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Salt and tadpoles (and a long explanation)



 
 
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  #11  
Old May 28th 04, 10:50 PM
Rodney Pont
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Posts: n/a
Default Salt and tadpoles (and a long explanation)

On Fri, 28 May 2004 09:16:38 -0400, Benign Vanilla wrote:

columnaris typically attacks the mouth, white threads around the mouth is

nearly
diagnostic. in fact, it is often called "mouth rot". Ingrid


Not to nit pick...well OK exactly to nit pick...the OP never mentioned
anything about threads or mouth damage, aside fromt the one fish that had
it's "face eaten off". Would it not make more sense to take a dead fish to
the vet and get it tested before you begin dosing for a disease that you are
not sure of?


I'd rather treat it and not loose another fish than wait. The vet isn't
really well up on fish and is looking into what antibiotics they can
recommend. We are really restricted on what we can use here. The fact
that it gets worse when the water temperature falls makes me inclined
to think that it is columnaris and that it's now internal due to the
faeces being white.

The fish with it's face eaten away was fine the night before but
floating dead the next morning. Being in the UK we don't have a lot of
predators, apart from the herons and the pond is netted against them.

I've been posting questions about this on and off since November but
didn't realise my news server was set to keep posts for this group
local so I saw my post but it wasn't sent to the world. I only realised
when a web based news reader I'm testing didn't show the post, so I
have been trying to get help but just thought no one had any
suggestions.

--
Regards - Rodney Pont
The from address exists but is mostly dumped,
please send any emails to the address below
e-mail ngpsm4 (at) infohitsystems (dot) ltd (dot) uk


  #12  
Old May 29th 04, 02:41 AM
dkat
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Salt and tadpoles (and a long explanation)

Do you have snakes, weasels, rats, turtles? If its face was eaten off over
night, you have predators or we have one REALLY nasty bacteria out there.

--
***************************************
Listen to Air America Radio
http://www.airamericaradio.com
***************************************
"Rodney Pont" wrote in message
news:atcfzvasbuvgflfgrzfygqhx.hygfvf0.pminews@ihs1 ...
On Fri, 28 May 2004 09:16:38 -0400, Benign Vanilla wrote:

columnaris typically attacks the mouth, white threads around the mouth

is
nearly
diagnostic. in fact, it is often called "mouth rot". Ingrid


Not to nit pick...well OK exactly to nit pick...the OP never mentioned
anything about threads or mouth damage, aside fromt the one fish that had
it's "face eaten off". Would it not make more sense to take a dead fish

to
the vet and get it tested before you begin dosing for a disease that you

are
not sure of?


I'd rather treat it and not loose another fish than wait. The vet isn't
really well up on fish and is looking into what antibiotics they can
recommend. We are really restricted on what we can use here. The fact
that it gets worse when the water temperature falls makes me inclined
to think that it is columnaris and that it's now internal due to the
faeces being white.

The fish with it's face eaten away was fine the night before but
floating dead the next morning. Being in the UK we don't have a lot of
predators, apart from the herons and the pond is netted against them.

I've been posting questions about this on and off since November but
didn't realise my news server was set to keep posts for this group
local so I saw my post but it wasn't sent to the world. I only realised
when a web based news reader I'm testing didn't show the post, so I
have been trying to get help but just thought no one had any
suggestions.

--
Regards - Rodney Pont
The from address exists but is mostly dumped,
please send any emails to the address below
e-mail ngpsm4 (at) infohitsystems (dot) ltd (dot) uk




  #13  
Old May 29th 04, 05:01 AM
Rodney Pont
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Salt and tadpoles (and a long explanation)

On Sat, 29 May 2004 01:41:42 GMT, dkat wrote:

Do you have snakes, weasels, rats, turtles? If its face was eaten off over
night, you have predators or we have one REALLY nasty bacteria out there.


We are in the vale of York and snakes are unknown here, as far as I'm
aware, but it would have taken the complete fish. It was eaten in the
water in a netted pond so stoats, weasels and rats are unlikely. If a
turtle had been released we would have seen it in the pond.

My favourite is still a starving Emperor dragonfly nymph. I just can't
think of anything else that would give that type of bite. It was lots
of small ones, like a caterpillar does to a leaf.

Whatever it was isn't around now, we've just got to get rid of the
bacteria that's taken hold.

--
Regards - Rodney Pont
The from address exists but is mostly dumped,
please send any emails to the address below
e-mail ngpsm4 (at) infohitsystems (dot) ltd (dot) uk


  #14  
Old May 30th 04, 01:56 AM
dkat
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Salt and tadpoles (and a long explanation)

Ever read All Creatures Great and Small (actually there were several and
they all were based on All Creatures... anyway)? One part of the writing
that I liked so much was the mystery involved and the solving of it. This
feels like that and I really want to find the cause for the pleasures sake.
I had not realized the fish was as small as I later read - I'm guessing the
head was no more than an inch long.... so we are talking something that took
what.. a 1/2 inch of fish? The thing is it would have to be strong enough
to be able to get away with it. I mean if you were this fish would you put
up with something chewing on you without putting up a fight of some sort...
And you are sure it was happy and healthy the evening before? That it
hadn't died and something took advantage of the situation..

--
***************************************
Listen to Air America Radio
http://www.airamericaradio.com
***************************************
"Rodney Pont" wrote in message
news:atcfzvasbuvgflfgrzfygqhx.hygx2c0.pminews@ihs1 ...
On Sat, 29 May 2004 01:41:42 GMT, dkat wrote:

Do you have snakes, weasels, rats, turtles? If its face was eaten off

over
night, you have predators or we have one REALLY nasty bacteria out there.


We are in the vale of York and snakes are unknown here, as far as I'm
aware, but it would have taken the complete fish. It was eaten in the
water in a netted pond so stoats, weasels and rats are unlikely. If a
turtle had been released we would have seen it in the pond.

My favourite is still a starving Emperor dragonfly nymph. I just can't
think of anything else that would give that type of bite. It was lots
of small ones, like a caterpillar does to a leaf.

Whatever it was isn't around now, we've just got to get rid of the
bacteria that's taken hold.

--
Regards - Rodney Pont
The from address exists but is mostly dumped,
please send any emails to the address below
e-mail ngpsm4 (at) infohitsystems (dot) ltd (dot) uk




  #15  
Old May 30th 04, 04:13 AM
~ jan JJsPond.us
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Salt and tadpoles (and a long explanation)

Thanks for that. This,
http://www.fish-helpline.co.uk/health/columnaris.html says it likes
cool water conditions and ours certainly does. We'll have a word with
the vet about antibiotics.


MediKoi is an antibotic food, if your fish are eating. TriCide Neo is a dip
that will take care of the problem if they're not.

You mentioned sediment in one post and that is where many bad bacterias
like to hang out, so I hope you removed as much as possible. A bad-bacteria
controller that we use here is called KoiZyme. See if you can find these
products in your area or a UK based internet pond shop.

Please let us know what happens. ~ jan


(Do you know where your water quality is?)
  #16  
Old May 30th 04, 06:19 AM
Rodney Pont
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Salt and tadpoles (and a long explanation)

On Sun, 30 May 2004 00:56:18 GMT, dkat wrote:

Ever read All Creatures Great and Small (actually there were several and
they all were based on All Creatures... anyway)? One part of the writing
that I liked so much was the mystery involved and the solving of it. This
feels like that and I really want to find the cause for the pleasures sake.
I had not realized the fish was as small as I later read - I'm guessing the
head was no more than an inch long.... so we are talking something that took
what.. a 1/2 inch of fish? The thing is it would have to be strong enough
to be able to get away with it. I mean if you were this fish would you put
up with something chewing on you without putting up a fight of some sort...
And you are sure it was happy and healthy the evening before? That it
hadn't died and something took advantage of the situation..


Yes I've read several of the books and watched the TV series. The vet
who wrote the books had a practice in Thirsk which isn't very far north
of me.

This fish was one of the smallest at the time, just over 4 inches if I
remember correctly. About 3/4 of an inch (length) of the head was eaten
from one side but not quite half way through. It was a comet, one of my
favourite fishes so it was one I kept an eye on more than the others.
It was fine the night before. I suppose it depends on how much damage
was done with the first bite, whatever had been chewing had plenty of
time to make several bites.

The other fish that were bitten had wounds in the lower body that
looked like something had eaten a semicircle of what it could reach
while it could hang on.

The largest fish in the pond is a fully grown green tench, maybe it ate
the perpetrator in the end.

--
Regards - Rodney Pont
The from address exists but is mostly dumped,
please send any emails to the address below
e-mail ngpsm4 (at) infohitsystems (dot) ltd (dot) uk


  #17  
Old May 30th 04, 07:53 AM
Rodney Pont
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Salt and tadpoles (and a long explanation)

On Sun, 30 May 2004 03:13:40 GMT, ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:

MediKoi is an antibotic food, if your fish are eating. TriCide Neo is a dip
that will take care of the problem if they're not.


I came across MediKoi while searching and it sounds as though it would
be ideal but it's not available for sale in the UK. The only antibiotic
that is legal for hobbyists is oxolinic acid but it's been abused so
much that it's no longer very effective and we haven't been able to
find anyone who supplies it.

Our vet has tried to get us some nitrofurazone/nitrofural because it is
absorbed from the water but her suppliers don't carry it. She has
suggested somewhere to try but they don't do web sales so it will have
to wait until after the holiday weekend.

You mentioned sediment in one post and that is where many bad bacterias
like to hang out, so I hope you removed as much as possible. A bad-bacteria
controller that we use here is called KoiZyme. See if you can find these
products in your area or a UK based internet pond shop.


Our Fish Mate pressurised filter just doesn't seem to be removing what
it should, even tadpoles manage to get through it. It's rated at 2,500
to 7000 litres/hour and we are pushing 3,000 through it so it should be
working. There is just a thin layer of sediment that seems impossible
to remove. We are trying a different make of bacteria this year,
'Miracle Plus' from bio-claire but with water temperatures of around
16C it's bit too cold for it to be very effective yet. We have 0.3%
salt in at the moment so that's just about killed off the bacteria for
now. I will see if I can find KoiZyme for the future.

Please let us know what happens. ~ jan


I will, now that my posts are going out. Thanks for your help.

--
Regards - Rodney Pont
The from address exists but is mostly dumped,
please send any emails to the address below
e-mail ngpsm4 (at) infohitsystems (dot) ltd (dot) uk


  #18  
Old May 30th 04, 04:56 PM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Salt and tadpoles (and a long explanation)

Oxolinic acid is extremely useful by soaking food in it. It cannot be used in teh
water for more than 3 days or it goes toxic. it is absorbed across the skin of GF,
probably also koi. but in food it can be fed for long periods of time.
I am surprised to hear it isnt effective.
your vet should be able to order romet B made for catfish growers. since it is
specifically for fish it should be allowed. I feed romet B in fall right before fish
"go dormant". The antibiotic saturates their tissues giving them some protection
going into spring.
But most important is setting up the pond so it minimizes disease.
Ingrid

"Rodney Pont" wrote:
The only antibiotic
that is legal for hobbyists is oxolinic acid but it's been abused so
much that it's no longer very effective and we haven't been able to
find anyone who supplies it.

Our vet has tried to get us some nitrofurazone/nitrofural because it is
absorbed from the water but her suppliers don't carry it. She has
suggested somewhere to try but they don't do web sales so it will have
to wait until after the holiday weekend.




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.
  #19  
Old June 6th 04, 06:47 AM
Rodney Pont
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Salt and tadpoles (and a long explanation)

On Sun, 30 May 2004 03:13:40 GMT, ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:

Please let us know what happens. ~ jan


The vet rang on Friday. She has found a fish expert on the other side
of the country and has supplied an antibiotic, Baytril (enrofloxacin I
think) for the pond.

The fish have gone off their food a little, but are still eating
something, they are no longer huddled together in a corner but do
patrol the pond slowly so something is happening.

Will pp oxidise the antibiotic when we are done with it so that we can
dispose of the water safely?

--
Regards - Rodney Pont
The from address exists but is mostly dumped,
please send any emails to the address below
e-mail ngpsm4 (at) infohitsystems (dot) ltd (dot) uk


  #20  
Old June 6th 04, 03:02 PM
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Salt and tadpoles (and a long explanation)

antibiotics are organic and get broken down. baytril is most effective injected into
the fish. altho you can make antibiotic food from it. soak the food in the
antibiotic and then coat with fish or shrimp oil of some kind. use floating food for
this. Ingrid

"Rodney Pont" wrote:

On Sun, 30 May 2004 03:13:40 GMT, ~ jan JJsPond.us wrote:

Please let us know what happens. ~ jan


The vet rang on Friday. She has found a fish expert on the other side
of the country and has supplied an antibiotic, Baytril (enrofloxacin I
think) for the pond.

The fish have gone off their food a little, but are still eating
something, they are no longer huddled together in a corner but do
patrol the pond slowly so something is happening.

Will pp oxidise the antibiotic when we are done with it so that we can
dispose of the water safely?




~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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.
 




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