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#11
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... If anyone does know a way of dealing with white spot and velvet at the same time please share it with me ========================== Google tropical+fish+diseases. These parasites aren't going to go away on their own. For white spot aka ick, I use QuickCure or AquraSol. I don't remember my fish ever having velvet. I'm sure you will find much information on the web for treating velvet. -- RM.... Zone 6. Middle TN USA ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
#12
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RM
there are no fish in the trays in the LFS, they are small unheated plastic trays on the floor (sounds terrible but it is actually a really nice shop) if the cold water slowed the life cycle down enough then maybe the parasites survived long enough there? i think it could have been less than 24 hrs I am treating the upside down catfish with interpet anti slime and velvet - he has fewer spots than yesterday, he looks paler than his healthy companion but otherwise he is acting fine - dare i say it but he might be the only fish to have got ill and recovered No need to worry about the loaches in the main tank as they are all dead now ![]() had them for five years - a little sad really I have spent every spare minute for the last few weeks googling velvet and ick, you may not apreciate it being in the US but most of the content on the web originates there. which means that a lot of what i am reading talks about US-only medication which i can't buy, but i am learning quite a lot all the same. I emailed the federation of british aquatic societies and they were extremely helpful, i hope they dont mind me sharing....... Here is his reply to my original post with my further questions and his further answers 1. Occasional flicking is normal. didn't know that - thanks 2. The cory possibly had "red blotch disease". Not sure of cause - I reckon bacterial. Cory expert Ian Fuller treats this using Melafix (made by API). I had read about a bacterial infection called red pest, possibly the same thing - i will buy some melafix asap 3. Bleeding heart tetras get a specfic viral infection that looks like Lymphocystis (small whitish blobs)- no cure, and prob. triggered by stress. Didn't know that either, it would explain why my congo tetras have been unaffected by the white spots and why it didn't respond to white spot treatments - does it look exactly like white spot? See attached picture taken by myself. 4. Amoxycillin isnt much use on fish as it treats gram-positive bacteria, whereas most major bacterial problems of ornamental fish are gram-negative. Be aware that antibiotics sold for humans can be different formats as those sold for use on fish. Some formats contain additional chemicals that can be toxic to fish. Wasn't sure about doing this, it was a bit of desparation 5. Sudden emergence of snails plus fast gill beats in fish suggests to me low oxygen problems, which could be root cause of the latter deaths. I had attributed the increase in snails to the clown loaches no longer eating them - could lack of oxygen be due to the illnesses / medication in the water? I guess the treatments may have upset the bacterial flora of the aquarium, causing a proliferation of oxygen-consuming bacteria? But low oxygen might reflect accumulating organic wastes in the gravel, resulting in increasing "BOD" (biological oxygen demand) which eventually reached a critical level. Hard to say. The picture of bleeding heart tetra virus looked like a fluffy fungus - not what mine had, i think it was ick. perhaps i just treated it too late Thanks for your help - i genuinely apreciate it chris |
#13
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![]() wrote in message ps.com... RM there are no fish in the trays in the LFS, they are small unheated plastic trays on the floor (sounds terrible but it is actually a really nice shop) if the cold water slowed the life cycle down enough then maybe the parasites survived long enough there? i think it could have been less than 24 hrs I am treating the upside down catfish with interpet anti slime and velvet - he has fewer spots than yesterday, he looks paler than his healthy companion but otherwise he is acting fine - dare i say it but he might be the only fish to have got ill and recovered Well that's good news. :-) Make sure you keep his water pristine and well oxygenated during treatment. No need to worry about the loaches in the main tank as they are all dead now ![]() had them for five years - a little sad really Oh no! :*( Next time you need to treat the plants before adding them to your tank. Put them in some tank water and a very bright place, or use a light over them. Keep them warm to hatch out any parasite cysts.... and add the medication as you would if treating a fish with parasites. I too have brought home "problems" with new plants in the past. I have spent every spare minute for the last few weeks googling velvet and ick, you may not apreciate it being in the US but most of the content on the web originates there. which means that a lot of what i am reading talks about US-only medication which i can't buy, but i am learning quite a lot all the same. I emailed the federation of british aquatic societies and they were extremely helpful, i hope they dont mind me sharing....... They are probably happy you share any information the give you if it helps save fish lives. I think what you call "red blotch" is what we call "contagious ulcers" a condition caused by bacteria that is almost impossible to treat. It wiped out my entire pond back in the late 1990s. :*( Here is his reply to my original post with my further questions and his further answers 1. Occasional flicking is normal. didn't know that - thanks 2. The cory possibly had "red blotch disease". Not sure of cause - I reckon bacterial. Cory expert Ian Fuller treats this using Melafix (made by API). I had read about a bacterial infection called red pest, possibly the same thing - i will buy some melafix asap 3. Bleeding heart tetras get a specfic viral infection that looks like Lymphocystis (small whitish blobs)- no cure, and prob. triggered by stress. Didn't know that either, it would explain why my congo tetras have been unaffected by the white spots and why it didn't respond to white spot treatments - does it look exactly like white spot? See attached picture taken by myself. 4. Amoxycillin isnt much use on fish as it treats gram-positive bacteria, whereas most major bacterial problems of ornamental fish are gram-negative. Be aware that antibiotics sold for humans can be different formats as those sold for use on fish. Some formats contain additional chemicals that can be toxic to fish. Wasn't sure about doing this, it was a bit of desparation 5. Sudden emergence of snails plus fast gill beats in fish suggests to me low oxygen problems, which could be root cause of the latter deaths. I had attributed the increase in snails to the clown loaches no longer eating them - could lack of oxygen be due to the illnesses / medication in the water? I guess the treatments may have upset the bacterial flora of the aquarium, causing a proliferation of oxygen-consuming bacteria? But low oxygen might reflect accumulating organic wastes in the gravel, resulting in increasing "BOD" (biological oxygen demand) which eventually reached a critical level. Hard to say. The picture of bleeding heart tetra virus looked like a fluffy fungus - not what mine had, i think it was ick. perhaps i just treated it too late Thanks for your help - i genuinely apreciate it chris -- RM.... ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
#14
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I never had Velvet. I had White Spot and I used a medicine called "QuICK
Cure" to treat it, along with gradually raising the temperature to about 85F, but I had no live plants at the time and I think that medicine is bad for plants. Having plants changes everything. Some use salt but that's also bad for plants. In the case of plants I'm not sure what I would do. I'd be tempted to remove the fish to another temporary hospital tank and treat them there, and let enough time pass for the parasites to die off (lacking any host) in the main tank (raise the temp as much as the plants will stand to speed the process) and then put the fish back afterward. I don't know how practical that would be, and I don't recall ever hearing of anyone doing it that way (that I can remember) but it's what first comes to my mind at present. I tend to do whatever seems logical when the need arises, and knowing that the parasites will die off without a host, that would be my thinking in such a case. I see in a later posting that 'Reel McKoi' wrote: "I think what you call "red blotch" is what we call "contagious ulcers" a condition caused by bacteria that is almost impossible to treat." - I would fully agree with that assessment, and it sounds exactly like what I have experienced in the past. Healthy fish are to some degree resistant to White Spot (and I would assume to Velvet also), but it is a known fact that adding cold water to a tank can allow the parasites to gain advantage over the fishes resistance whereas the fish might have been able to resist being infested otherwise. I would never do it. More frequent water changes are needed in an overstocked tank, and not cleaning the gravel and other parts of the environment will lead to a dirty environment that harmful bacteria will thrive in. All of these factors combine to lower the fishes resistance to disease, and since bacteria are always present, the only defense the fish have is a strong immune system and robust health. A clean tank and stable environment are essential for healthy fish. Think of how in the wild they have a large body of constantly circulating clean pristine water (with plenty of sunlight which kills bacteria) with a low level of bacterial concentrations, and plenty of dissolved oxygen; that is what you want to try to replicate in your tanks. Thinking of sunlight killing bacteria, a U.V. sterilizer unit would probably help a lot. I've never had one but it's been on my mind some and it will kill both parasites and bacteria. The nitrifying bacteria are mostly on surfaces and not in the water, so it won't affect them much. I suspect that using a U.V. unit prevents a lot of problems and would provide some peace of mind. Fedor wrote in message ups.com... Fedor, Thanks for your replies - it is good to have someone elses thoughts when you are unsure what is right or wrong. i have posted this on yahoo groups but everyone there only seems interested in arguing! I am begining to form an idea of how it may all have gone wrong The tank was overstocked, i never cleaned all the gravel, and i regularly added cold water to get the catfish to spawn. These things together would have had an effect on the fish even though they all looked great, then i added some plants, some of which i know were from a regular customer at the LFS who has a CO2 setup at home, he brings in plants when he has too many and the guy at the fish shop sells them (actually he gave me a load to keep me sweet because i supply him with catfish) anyway, i think i remember him saying that the guy had just brought the plants in recently - this would mean that parasites may have still been ailve on them or in their water. I think that the corydoras died of an infection called red pest, possibly brought on the the attack of parasites, the others developed parasite infestations later and their bacterial infections were as a result of this. The thing is now i need to get rid of the parasites which i believe to be velvet and white spot at the same time. Do you know of a treatment for both together? I have read about copper which is used for ridding a tank of snails, but i dont like the idea of it, it is a poison. And it would damage my plants. There is also methylene blue but it will have side effects too and i don't know how effective it is. Like you i subscribe to the idea of minimal intervention, letting nature (such as it is in a fish tank!) look after itself, so i may just keep on removing sick fishes, changing the water, cleaning the gravel etc etc and hoping the fishes iminutiy in the main tank takes care of it If anyone does know a way of dealing with white spot and velvet at the same time please share it with me Thanks chris |
#15
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I have learned my lessons - i thought i could slightly overstock if i
was careful, however it would seem that being careful does not include using cold water, adding plants straight into the tank, and not cleaning the gravel ! I am still rather suprised that 9 deaths (so far) from white spot and velvet both together could be the result - in the past i have seen the odd case of dropsy or something if the water peramiters went bad but never quite such a load of fishywhoopass. Another quote from the fish doctor: Its therefore possible that whitespot has been ticking over in your tank at imperceptively low levels for some time (possibly months). Your fish may have developed immunity to whitespot, but if stressed then some or all will lose that immunity and sustain a heavier infection - which then become obvious to the fish-keeper. This is often the cause of "mystery outbreaks" of whitespot. kind of explains it i suppose, a bit of extra stress (the introduction of vevlet on a plant?) and it all went wrong. chris |
#16
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... kind of explains it i suppose, a bit of extra stress (the introduction of vevlet on a plant?) and it all went wrong. =========== And sometimes things nose-dive and we'll never know the cause. :-( -- RM.... Zone 6. Middle TN USA ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
#17
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well, the upside down catfish is spot/velvet-free, looks totally
recovered. i lost all three clown loaches (i saw some in a shop today and they look SO small, i am going to wait a few weeks and try to find some bigger ones) and 6 bleeding heart tetras. I have seen a make of medicine online called eSHa, they do a medicine for velvet & white spot and another for bacterial infections, fin rot, body rot, tail rot, pop-eye etc etc, but the best thing is you can use them both together, which means you can treat for just about every common condition at the same time, if only i had known about them sooner i may not have lost any fish at all! anyone heard of ESHA before? chris |
#18
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... well, the upside down catfish is spot/velvet-free, looks totally recovered. i lost all three clown loaches (i saw some in a shop today and they look SO small, i am going to wait a few weeks and try to find some bigger ones) and 6 bleeding heart tetras. Make sure the tank is free of parasites before you get the new ones. I bought some new fish today also. They're acclimating in a 2g aerated tank as I write this. ![]() collected in a clean 30g plant tub. I have seen a make of medicine online called eSHa, they do a medicine for velvet & white spot and another for bacterial infections, fin rot, body rot, tail rot, pop-eye etc etc, but the best thing is you can use them both together, which means you can treat for just about every common condition at the same time, if only i had known about them sooner i may not have lost any fish at all! You may want to think about keeping them on hand. I always have fish medication on hand for emergencies. anyone heard of ESHA before? -- RM.... Zone 6. Middle TN USA ~~~~ }((((* ~~~ }{{{{(ö |
#19
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The antic loaches were now out of their ambuscade abode but searching very ill although they had alone one or two white spots each, they actually looked added like they had got velvet, but it was actual subtle. The next morning two of the tetras were dead.Next day two added died, and the endure two died the afterward day.
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