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![]() "Gill Passman" gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote in message .. . Hi All, This is really a continuation from the Sick Mollie in my son's tank and subsequent loss of two Mollies last weekend. I did my normal check this morning and now one of the Rosy Barbs is on her way out. Checked the water pH 8 (normal for our tanks), 0 Ammonia and Nitrites and Nitrates are at 5. No new fish added for months. Tank has been running since last August. Tank is around 15UK galls. Current occupants are 1 mollie and 4 Rosy Barbs (around 10 inches of fish maximum). Plenty of plants. Water changes are weekly 20-30%. We've had very few problems with this tank until now. I just can't figure out what is going on here or what to do next. If the remaining Rosy Barbs would be OK with Gouramis I suppose I could move them and then strip down the tank - this is the only thing I can think of for now. But I hesitate because I don't want to risk infecting any of the other fish in the other tanks. Does anyone have any clues as to what might be happening or what I can do next to keep the remaining fish? Thanks Gill Could the symptoms I'm describing be caused by over-feeding? I am starting to see a common pattern but don't want to throw any stones unless I'm sure..... |
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On Sun, 29 May 2005 12:23:31 +0100, "Gill Passman"
gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: Hi All, This is really a continuation from the Sick Mollie in my son's tank and subsequent loss of two Mollies last weekend. I did my normal check this morning and now one of the Rosy Barbs is on her way out. Checked the water pH 8 (normal for our tanks), 0 Ammonia and Nitrites and Nitrates are at 5. No new fish added for months. Tank has been running since last August. Tank is around 15UK galls. Current occupants are 1 mollie and 4 Rosy Barbs (around 10 inches of fish maximum). Plenty of plants. Water changes are weekly 20-30%. We've had very few problems with this tank until now. I just can't figure out what is going on here or what to do next. If the remaining Rosy Barbs would be OK with Gouramis I suppose I could move them and then strip down the tank - this is the only thing I can think of for now. But I hesitate because I don't want to risk infecting any of the other fish in the other tanks. Does anyone have any clues as to what might be happening or what I can do next to keep the remaining fish? Thanks Gill If I try to rule out causes of death based on your info and the info you've given to others: It doesn't appear to be a common parasite like Ich, or velvet because you see these on the fish. Internal parasites, worms or flagellates or whatever will usually show symptoms of the fish getting thinner, wasting away, the feces might be weird, white and stringy or no feces at all from the fish. So I rule out all of these. I rule out poisoning be it from ammonia or nitrate or metals or something weird gotten into the tank because the fish should show signs of poisoning: breathing faster, panting at the surface or at the bottom of the tank. So what's left? I think your pH is a bit high, but if others want to say that it's fine for these fish I'll take their word for it. I don't pay much attention to pH anymore because where I live it's 7.0 out of the tap. If it's bacterial in nature as Elaine suggests, the way it works, as I understand it, is more or less like this. These bacteria which can cause illness, Aeromonas or Mycobacterium or whatever their names are, will always be present in your tank just like the bacteria you want in the tank, the species which break down the ammonia and nitrites. These evil bacteria will grow in numbers if the tank is generally not clean enough. Keep these numbers down by vacuuming gravel and changing water more frequently and diluting out the little buggers. The gravel in this tank is vacuumed all the way to the bottom glass of the tank? I ask because I think these bacteria live and multiply down there where there is less oxygen in the water surrounding the gravel. If this is a bacteria problem, I don't think these fish in the tank will infect fish in other tanks. The bacteria in question are already in the other tanks in certain numbers anyway. I think what I would do is move all the fish in with the gouramis, and tear down this tank completely and start it over. If you decide to do this, after you remove fish and plants pour in some chlorine bleach and stir up the gravel and wash it out the following day. Everything will be killed/disinfected by the bleach. -Derek |
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![]() "Derek Benson" wrote in message ... On Sun, 29 May 2005 12:23:31 +0100, "Gill Passman" gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: Hi All, This is really a continuation from the Sick Mollie in my son's tank and subsequent loss of two Mollies last weekend. I did my normal check this morning and now one of the Rosy Barbs is on her way out. Checked the water pH 8 (normal for our tanks), 0 Ammonia and Nitrites and Nitrates are at 5. No new fish added for months. Tank has been running since last August. Tank is around 15UK galls. Current occupants are 1 mollie and 4 Rosy Barbs (around 10 inches of fish maximum). Plenty of plants. Water changes are weekly 20-30%. We've had very few problems with this tank until now. I just can't figure out what is going on here or what to do next. If the remaining Rosy Barbs would be OK with Gouramis I suppose I could move them and then strip down the tank - this is the only thing I can think of for now. But I hesitate because I don't want to risk infecting any of the other fish in the other tanks. Does anyone have any clues as to what might be happening or what I can do next to keep the remaining fish? Thanks Gill If I try to rule out causes of death based on your info and the info you've given to others: It doesn't appear to be a common parasite like Ich, or velvet because you see these on the fish. Internal parasites, worms or flagellates or whatever will usually show symptoms of the fish getting thinner, wasting away, the feces might be weird, white and stringy or no feces at all from the fish. So I rule out all of these. I rule out poisoning be it from ammonia or nitrate or metals or something weird gotten into the tank because the fish should show signs of poisoning: breathing faster, panting at the surface or at the bottom of the tank. So what's left? I think your pH is a bit high, but if others want to say that it's fine for these fish I'll take their word for it. I don't pay much attention to pH anymore because where I live it's 7.0 out of the tap. If it's bacterial in nature as Elaine suggests, the way it works, as I understand it, is more or less like this. These bacteria which can cause illness, Aeromonas or Mycobacterium or whatever their names are, will always be present in your tank just like the bacteria you want in the tank, the species which break down the ammonia and nitrites. These evil bacteria will grow in numbers if the tank is generally not clean enough. Keep these numbers down by vacuuming gravel and changing water more frequently and diluting out the little buggers. The gravel in this tank is vacuumed all the way to the bottom glass of the tank? I ask because I think these bacteria live and multiply down there where there is less oxygen in the water surrounding the gravel. If this is a bacteria problem, I don't think these fish in the tank will infect fish in other tanks. The bacteria in question are already in the other tanks in certain numbers anyway. I think what I would do is move all the fish in with the gouramis, and tear down this tank completely and start it over. If you decide to do this, after you remove fish and plants pour in some chlorine bleach and stir up the gravel and wash it out the following day. Everything will be killed/disinfected by the bleach. -Derek What you are saying is making total sense....apart from a slight question mark over a certain nephew deciding to over feed...I cannot think of anything else (he was here a few days before the Mollie decline and again a couple of days ago). The gravel in this tank is not what I have in the others - it is more a pea gravel rather than the finer stuff I normally have so harder to vaccum....maybe there is something trapped in there - like Hydrogen Sulphide..... My son comes back tomorrow from his Dad's....he is already disallusioned and thinking of giving up fish keeping based on the recent deaths....I hope I can keep him hanging in there....he truly did love it.... Gill |
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On Sun, 29 May 2005 23:27:16 +0100, "Gill Passman"
gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: "Derek Benson" wrote in message .. . On Sun, 29 May 2005 12:23:31 +0100, "Gill Passman" gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: Hi All, This is really a continuation from the Sick Mollie in my son's tank and subsequent loss of two Mollies last weekend. I did my normal check this morning and now one of the Rosy Barbs is on her way out. Checked the water pH 8 (normal for our tanks), 0 Ammonia and Nitrites and Nitrates are at 5. No new fish added for months. Tank has been running since last August. Tank is around 15UK galls. Current occupants are 1 mollie and 4 Rosy Barbs (around 10 inches of fish maximum). Plenty of plants. Water changes are weekly 20-30%. We've had very few problems with this tank until now. I just can't figure out what is going on here or what to do next. If the remaining Rosy Barbs would be OK with Gouramis I suppose I could move them and then strip down the tank - this is the only thing I can think of for now. But I hesitate because I don't want to risk infecting any of the other fish in the other tanks. Does anyone have any clues as to what might be happening or what I can do next to keep the remaining fish? Thanks Gill If I try to rule out causes of death based on your info and the info you've given to others: It doesn't appear to be a common parasite like Ich, or velvet because you see these on the fish. Internal parasites, worms or flagellates or whatever will usually show symptoms of the fish getting thinner, wasting away, the feces might be weird, white and stringy or no feces at all from the fish. So I rule out all of these. I rule out poisoning be it from ammonia or nitrate or metals or something weird gotten into the tank because the fish should show signs of poisoning: breathing faster, panting at the surface or at the bottom of the tank. So what's left? I think your pH is a bit high, but if others want to say that it's fine for these fish I'll take their word for it. I don't pay much attention to pH anymore because where I live it's 7.0 out of the tap. If it's bacterial in nature as Elaine suggests, the way it works, as I understand it, is more or less like this. These bacteria which can cause illness, Aeromonas or Mycobacterium or whatever their names are, will always be present in your tank just like the bacteria you want in the tank, the species which break down the ammonia and nitrites. These evil bacteria will grow in numbers if the tank is generally not clean enough. Keep these numbers down by vacuuming gravel and changing water more frequently and diluting out the little buggers. The gravel in this tank is vacuumed all the way to the bottom glass of the tank? I ask because I think these bacteria live and multiply down there where there is less oxygen in the water surrounding the gravel. If this is a bacteria problem, I don't think these fish in the tank will infect fish in other tanks. The bacteria in question are already in the other tanks in certain numbers anyway. I think what I would do is move all the fish in with the gouramis, and tear down this tank completely and start it over. If you decide to do this, after you remove fish and plants pour in some chlorine bleach and stir up the gravel and wash it out the following day. Everything will be killed/disinfected by the bleach. -Derek What you are saying is making total sense....apart from a slight question mark over a certain nephew deciding to over feed...I cannot think of anything else (he was here a few days before the Mollie decline and again a couple of days ago). The gravel in this tank is not what I have in the others - it is more a pea gravel rather than the finer stuff I normally have so harder to vaccum....maybe there is something trapped in there - like Hydrogen Sulphide..... My son comes back tomorrow from his Dad's....he is already disallusioned and thinking of giving up fish keeping based on the recent deaths....I hope I can keep him hanging in there....he truly did love it.... Gill If he was of the age, would you keep an ex girl friend around because he once really liked her? Why not keep the tank for your own interest and let him move on? In my fast growing years (as in height) I moved through many interests. Here I am 60 years later picking up on one of those interests. dick |
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![]() "Dick" wrote in message ... On Sun, 29 May 2005 23:27:16 +0100, "Gill Passman" gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: "Derek Benson" wrote in message .. . On Sun, 29 May 2005 12:23:31 +0100, "Gill Passman" gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: Hi All, This is really a continuation from the Sick Mollie in my son's tank and subsequent loss of two Mollies last weekend. I did my normal check this morning and now one of the Rosy Barbs is on her way out. Checked the water pH 8 (normal for our tanks), 0 Ammonia and Nitrites and Nitrates are at 5. No new fish added for months. Tank has been running since last August. Tank is around 15UK galls. Current occupants are 1 mollie and 4 Rosy Barbs (around 10 inches of fish maximum). Plenty of plants. Water changes are weekly 20-30%. We've had very few problems with this tank until now. I just can't figure out what is going on here or what to do next. If the remaining Rosy Barbs would be OK with Gouramis I suppose I could move them and then strip down the tank - this is the only thing I can think of for now. But I hesitate because I don't want to risk infecting any of the other fish in the other tanks. Does anyone have any clues as to what might be happening or what I can do next to keep the remaining fish? Thanks Gill If I try to rule out causes of death based on your info and the info you've given to others: It doesn't appear to be a common parasite like Ich, or velvet because you see these on the fish. Internal parasites, worms or flagellates or whatever will usually show symptoms of the fish getting thinner, wasting away, the feces might be weird, white and stringy or no feces at all from the fish. So I rule out all of these. I rule out poisoning be it from ammonia or nitrate or metals or something weird gotten into the tank because the fish should show signs of poisoning: breathing faster, panting at the surface or at the bottom of the tank. So what's left? I think your pH is a bit high, but if others want to say that it's fine for these fish I'll take their word for it. I don't pay much attention to pH anymore because where I live it's 7.0 out of the tap. If it's bacterial in nature as Elaine suggests, the way it works, as I understand it, is more or less like this. These bacteria which can cause illness, Aeromonas or Mycobacterium or whatever their names are, will always be present in your tank just like the bacteria you want in the tank, the species which break down the ammonia and nitrites. These evil bacteria will grow in numbers if the tank is generally not clean enough. Keep these numbers down by vacuuming gravel and changing water more frequently and diluting out the little buggers. The gravel in this tank is vacuumed all the way to the bottom glass of the tank? I ask because I think these bacteria live and multiply down there where there is less oxygen in the water surrounding the gravel. If this is a bacteria problem, I don't think these fish in the tank will infect fish in other tanks. The bacteria in question are already in the other tanks in certain numbers anyway. I think what I would do is move all the fish in with the gouramis, and tear down this tank completely and start it over. If you decide to do this, after you remove fish and plants pour in some chlorine bleach and stir up the gravel and wash it out the following day. Everything will be killed/disinfected by the bleach. -Derek What you are saying is making total sense....apart from a slight question mark over a certain nephew deciding to over feed...I cannot think of anything else (he was here a few days before the Mollie decline and again a couple of days ago). The gravel in this tank is not what I have in the others - it is more a pea gravel rather than the finer stuff I normally have so harder to vaccum....maybe there is something trapped in there - like Hydrogen Sulphide..... My son comes back tomorrow from his Dad's....he is already disallusioned and thinking of giving up fish keeping based on the recent deaths....I hope I can keep him hanging in there....he truly did love it.... Gill If he was of the age, would you keep an ex girl friend around because he once really liked her? Why not keep the tank for your own interest and let him move on? In my fast growing years (as in height) I moved through many interests. Here I am 60 years later picking up on one of those interests. dick I totally agree with you. I had a word with him about his tanks and suggested even consolidating them into just one tank to make the maintenance easier for him (me in reality). The answer I got was "you're just after one of my tanks". He wants to keep going he's just fed up with losing the fish - and I can't say that I blame him. Here's hoping for happier times Gill |
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On Mon, 30 May 2005 17:28:31 +0100, "Gill Passman"
gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: "Dick" wrote in message .. . On Sun, 29 May 2005 23:27:16 +0100, "Gill Passman" gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: "Derek Benson" wrote in message .. . On Sun, 29 May 2005 12:23:31 +0100, "Gill Passman" gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: Hi All, This is really a continuation from the Sick Mollie in my son's tank and subsequent loss of two Mollies last weekend. I did my normal check this morning and now one of the Rosy Barbs is on her way out. Checked the water pH 8 (normal for our tanks), 0 Ammonia and Nitrites and Nitrates are at 5. No new fish added for months. Tank has been running since last August. Tank is around 15UK galls. Current occupants are 1 mollie and 4 Rosy Barbs (around 10 inches of fish maximum). Plenty of plants. Water changes are weekly 20-30%. We've had very few problems with this tank until now. I just can't figure out what is going on here or what to do next. If the remaining Rosy Barbs would be OK with Gouramis I suppose I could move them and then strip down the tank - this is the only thing I can think of for now. But I hesitate because I don't want to risk infecting any of the other fish in the other tanks. Does anyone have any clues as to what might be happening or what I can do next to keep the remaining fish? Thanks Gill If I try to rule out causes of death based on your info and the info you've given to others: It doesn't appear to be a common parasite like Ich, or velvet because you see these on the fish. Internal parasites, worms or flagellates or whatever will usually show symptoms of the fish getting thinner, wasting away, the feces might be weird, white and stringy or no feces at all from the fish. So I rule out all of these. I rule out poisoning be it from ammonia or nitrate or metals or something weird gotten into the tank because the fish should show signs of poisoning: breathing faster, panting at the surface or at the bottom of the tank. So what's left? I think your pH is a bit high, but if others want to say that it's fine for these fish I'll take their word for it. I don't pay much attention to pH anymore because where I live it's 7.0 out of the tap. If it's bacterial in nature as Elaine suggests, the way it works, as I understand it, is more or less like this. These bacteria which can cause illness, Aeromonas or Mycobacterium or whatever their names are, will always be present in your tank just like the bacteria you want in the tank, the species which break down the ammonia and nitrites. These evil bacteria will grow in numbers if the tank is generally not clean enough. Keep these numbers down by vacuuming gravel and changing water more frequently and diluting out the little buggers. The gravel in this tank is vacuumed all the way to the bottom glass of the tank? I ask because I think these bacteria live and multiply down there where there is less oxygen in the water surrounding the gravel. If this is a bacteria problem, I don't think these fish in the tank will infect fish in other tanks. The bacteria in question are already in the other tanks in certain numbers anyway. I think what I would do is move all the fish in with the gouramis, and tear down this tank completely and start it over. If you decide to do this, after you remove fish and plants pour in some chlorine bleach and stir up the gravel and wash it out the following day. Everything will be killed/disinfected by the bleach. -Derek What you are saying is making total sense....apart from a slight question mark over a certain nephew deciding to over feed...I cannot think of anything else (he was here a few days before the Mollie decline and again a couple of days ago). The gravel in this tank is not what I have in the others - it is more a pea gravel rather than the finer stuff I normally have so harder to vaccum....maybe there is something trapped in there - like Hydrogen Sulphide..... My son comes back tomorrow from his Dad's....he is already disallusioned and thinking of giving up fish keeping based on the recent deaths....I hope I can keep him hanging in there....he truly did love it.... Gill If he was of the age, would you keep an ex girl friend around because he once really liked her? Why not keep the tank for your own interest and let him move on? In my fast growing years (as in height) I moved through many interests. Here I am 60 years later picking up on one of those interests. dick I totally agree with you. I had a word with him about his tanks and suggested even consolidating them into just one tank to make the maintenance easier for him (me in reality). The answer I got was "you're just after one of my tanks". He wants to keep going he's just fed up with losing the fish - and I can't say that I blame him. Here's hoping for happier times Gill How about buying a new tank to replace the jinx, then you could experiment to your heart's desire and boy luv would have the excitement of setting up a new tank? (It is exciting setting up a new tank, isn't it? Well, it can be if the recent experience has robbed him of its joy.) dick |
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Derek Benson wrote:
On Sun, 29 May 2005 12:23:31 +0100, "Gill Passman" gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: Hi All, This is really a continuation from the Sick Mollie in my son's tank and subsequent loss of two Mollies last weekend. I did my normal check this morning and now one of the Rosy Barbs is on her way out. Checked the water pH 8 (normal for our tanks), 0 Ammonia and Nitrites and Nitrates are at 5. No new fish added for months. Tank has been running since last August. Tank is around 15UK galls. Current occupants are 1 mollie and 4 Rosy Barbs (around 10 inches of fish maximum). Plenty of plants. Water changes are weekly 20-30%. We've had very few problems with this tank until now. I just can't figure out what is going on here or what to do next. If the remaining Rosy Barbs would be OK with Gouramis I suppose I could move them and then strip down the tank - this is the only thing I can think of for now. But I hesitate because I don't want to risk infecting any of the other fish in the other tanks. Does anyone have any clues as to what might be happening or what I can do next to keep the remaining fish? Thanks Gill If I try to rule out causes of death based on your info and the info you've given to others: It doesn't appear to be a common parasite like Ich, or velvet because you see these on the fish. Internal parasites, worms or flagellates or whatever will usually show symptoms of the fish getting thinner, wasting away, the feces might be weird, white and stringy or no feces at all from the fish. So I rule out all of these. I rule out poisoning be it from ammonia or nitrate or metals or something weird gotten into the tank because the fish should show signs of poisoning: breathing faster, panting at the surface or at the bottom of the tank. So what's left? I think your pH is a bit high, but if others want to say that it's fine for these fish I'll take their word for it. I don't pay much attention to pH anymore because where I live it's 7.0 out of the tap. If it's bacterial in nature as Elaine suggests, the way it works, as I understand it, is more or less like this. These bacteria which can cause illness, Aeromonas or Mycobacterium or whatever their names are, will always be present in your tank just like the bacteria you want in the tank, the species which break down the ammonia and nitrites. These evil bacteria will grow in numbers if the tank is generally not clean enough. Keep these numbers down by vacuuming gravel and changing water more frequently and diluting out the little buggers. The gravel in this tank is vacuumed all the way to the bottom glass of the tank? I ask because I think these bacteria live and multiply down there where there is less oxygen in the water surrounding the gravel. If this is a bacteria problem, I don't think these fish in the tank will infect fish in other tanks. The bacteria in question are already in the other tanks in certain numbers anyway. I think what I would do is move all the fish in with the gouramis, and tear down this tank completely and start it over. If you decide to do this, after you remove fish and plants pour in some chlorine bleach and stir up the gravel and wash it out the following day. Everything will be killed/disinfected by the bleach. -Derek I've seen drop-dead-itis caused by particularly virulent forms of flexibacter. It spreads through water or when fish pick at a dead fish, and get an internal infection. As you said, bacteria can be present in tanks and bloom in nutrient rich gravel. The nice thing about the permanganate is that it does a light, fish-friendly oxidation similar to bleach. It will reduce the numbers of bacteria in the tank so the fishes immune systems can fight them off again. You may be right that a tear-down and disinfection is better, using filter media from a different tank to jump-start the filter. It's a lot of work and stress on the fish, and I was hoping that using a light permanganate treatment along with a good cleaning would avoid Gill's having to do that. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com |
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![]() "Elaine T" wrote in message . com... Derek Benson wrote: On Sun, 29 May 2005 12:23:31 +0100, "Gill Passman" gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: Hi All, This is really a continuation from the Sick Mollie in my son's tank and subsequent loss of two Mollies last weekend. I did my normal check this morning and now one of the Rosy Barbs is on her way out. Checked the water pH 8 (normal for our tanks), 0 Ammonia and Nitrites and Nitrates are at 5. No new fish added for months. Tank has been running since last August. Tank is around 15UK galls. Current occupants are 1 mollie and 4 Rosy Barbs (around 10 inches of fish maximum). Plenty of plants. Water changes are weekly 20-30%. We've had very few problems with this tank until now. I just can't figure out what is going on here or what to do next. If the remaining Rosy Barbs would be OK with Gouramis I suppose I could move them and then strip down the tank - this is the only thing I can think of for now. But I hesitate because I don't want to risk infecting any of the other fish in the other tanks. Does anyone have any clues as to what might be happening or what I can do next to keep the remaining fish? Thanks Gill If I try to rule out causes of death based on your info and the info you've given to others: It doesn't appear to be a common parasite like Ich, or velvet because you see these on the fish. Internal parasites, worms or flagellates or whatever will usually show symptoms of the fish getting thinner, wasting away, the feces might be weird, white and stringy or no feces at all from the fish. So I rule out all of these. I rule out poisoning be it from ammonia or nitrate or metals or something weird gotten into the tank because the fish should show signs of poisoning: breathing faster, panting at the surface or at the bottom of the tank. So what's left? I think your pH is a bit high, but if others want to say that it's fine for these fish I'll take their word for it. I don't pay much attention to pH anymore because where I live it's 7.0 out of the tap. If it's bacterial in nature as Elaine suggests, the way it works, as I understand it, is more or less like this. These bacteria which can cause illness, Aeromonas or Mycobacterium or whatever their names are, will always be present in your tank just like the bacteria you want in the tank, the species which break down the ammonia and nitrites. These evil bacteria will grow in numbers if the tank is generally not clean enough. Keep these numbers down by vacuuming gravel and changing water more frequently and diluting out the little buggers. The gravel in this tank is vacuumed all the way to the bottom glass of the tank? I ask because I think these bacteria live and multiply down there where there is less oxygen in the water surrounding the gravel. If this is a bacteria problem, I don't think these fish in the tank will infect fish in other tanks. The bacteria in question are already in the other tanks in certain numbers anyway. I think what I would do is move all the fish in with the gouramis, and tear down this tank completely and start it over. If you decide to do this, after you remove fish and plants pour in some chlorine bleach and stir up the gravel and wash it out the following day. Everything will be killed/disinfected by the bleach. -Derek I've seen drop-dead-itis caused by particularly virulent forms of flexibacter. It spreads through water or when fish pick at a dead fish, and get an internal infection. As you said, bacteria can be present in tanks and bloom in nutrient rich gravel. The nice thing about the permanganate is that it does a light, fish-friendly oxidation similar to bleach. It will reduce the numbers of bacteria in the tank so the fishes immune systems can fight them off again. You may be right that a tear-down and disinfection is better, using filter media from a different tank to jump-start the filter. It's a lot of work and stress on the fish, and I was hoping that using a light permanganate treatment along with a good cleaning would avoid Gill's having to do that. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com I ran all of the ideas past Matthew (my son) who owns the tank in question - young but very sensible - reads and researches a lot. He does not want to tear down the tank - mainly because he suspects that I might steal it if he does and won't believe any reassurances.... Equally he does not want to move the fish into his 30gall just in case it is anything infectious. (Quite sensible IMO) We did a 30% change tonight and added salt and Liquisil General Tonic (Interpet) which is supposed to tackle "background levels of of bacteria, fungus and parasites in aquariums" Permanganate will be the next step.....hopefully we won't lose any more and need to take it (fingers crossed) Thanks everyone Gill |
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![]() "Gill Passman" gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote in message .. . "Elaine T" wrote in message . com... Derek Benson wrote: On Sun, 29 May 2005 12:23:31 +0100, "Gill Passman" gillspamattaylorpassmanspam.co.uk wrote: Hi All, This is really a continuation from the Sick Mollie in my son's tank and subsequent loss of two Mollies last weekend. I did my normal check this morning and now one of the Rosy Barbs is on her way out. Checked the water pH 8 (normal for our tanks), 0 Ammonia and Nitrites and Nitrates are at 5. No new fish added for months. Tank has been running since last August. Tank is around 15UK galls. Current occupants are 1 mollie and 4 Rosy Barbs (around 10 inches of fish maximum). Plenty of plants. Water changes are weekly 20-30%. We've had very few problems with this tank until now. I just can't figure out what is going on here or what to do next. If the remaining Rosy Barbs would be OK with Gouramis I suppose I could move them and then strip down the tank - this is the only thing I can think of for now. But I hesitate because I don't want to risk infecting any of the other fish in the other tanks. Does anyone have any clues as to what might be happening or what I can do next to keep the remaining fish? Thanks Gill If I try to rule out causes of death based on your info and the info you've given to others: It doesn't appear to be a common parasite like Ich, or velvet because you see these on the fish. Internal parasites, worms or flagellates or whatever will usually show symptoms of the fish getting thinner, wasting away, the feces might be weird, white and stringy or no feces at all from the fish. So I rule out all of these. I rule out poisoning be it from ammonia or nitrate or metals or something weird gotten into the tank because the fish should show signs of poisoning: breathing faster, panting at the surface or at the bottom of the tank. So what's left? I think your pH is a bit high, but if others want to say that it's fine for these fish I'll take their word for it. I don't pay much attention to pH anymore because where I live it's 7.0 out of the tap. If it's bacterial in nature as Elaine suggests, the way it works, as I understand it, is more or less like this. These bacteria which can cause illness, Aeromonas or Mycobacterium or whatever their names are, will always be present in your tank just like the bacteria you want in the tank, the species which break down the ammonia and nitrites. These evil bacteria will grow in numbers if the tank is generally not clean enough. Keep these numbers down by vacuuming gravel and changing water more frequently and diluting out the little buggers. The gravel in this tank is vacuumed all the way to the bottom glass of the tank? I ask because I think these bacteria live and multiply down there where there is less oxygen in the water surrounding the gravel. If this is a bacteria problem, I don't think these fish in the tank will infect fish in other tanks. The bacteria in question are already in the other tanks in certain numbers anyway. I think what I would do is move all the fish in with the gouramis, and tear down this tank completely and start it over. If you decide to do this, after you remove fish and plants pour in some chlorine bleach and stir up the gravel and wash it out the following day. Everything will be killed/disinfected by the bleach. -Derek I've seen drop-dead-itis caused by particularly virulent forms of flexibacter. It spreads through water or when fish pick at a dead fish, and get an internal infection. As you said, bacteria can be present in tanks and bloom in nutrient rich gravel. The nice thing about the permanganate is that it does a light, fish-friendly oxidation similar to bleach. It will reduce the numbers of bacteria in the tank so the fishes immune systems can fight them off again. You may be right that a tear-down and disinfection is better, using filter media from a different tank to jump-start the filter. It's a lot of work and stress on the fish, and I was hoping that using a light permanganate treatment along with a good cleaning would avoid Gill's having to do that. -- Elaine T __ http://eethomp.com/fish.html '__ rec.aquaria.* FAQ http://faq.thekrib.com I ran all of the ideas past Matthew (my son) who owns the tank in question - young but very sensible - reads and researches a lot. He does not want to tear down the tank - mainly because he suspects that I might steal it if he does and won't believe any reassurances.... Equally he does not want to move the fish into his 30gall just in case it is anything infectious. (Quite sensible IMO) We did a 30% change tonight and added salt and Liquisil General Tonic (Interpet) which is supposed to tackle "background levels of of bacteria, fungus and parasites in aquariums" Permanganate will be the next step.....hopefully we won't lose any more and need to take it (fingers crossed) Thanks everyone Gill Update...we've had enough...tank gets torn down Friday.... Gill |
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Hi Gil,
Jumped on this late as I've just this week started setting up tanks again after an 8-year absence due to work. My questions and comments are woven below; bear in mind I'm VERY old-fashioned about aquaria: Hi All, This is really a continuation from the Sick Mollie in my son's tank and subsequent loss of two Mollies last weekend. I did my normal check this morning and now one of the Rosy Barbs is on her way out. Checked the water pH 8 (normal for our tanks), 0 Ammonia and Nitrites and Nitrates are at 5. For most freshwater fish in general, and Mollies specifically are you adding about 1/2 to 1 tsp of salt per gallon to the water? It greatly helps in controlling bacteria problems and helps the fish maintain their "slime coat" easier. For lots of live plants, I'd probably go with the 1/2 tsp per gallon. No new fish added for months. Tank has been running since last August. Tank is around 15UK galls. Current occupants are 1 mollie and 4 Rosy Barbs (around 10 inches of fish maximum). Plenty of plants. Water changes are weekly 20-30%. We've had very few problems with this tank until now. Why would you do more than maybe 10% water changes monthy, if that much? I would, personaly, find 20%+ weekly to be way too stressful on both fish and plants. What type of filter are you using? I just can't figure out what is going on here or what to do next. If the remaining Rosy Barbs would be OK with Gouramis I suppose I could move them and then strip down the tank - this is the only thing I can think of for now. But I hesitate because I don't want to risk infecting any of the other fish in the other tanks. Does anyone have any clues as to what might be happening or what I can do next to keep the remaining fish? Wild-ass-guess here that the fish are being over-stressed by all the water changes disturbing their enviroment, the water doesn't have time to "age" and promote healthy fish. Go with the very cheap and old-time salt fix and see how it works for you. Please email me with the results. Mack |
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