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#1
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Hello all, I have a 15x18 pond and have had 8 very large goldfish(8-10") in
it for 2 years now. I just put in my first koi. It has been in the pond for 2 weeks and still is a very active swimmer and feeder. All of the golfish are fine except for one silver, red, and black one that has a white fuzzy spot on its side. The new koi has a red sore on its side and redness where the tailfin meets the body. I really don't want to lose this one. It is and white and black butterfly koi with and orange snout. It Any sugestions on what is wrong and how to correct it would be sincerely appreciated. Randy |
#2
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![]() "Randy" wrote in message news:4nJyc.6413$Hg2.3690@attbi_s04... Hello all, I have a 15x18 pond and have had 8 very large goldfish(8-10") in it for 2 years now. I just put in my first koi. It has been in the pond for 2 weeks and still is a very active swimmer and feeder. All of the golfish are fine except for one silver, red, and black one that has a white fuzzy spot on its side. This sounds like a fungus. I would isolate this fish immediately in a medical tank and treat the tank with Maracyn (Erythromycn), according to instructions. And just to be sure that it isn't a paracite like ick, I'd put some coppersafe in the water, and in the pond as well (unless you have valuable invertebrates in your pond). The new koi has a red sore on its side and redness where the tailfin meets the body. I really don't want to lose this one. It is and white and black butterfly koi with and orange snout. It Any sugestions on what is wrong and how to correct it would be sincerely appreciated. Randy It sounds like the Koi has a bacterial infection. You should isolate this fish immediately as well in an isolation tank and treat the tank with Maracyn II (Minocycline) according to instructions. A rule of thumb when adding fish to an extablished pond: Always quarantine them before putting them in ther pond to see if they have any diseases. That way you won't be introducing infectious diseases to the pond (which is usually hard and expensive to treat because of the size). You do have an isolation tank, don't you? I have 1 fifty gallon tuperware tub, and 1 twenty gallon tuperware tub that I use for treatment purposes. It is important that the water is aerated during treatment, and I always place them out of the weather, in a shaded area. If you can bring them inside in a temperature controlled environment, it always helps. It also helps to keep track of water conditions during treatment. Finally, when treating fin and body sores, I always add some stress coat with aloe to the water, because it helps soothe the sores, and helps the healing process. |
#3
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The red sores on the koi are bacterial infections that have gotten through
the slime coat by the fish scraping itself against something in the pond, the net, or the previous pond. There is a product that I really like for keeping the bacteria in check, called KoiZyme. Once the fish break, it is a good idea to feed a medicated food, but the most important thing is to be absolutely sure the water is pristine. Zero ammonia and nitrites are a must. Nitrates should be below 25. If the sores become very bad, it is sometimes necessary to inject the antibiotics, though there are some now that you can dip the fish in. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "Randy" wrote in message news:4nJyc.6413$Hg2.3690@attbi_s04... Hello all, I have a 15x18 pond and have had 8 very large goldfish(8-10") in it for 2 years now. I just put in my first koi. It has been in the pond for 2 weeks and still is a very active swimmer and feeder. All of the golfish are fine except for one silver, red, and black one that has a white fuzzy spot on its side. The new koi has a red sore on its side and redness where the tailfin meets the body. I really don't want to lose this one. It is and white and black butterfly koi with and orange snout. It Any sugestions on what is wrong and how to correct it would be sincerely appreciated. Randy |
#4
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I agree with Rich. Do a water change, use KoiZyme, use medicated food for
atleast 10 days. This has always helped my wetones. "RichToyBox" wrote in message news:vANyc.26099$0y.3914@attbi_s03... The red sores on the koi are bacterial infections that have gotten through the slime coat by the fish scraping itself against something in the pond, the net, or the previous pond. There is a product that I really like for keeping the bacteria in check, called KoiZyme. Once the fish break, it is a good idea to feed a medicated food, but the most important thing is to be absolutely sure the water is pristine. Zero ammonia and nitrites are a must. Nitrates should be below 25. If the sores become very bad, it is sometimes necessary to inject the antibiotics, though there are some now that you can dip the fish in. -- RichToyBox http://www.geocities.com/richtoybox/pondintro.html "Randy" wrote in message news:4nJyc.6413$Hg2.3690@attbi_s04... Hello all, I have a 15x18 pond and have had 8 very large goldfish(8-10") in it for 2 years now. I just put in my first koi. It has been in the pond for 2 weeks and still is a very active swimmer and feeder. All of the golfish are fine except for one silver, red, and black one that has a white fuzzy spot on its side. The new koi has a red sore on its side and redness where the tailfin meets the body. I really don't want to lose this one. It is and white and black butterfly koi with and orange snout. It Any sugestions on what is wrong and how to correct it would be sincerely appreciated. Randy |
#5
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0.9lbs crystal solar salt like for water softeners per 100 gallons of water.
start feeding antibiotic food, like romet. "Randy" wrote: Hello all, I have a 15x18 pond and have had 8 very large goldfish(8-10") in it for 2 years now. I just put in my first koi. It has been in the pond for 2 weeks and still is a very active swimmer and feeder. All of the golfish are fine except for one silver, red, and black one that has a white fuzzy spot on its side. The new koi has a red sore on its side and redness where the tailfin meets the body. I really don't want to lose this one. It is and white and black butterfly koi with and orange snout. It Any sugestions on what is wrong and how to correct it would be sincerely appreciated. Randy ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 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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