internal spawning injuries and/or infected eggs would account for what you see. spawning bruises most certainly would look purplish. 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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Thank you!!! I will!
Joan call Jo Ann and discuss this with her. 1-251-649-4790. Ingrid Again, thanks for responding! Today I found another fish dead. :-( [snip] |
#19
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![]() Thank you! I'll get some tomorrow! Joan Filter charcoal, activated carbon, can be gotten at the fish store, or call one of the water treatment companies. They use it to remove bad tastes from the water. I put several pounds of it in the leg of panty hose and drape it across the spill way of the water fall/ stream/ or filter return. At the fish store the price will be a little high, but if that is what it is, it will be worth it. |
#20
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![]() "JGW" wrote in message ... snip Hi! Thanks so much. I'm glad to know about the baking soda, and also about the rain. We have had a lot of rain lately. snip Lots of rain? What's your runoff situation like? Could something nasty be running into the pond? BV. |
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