FAQs on Freshwater Infectious
(bacterial, fungal) Diseases: Mycobacterial, TB, Wasting
Disease
Related Articles: Freshwater Fish Diseases, Freshwater Diseases, FW Disease Troubleshooting,
Choose Your
Weapon: Freshwater Fish Disease Treatment Options
by Neale Monks, Understanding
Bacterial Disease in Aquarium Fish; With a gallery of bacterial
infections, a discussion of Fish TB, and a listing of major
antimicrobial medications with examples available to
fishkeepers By Myron Roth, Ph.D.,
Related FAQs: Infectious (bacterial, fungal, viral)
Disease 1, Infectious FW
Diseases 2, Infectious FW Disease
3, Infectious FW Disease 4,
Infectious FW Disease 5, &
Infectious Disease: Identification/Diagnosis, Causes/Etiology/Prevention, Cures/Medications, Case Histories:
Bacterial, True Fungal, & By Type/Organisms:
Fin & Mouth Rot, Columnaris, Whirling Disease, Bettas w/
Infections,
|
Mmm, much is often diagnosed as
"Mycobacterial" in origin. Like most infectious issues,
those attributed to TB are largely environmentally mediated.
Nonetheless, do wear gloves and/or keep your hands out of your
tanks if your skin is broken.
|
Might be tuberculosis or something else
7/18/19
I have a new tank since March. I have been keeping track of the parameters and
doing a weekly or biweekly water change as needed to keep ammonia down.
<Mmm, ammonia? It should be gone; your system should have long since cycled...
are you referring to nitrate accumulation?>
It is a planted tank with Fluval dirt
<? What is this?>
and slow growing but varied plants. When nitrates started to appear I slowly
added fish 4 cories in a
60 gallon tank. I waited, watched, tested, and water changed as needed.
At some points I did add bacteria in bottle (was trying to grow them naturally
but got impatient to set up) as tank stabilized I added more. Right now it's
July and I have my 4 Cories, some random amount of Ghost Shrimp, two Assassin
Snails (to deal with pest snails that came with plants) an Oto cat, and a
Bristlenose, 6 Cardinal Tetras, 7 Glofish, 6 Von Ryan <Rio?>Tetras, one Platinum
Gourami, one 2 Dot Gourami, and one Snakeskin Gourami. I had a Betta but he
died. He has the same symptoms as my Snakeskin Gourami is experiencing. Losing
weight, lesions, and the behavior is the one that has me puzzled. He bends and
straightens into an s shape. He was mostly gasping at the top and not really
moving but them would dart around like crazy. I was told by a couple of people
he might have tuberculosis among other possibilities. I'm trying to know what it
can be. Obviously the Betta had it so it is contagious or if it is a parasite
then goes top different hosts.
<A couple notes. Mycobacteria aren't parasites; this is a group of bacteria; and
Mycobacteria are pretty much omnipresent in captive biological aquatic
systems... becoming pathogenic (disease-inducing) under
conditions favoring them, disfavoring their hosts>
I did put now the Snakeskin into a hospital tank and started giving him curative
baths twice daily. I am dosing both the hospital bath and main tank with Melafix
and have added salt.
<Mmm; do search WWM re Melafix; not of any real use>
He seems to have perked up and swimming around more normal. He is still bending
into
an S and straightening still. His color is looking much better but it's only
been 2 days of treatment. The other fish right now look normal. Good color,
healthy find and normal behavior. Can you tell me what he has?
<Not based on the information provided, no. The issues with the Betta, Gourami
may be pre-existing (from the breeders, handlers before your acquisition), or
infectious as you state. IF the latter there are
anti-bacterial, antimicrobial approaches to try...>
Is tuberculosis the only possible disease that he would have or is there
something else he might have?
<Please search, read on WWM re Tuberculosis... and follow the references listed
there re identification, possible potential treatments. Bob Fenner>
Re: Might be tuberculosis or something else
7/18/19
I have a new tank since March. I have been keeping track of the parameters and
doing a weekly or biweekly water change as needed to keep ammonia down.
<Mmm, ammonia? It should be gone; your system should have long since cycled...
are you referring to nitrate accumulation?>
~Well to begin with when there was no fish and not fully cycled but plants I
would do some water changes so that the plants would not be burned by the
ammonia.
<<... this shouldn't happen. Some, most plants can utilize ammonia as a food
source>>
Once the nitrates started showing I knew that I had achieved a level of cycle
and added my cories and I'm trying to remember what else. Maybe it was hasty but
I had miss having fish. This did cause a bit of an overload of ammonia on my
bacteria and was why I did some water changes to keep happy fish. Always the
levels were low. Nitrates were always low but still did weekly water changes
just to make sure they had fresh water.
Still watching levels every week I would add a fish but sometimes a
school.~
It is a planted tank with Fluval dirt
<? What is this?>
~[image: image.png]
<<Ahh, a commercial substrate>>
and slow growing but varied
plants. When nitrates started to appear I slowly added fish 4 cories in a 60
gallon tank. I waited, watched, tested, and water changed as needed.
At some points I did add bacteria in bottle (was trying to grow them naturally
but got impatient to set up) as tank stabilized I added more. Right now it's
July and I have my 4 Cories, some random amount of Ghost Shrimp, two Assassin
Snails (to deal with pest snails that came with plants) an Oto cat, and a
Bristlenose, 6 Cardinal Tetras, 7 Glofish, 6 Von Ryan Tetras, one Platinum
Gourami, one 2 Dot Gourami, and one Snakeskin Gourami. I had a Betta but he
died. He has the same symptoms as my Snakeskin
Gourami is experiencing. Losing weight, lesions, and the behavior is the one
that has me puzzled. He bends and straightens into an s shape. He was mostly
gasping at the top and not really moving but them would dart around like crazy.
I was told by a couple of people he might have tuberculosis among other
possibilities. I'm trying to know what it can be. Obviously the Betta had it so
it is contagious or if it is a parasite then goes top different hosts.
<A couple notes. Mycobacteria aren't parasites; this is a group of bacteria; and
Mycobacteria are pretty much omnipresent in captive biological aquatic
systems... becoming pathogenic (disease-inducing) under
conditions favoring them, disfavoring their hosts>
~Yes I guess I was hoping for not tuberculosis. Everything I read about it
sounds awful and before I nuc my tank I want to make sure it is what people are
telling me it is. ~
<<Better to educate yourself rather than rely on hearsay opinions>>
I did put now the Snakeskin into a hospital tank and started giving him curative
baths twice daily. I am dosing both the hospital bath and main tank with Melafix
and have added salt.
<<Mmm; do search WWM re Melafix; not of any real use>>
~It was all I had on hand at time. I want to get what I need. I don't want to
buy random stuff until I know what exactly will help my tank. I don't like to
just jump and get everything everyone says I need. I have been told to get stuff
to treat fungus and stuff I know is low bacterial cure. I did not follow that
advise. I have some knowledge but have never experience with tuberculosis. This
is why I'm reaching out to others with more knowledge than me.~
<<Read where you've been referred to>>
He seems to have perked up and swimming around more normal. He is still bending
into an S and straightening still. His color is looking much better but it's
only been 2 days of treatment. The other fish right now look normal. Good color,
healthy find and normal behavior. Can you tell me what he has?
<Not based on the information provided, no. The issues with the Betta, Gourami
may be pre-existing (from the breeders, handlers before your acquisition), or
infectious as you state. IF the latter there are
anti-bacterial, antimicrobial approaches to try...>
~I do not know the breeder but I could find out. I buy all my fish from a mom
and pop store. Good store, fish always look good and customers come from miles
around because of the quality of stock. Would a video help? I was going to send
one but thought it would be too big of a file.~
<<If large files, do park them elsewhere and send a link>>
Is tuberculosis the only possible disease that he would have or is there
something else he might have?
<Please search, read on WWM re Tuberculosis... and follow the references listed
there re identification, possible potential treatments. Bob Fenner>
Ok I will look again on your site. I was just wanting to make sure that it was
tuberculosis before I start to destroy my beautiful tank.
<<Real good. BobF>>
|
|
Might be tuberculosis or something else /Neale
7/19/19
I have a new tank since March. I have been keeping track of the parameters
and doing a weekly or biweekly water change as needed to keep ammonia down.
It is a planted tank with Fluval dirt and slow growing but varied plants.
<Adding some fast-growing plants will help control algae. Even floating
plants will do! Slow-growing plants have little impact on water quality.>
When nitrates started to appear I slowly added fish 4 cories in a 60 gallon
tank. I waited, watched, tested, and water changed as needed. At some points
I did add bacteria in bottle (was trying to grow them naturally but got
impatient to set up) as tank stabilized I added more. Right now it's July
and I have my 4 Cories, some random amount of Ghost Shrimp, two Assassin
Snails (to deal with pest snails that came with plants) an Oto cat,
<These are social and rarely last long kept singly. Indeed, they rarely last
long in most community tanks given their need for copious green algae or its
substitutes.>
and a Bristlenose, 6 Cardinal Tetras, 7 Glofish, 6 Von Ryan Tetras, one
Platinum Gourami, one 2 Dot Gourami, and one Snakeskin Gourami. I had a Beta
but he died. He has the same symptoms as my Snakeskin Gourami is
experiencing. Losing weight, lesions, and the behavior is the one that has
me puzzled. He bends and straightens into an s shape. He was mostly gasping
at the top and not really moving but them would dart around like crazy. I
was told by a couple of people he might have tuberculosis among other
possibilities.
<Really hard to say. You're quite right that Mycobacteria infections can
cause lesions, wasting, and spinal deformities. But so can a range of other
diseases, including simple exposure to non-zero ammonia and nitrite levels.>
I'm trying to know what it can be.
<Understood, and probably impossible outside of a fish pathology lab.>
Obviously the Betta had it so it is contagious or if it is a parasite then
goes top different hosts.
<Or both succumbed to similar stress factors in similar ways.>
I did put now the Snakeskin into a hospital tank and started giving him
curative baths twice daily. I am dosing both the hospital bath and main tank
with Melafix and have added salt
<Melafix likely not useful here, especially if the problem is bacterial.
Salt may help, though it's hard to say: salt can reduce the toxicity of
ammonia and nitrite, and might reduce osmotic stress where lesions occur,
but on the other hand it isn't even remotely a treatment for bacterial
infections.>
He seems to have perked up and swimming around more normal.
<Good. If the problem is environmental, simply optimising water quality
could do the trick.>
He is still bending into an S and straightening still. His color is looking
much better but it's only been 2 days of treatment. The other fish right now
look normal. Good color, healthy find and normal behavior. Can you tell me
what he has?
<Nope.>
Is tuberculosis the only possible disease that he would have or is there
something else he might have?
<See above. Time, luck probably the best things to rely on here. If
Mycobacteria, nothing short of the fish's own immune system will help. No
medications sold to aquarists have any impact. But if environmental, as I
say, optimise living conditions and things may improve. Cheers, Neale.>
|
Crayfish, bad molt, and mycobacterium
12/14/16
Hello WWC,
<Close enough>
This is very long because I want to give as much information as possible. I
am a college student working on my B.S. in zoology,
<Oh! My undergrad. degree as well>
so this is exactly the kind of thing that interests me and therefore I have
collected a lot of information about the circumstances.
<Okay>
I have a 10 gallon freshwater aquarium with the following water
conditions... the first test is from 5 days ago, and the second is after I
did a water change:
First:
Nitrate <20 ppm
Nitrite 0
GH 200
KH 180
PH 7.8
Temp 64 F
Now the numbers are:
Nitrate <20 ppm
Nitrite 0
GH 150
KH 120
PH 7.6
Temp 64 F
<A bit "older"... still; acceptable values>
In the tank resides one female crayfish of unknown species and two "mosquito
fish" (Gambusia affinis). I have had the crayfish since November 2, 2015
when I accidentally caught her from a pond at my school (I was netting some
mosquito fish from the pond to put in an aquarium because I'm just weird
like that). She was only approximately an inch long at the time, and almost
translucent, with tiny little baby pincers. While reading up on crayfish, I
found a recipe for a gel-type food that I could adjust to meet her needs. It
uses gelatin as a binder, and is frozen after it sets, so I can break off
cubes to thaw as needed. I made it with dried Spirulina, dried organic kelp,
fresh spinach, fresh zucchini, cooked whole shrimp, and some salmon. It is
mostly greens, though, as that seemed most appropriate.
Her diet consists of the gel food, shrimp pellets, algae pellets, fresh
greens/cucumber/etc., duckweed, and sometimes frozen brine shrimp. I try to
keep it varied.
<Good... I'd add a modicum of iodide-ate to the water weekly as well. Have
you read on WWM Re Cray nutrition?>
Now she is approximately 4.5" long, and has molted 10 times since I brought
her home. The problem started with the last molt, which was July 15, and
continued with one that happened 5 days ago. Before I get to that, however,
I want to express my reason for emailing you when you have so many posts
already regarding bad molts.
<Ah yes>
I had some mosquito fish fry in my 5.5 gallon aquarium, and on June 5th I
noticed one fry had a bent spine. I thought maybe he had been injured or
something, and never considered that it could be something contagious. Then
there were some other anomalies with the fish in that tank and with the tank
conditions, the specifics of which probably don't matter in this context.
But at some point I realized there were more than one fry with a bent spine,
and finally researched it as a symptom of a larger illness, rather than an
injury. I began to come to the horrible hypothesis that my tank somehow had
been infected with mycobacterium. It explained many of the abnormalities I
had encountered.
<Mmm; well.... This genus of bacteria are about in most all aquatic
systems...>
**Since this took some time to figure out, it is very likely that I used
some tool (a net or whatever) on both the 10 gallon and the 5.5 gallon tanks
after the 5.5 gallon was infected.**
I tried treating the 5.5 gallon with Tetra Lifeguard (it's the only
medication I had on hand so I gave it a try), which was ineffective against
most of the symptoms I was seeing. The number of fish with spinal
deformities was going up, and there were several deaths within a few days of
each other, so I began to consider euthanizing them.
<I would; yes>
Before I did, however, on July 15 the crayfish molted and was left with at
least three exposed gills on one side. They were completely outside the
carapace. I went to my LFS (they have a local reputation as "experts"),
freaking out a bit, and the guy was worse than useless. He said he couldn't
help me, there was nothing that could be done for either the crayfish or the
Gambusia. His actual advice regarding the crayfish was, "just keep checking
the water conditions and see if she makes it."
<?!>
I euthanized about 15 fish that day, mostly fry, and treated the healthiest
ones with Kanamycin. I completely broke down my 5.5 gallon tank and tossed
all the live plants, but didn't know what to do about the crayfish in the 10
gallon. I decided to just go on the assumption that crayfish couldn't
contract mycobacterium (if that's even what my fish had, but I didn't test
them, so I'm not 100% sure), and that the bad molt was due to lack of
iodide, which she only really gets from her diet.
<Again; I'd supplement; weekly, add to the water>
The last few months she was pretty much refusing to eat the gel food any
more and would just make a mess with it and then leave it sitting on the
bottom of the tank. She stopped eating the stuff she usually enjoyed, like
fresh kale, and would almost exclusively eat the shrimp pellets or the flake
fish food that I put in for the mosquito fish. I kept meaning to buy
aquarium iodide to supplement this, but life happened and I never got to it.
I didn't realize how long she went without eating greens until I saw the
effects.
When she had the bad molt,
<You are leaving these molts in the system I hope/trust, for this animal to
consume>
I tried to be more vigilant about water conditions (though when I tested it
at the time, the parameters were actually the same as the first test listed
above, they weren't horrible, but I hadn't been cleaning the tank as often
as I should have been and I wasn't sure if that contributed or not), and
tried to get her to eat more green things. Once again, though, several
things happened in my life that made it get pushed aside, and she must not
have been getting enough iodide still...
She molted 5 days ago and she almost died this time. I found her lying on
her side next to her molted exoskeleton, and she had a number of gills
outside the carapace again but more this time, and on both sides. One of her
antennae didn't look right, and she was not moving. Her little antennules
were twitching, though, so I covered the tank with a dark towel
and kept her in the dark and quiet for about 24 hours before checking on her
again. At that point she was still on her side, but another 12 hours later
she was upright again and eating her exoskeleton. Now I have been able to
see her better and not only are a bunch of gills outside her shell and an
antenna bent (and the part after the "bend" is turning white), but one of
her claws looks really bad, too. She was holding it funny and after a couple
days the "elbow" (for lack of a better word) turned very bright red. The
redness has spread along that claw and it also looks a little fuzzy, like
food that's been left in the tank too long. She isn't very active, she is
barely eating her exoskeleton at all, but she does walk
around a little and she is definitely alive and alert. She looks awful
though.
<I'd also add a level teaspoon of baking soda/sodium bicarbonate and a
"hardness" stone like those sold for turtles in the trade>
I have ordered marine iodide and I am keeping the tank somewhat dark, so she
feels safe and hidden, to minimize stress. I bought gallons of bottled water
and I **VERY** carefully gravel vacuumed the dirtiest part of the tank (I
didn't clean the whole thing because, again, stress. I didn't go too close
to the crayfish herself, I let her feel hidden.) and replaced the water
(about 50% of the tank) with Crystal Geyser, instead of using treated tap
water. I don't know why, it just seemed safer. Maybe that's just paranoia.
<Dechloraminated tap/mains water should be fine. Bottled isn't better for
crayfish>
My concern about getting her through this is, can this be caused by
mycobacterium?
<Not "caused" per se... or per accidens: that is, not the immediate, direct
cause... But bacteria may be playing a secondary role here>
It affects the skeletons of vertebrates, could it affect the exoskeleton of
an invertebrate?? Should I take the exoskeleton out at this point? Is it
just making water conditions worse as it breaks down?
<I would leave it in... and do what I've mentioned above. Triple dose the I2
now>
I adore this crayfish. She is a remarkable little creature. Can I do
anything for her? Is there some medication that would help her recover?
There are things I know I did wrong and will be making an effort to change,
but I don't know enough about invertebrate biology to know exactly what went
wrong, especially when there are a number of possible causes. I'm attaching
a couple pictures of her current condition so you can see what exactly I'm
talking about.
Thank you in advance and let me know if there is more information you need.
-Margie
<Welcome. Bob Fenner; who will place this msg. in Neale Monk's in-box for
his separate resp.>
Crayfish, molt, Myco- pics 12/14/16
Hello again,
<Marge>
Sorry I forgot to attach the pictures when I emailed you earlier today. I
was up late studying for finals so I'm a bit tired lol.
<No worries>
Forgive the reflections off the glass of the tank. Also, I cropped the
pictures to reduce their size, so some may be odd proportions. If there are
any included here that look weird, they are included because they show
something specific, like the gills outside the carapace (which are hard to
see because they blend into the rocks) or the antenna that is sad looking.
The redness of the claw is obvious, but also if you look closely you'll see
the fuzziness... like it's rotting. All these are from the most recent molt
that she had about 5 days ago. The first 2 pictures were taken 2 days after
molting, the next one where she is on her side was taken yesterday, and you
can see how the redness has spread down the claw. In that one she is next to
her shed exoskeleton, so excuse any random extraneous body parts.
Thank you again for all your time.
-Margie
<Can't (of course) discern root cause/s here; but do concur the molt is
odd/misshapen... Perhaps something missing (deficiency)... I'd add liquid
vitamins/HUFA mix to the water weekly as well as to the food mix (like
SeaChem's "Vitality" product). BobF>
|
|
Crayfish, bad molt, and mycobacterium
Neale's go 12/15/16
Hello WWC,
<Margie,>
This is very long because I want to give as much information as possible. I am a
college student working on my B.S. in zoology, so this is exactly the kind of
thing that interests me and therefore I have collected a lot of information
about the circumstances.
<Understood.>
I have a 10 gallon freshwater aquarium with the following water conditions...
the first test is from 5 days ago, and the second is after I did a water change:
First:
Nitrate <20 ppm
Nitrite 0
GH 200
KH 180
PH 7.8
Temp 64 F
<All sounds fine.>
Now the numbers are:
Nitrate <20 ppm
Nitrite 0
GH 150
KH 120
PH 7.6
Temp 64 F
<No major problems here.>
In the tank resides one female crayfish of unknown species and two "mosquito
fish" (Gambusia affinis). I have had the crayfish since November 2, 2015 when I
accidentally caught her from a pond at my school (I was netting some mosquito
fish from the pond to put in an aquarium because I'm just weird like that). She
was only approximately an inch long at the time, and almost translucent, with
tiny little baby pincers. While reading up on crayfish, I found a recipe for a
gel-type food that I could adjust to meet her needs. It uses gelatin as a
binder, and is frozen after it sets, so I
can break off cubes to thaw as needed. I made it with dried Spirulina, dried
organic kelp, fresh spinach, fresh zucchini, cooked whole shrimp, and some
salmon. It is mostly greens, though, as that seemed most appropriate.
Her diet consists of the gel food, shrimp pellets, algae pellets, fresh
greens/cucumber/etc., duckweed, and sometimes frozen brine shrimp. I try to keep
it varied.
<Good. This all sounds appropriate. Gambusia are a bit hit and miss in fish
tanks, but shouldn't cause any problems with crayfish.>
Now she is approximately 4.5" long, and has molted 10 times since I brought her
home. The problem started with the last molt, which was July 15, and continued
with one that happened 5 days ago. Before I get to that, however, I want to
express my reason for emailing you when you have so many posts already regarding
bad molts.
<Indeed! It's impossible to know the real problems, but iodine may be a
significant factor. On top of that, other dietary deficiencies are possible, but
as you suggest, maximising variety, and biasing towards plant foods, probably
helps here. Then there's exposure to heavy metals. While clearly copper for
example is toxic to crustaceans above certain levels, the problems caused by
lower, non-lethal levels aren't often considered by aquarists, but may be
important. There may be other factors too, such as day length or season
temperature variations we just don't consider, and again, these may be important
with regard to properly synchronising all the different physiological mechanisms
involved.>
I had some mosquito fish fry in my 5.5 gallon aquarium, and on June 5th I
noticed one fry had a bent spine. I thought maybe he had been injured or
something, and never considered that it could be something contagious.
<The odd deformed fry is relatively common among fish. They tend to produce
large numbers of offspring, but with little of the "error correction" typical
among mammals, where deformed embryos will be eliminated long before birth. I
guess it's down to the relative shortness of the pregnancy phase, and the far
weaker interaction between the eggs and the mother's blood supply. There are
exceptions, the Goodeids for example having the equivalent of a placenta, but
your Mosquitofish do little more than carry the eggs and provide oxygen; the fry
get most of their energy from a yolk
sac, and relatively little from the maternal blood supply.>
Then there were some other anomalies with the fish in that tank and with the
tank conditions, the specifics of which probably don't matter in this context.
But at some point I realized there were more than one fry with a bent spine, and
finally researched it as a symptom of a larger illness, rather than an injury. I
began to come to the horrible hypothesis that my tank somehow had been infected
with mycobacterium. It explained many of the abnormalities I had encountered.
<Possibly. But Mycobacteriosis is very difficult to diagnose by visual
inspection. It's probably impossible to do so, really. It may also be the case
that Mycobacteriosis may well be latent in most tanks, but only becomes a
problem under specific conditions where fish are stressed or poisoned. In any
event, it's hard to say that's the story here, because things like bent spines
and failed moults can easily be explained by environmental stress, genetics,
dietary shortcomings, etc.>
**Since this took some time to figure out, it is very likely that I used some
tool (a net or whatever) on both the 10 gallon and the 5.5 gallon tanks after
the 5.5 gallon was infected.**
<Easily sterilised using dilute bleach followed by thorough rinsing.>
I tried treating the 5.5 gallon with Tetra Lifeguard (it's the only medication I
had on hand so I gave it a try), which was ineffective against most of the
symptoms I was seeing. The number of fish with spinal deformities was going up,
and there were several deaths within a few days of each other, so I began to
consider euthanizing them.
<Yikes.>
Before I did, however, on July 15 the crayfish molted and was left with at least
three exposed gills on one side. They were completely outside the carapace. I
went to my LFS (they have a local reputation as "experts"), freaking out a bit,
and the guy was worse than useless. He said he couldn't help me, there was
nothing that could be done for either the crayfish or the Gambusia. His actual
advice regarding the crayfish was, "just keep checking the water conditions and
see if she makes it."
<Would agree somewhat; once crustaceans are sick, it's actually very difficult
to heal them. On the upside, if fed and protected, subsequent moults can put
right any damage.>
I euthanized about 15 fish that day, mostly fry, and treated the healthiest ones
with Kanamycin. I completely broke down my 5.5 gallon tank and tossed all the
live plants, but didn't know what to do about the crayfish in the 10 gallon. I
decided to just go on the assumption that crayfish couldn't contract
mycobacterium (if that's even what my fish had, but I didn't test them, so I'm
not 100% sure), and that the bad molt was due to lack of iodide, which she only
really gets from her diet.
<I would agree with your analysis here, in the sense Mycobacteria species are
unlikely to jump from a fish to a crustacean. That said, I don't know that for
sure.>
The last few months she was pretty much refusing to eat the gel food any more
and would just make a mess with it and then leave it sitting on the bottom of
the tank. She stopped eating the stuff she usually enjoyed, like fresh kale, and
would almost exclusively eat the shrimp pellets or the flake fish food that I
put in for the mosquito fish. I kept meaning to buy aquarium iodide to
supplement this, but life happened and I never got to it. I didn't realize how
long she went without eating greens until I saw the effects.
<Understood. Their scavenging behaviour does mislead some folks into seeing them
as more carnivorous than they really are. Crayfish are more deposit feeders, and
tend to consume a lot of algae and decaying plant material alongside carrion and
other scraps of food.>
When she had the bad molt, I tried to be more vigilant about water conditions
(though when I tested it at the time, the parameters were actually the same as
the first test listed above, they weren't horrible, but I hadn't been cleaning
the tank as often as I should have been and I wasn't sure if that contributed or
not), and tried to get her to eat more
green things. Once again, though, several things happened in my life that made
it get pushed aside, and she must not have been getting enough iodide still...
<I see this from your photo.>
She molted 5 days ago and she almost died this time. I found her lying on her
side next to her molted exoskeleton, and she had a number of gills outside the
carapace again but more this time, and on both sides. One of her antennae didn't
look right, and she was not moving. Her little antennules were twitching,
though, so I covered the tank with a dark towel and kept her in the dark and
quiet for about 24 hours before checking on her again. At that point she was
still on her side, but another 12 hours later she was upright again and eating
her exoskeleton. Now I have been able to see her better and not only are a bunch
of gills outside her shell and an antenna bent (and the part after the "bend" is
turning white), but one of her claws looks really bad, too. She was holding it
funny and after a couple days the "elbow" (for lack of a better word) turned
very bright red. The redness has spread along that claw and it also looks a
little fuzzy, like food that's been left in the tank too long. She isn't very
active, she is barely eating her exoskeleton at all, but she does walk around a
little and she is definitely alive and alert. She looks awful though.
<Agreed.>
I have ordered marine iodide and I am keeping the tank somewhat dark, so she
feels safe and hidden, to minimize stress. I bought gallons of bottled water and
I **VERY** carefully gravel vacuumed the dirtiest part of the tank (I didn't
clean the whole thing because, again, stress. I didn't go too close to the
crayfish herself, I let her feel hidden.) and replaced the water (about 50% of
the tank) with Crystal Geyser, instead of using treated tap water. I don't know
why, it just seemed safer. Maybe that's just paranoia.
<I would be careful dramatically changing water chemistry. Good water quality is
important though, and ideally water that's somewhat hard, to reduce osmotic
stress if nothing else, but also to prevent further damage to her skeleton.>
My concern about getting her through this is, can this be caused by
mycobacterium?
<No idea, in all honesty.>
It affects the skeletons of vertebrates, could it affect the exoskeleton of an
invertebrate?
<Completely different mechanisms of secretion and maintenance, so hard to
imagine Mycobacteria could affect them/these similarly.>
Should I take the exoskeleton out at this point? Is it just making water
conditions worse as it breaks down?
<Crayfish should have access to previous moults; what we do know about
crustaceans generally is that consumption of their moult is often significant,
and budgeted into their energy equation, allowing them to recycle nutrients.
Without access to the moult, they might 'overspend' on calcium or whatever, and
that deficit could be lethal.>
I adore this crayfish. She is a remarkable little creature. Can I do anything
for her?
<Optimise water quality; offer tiny bits of food periodically; provide a
suitable source of calcium such as a bit of cuttlebone to harden the water and
possibly be eaten; optimise diet, to include seaweed-based iodine sources.>
Is there some medication that would help her recover?
<The science just isn't there yet. We know almost nothing about medicating
inverts. Far more effort is put into exterminating them, insects especially. We
probably wouldn't know much about fish medicines either, were it not for
hobbyists keeping them as pets. Only very recently has fish farming been an
actual thing big enough to warrant research.>
There are things I know I did wrong and will be making an effort to change, but
I don't know enough about invertebrate biology to know exactly what went wrong,
especially when there are a number of possible causes. I'm
attaching a couple pictures of her current condition so you can see what exactly
I'm talking about.
<Thank you.>
Thank you in advance and let me know if there is more information you need.
-Margie
<Most welcome, Neale.>
Re: Crayfish, bad molt, and mycobacterium
6/20/16
Hello again!
<Margie,>
Thank you so much for all the information. As Neale observed, there is a lot
more information available out there about exterminating inverts than saving
them, so you guys are a rare and valuable resource.
<Thanks for the kind words.>
Since both responses I got asked about this, yes, I do always leave the
exoskeleton in the tank every time she molts so she can "recycle" it. (Got a
great picture of her eating her own claw once. It was AWESOME. And it creeped my
mom out, too, which was a bonus.)
<Heh!>
The crayfish lost her damaged claw the other day. Not just the part that's
exoskeleton, either-- there was a good sized chunk of flesh that came off too.
She has a little stump that is still bright red and white, and looks quite bad.
She hides 24/7 (making it difficult for me to get a good look at her) and barely
moves at all. She doesn't explore, or rearrange her tank, or scavenge for food
at all. She hasn't been eating her exoskeleton, or anything else that I know of.
I kind of gently nudge her tail sometimes just to see if she is still alive (she
is). I'm very concerned.
<Understood. Autotomy, the casting off of damaged/trapped limbs, is within the
normal range of things crayfish do. So in theory, if the break is clean, she
can/will survive without much trouble. But if the damage extends beyond the
natural 'breaks' in their exoskeleton, they can quickly become infected. If she
survives a week, that's probably a good sign though.>
I removed from the tank the part of her dead claw that was fleshy, after a
couple days, since it was beginning to decompose.
<Absolutely! Leaving empty shells to be eaten is good. Leaving decaying hunks of
flesh, that's bad!>
I guess my big question is just... in your opinion(s), do you think she will
make it? Obviously you can't predict the future (or can you?? o_0) but in your
experience is something like this survivable?
<Yes, if the break is clean. Less likely otherwise.>
Also, how much iodine should I be supplementing? Since I usually see the
recommended dose is half whatever the bottle says, but then Bob said triple
dose, so does that mean triple the half dose (so 1.5x the dose on the bottle
label), or triple what the bottle says?...
<Oh, I'd tend to go half the dosage stated for marines. Freshwater organisms
seem hard-wired to get by with less iodine.>
Thank you again.
-Margie
<Most welcome. Neale.>
|
TB or results of Camallanus treatment in guppies
1/18/15
Hi,
<Hello Eva,>
I'm hoping you can help me with a problem I've been having in my
freshwater tank. I came home with a couple of new guppies in October and
they had Camallanus worms.
<Not uncommon in farmed livebearers, particularly in the US for some
reason.>
I ended up with my whole tank infected. After trying several things I
was finally able to get my fish store (not the one that I bought the
sick fish from) to sell me some Levamisole, which took care of the
worms.
<Indeed.>
Since they were treated the one neon I had developed a crooked back and
died. I figured that he had worms inside him that died and that was why
he got crooked and of course died.
<Possibly, or a reaction to the medication, or simply a coincidence.
Neons and Guppies require fundamentally different living conditions, so
it's unlikely (read: practically impossible) to provide optimal
conditions for both. To recap, Neons want cool (22-25 C/72-77 F) water
that's soft and slightly acidic to neutral (1-12 degrees dH, pH 6-7). By
contrast, fancy Guppies are more sensitive to cold their wild ancestors,
so need warmth (25-28 C/77-82 F) and want water that's at least medium
hard and slightly basic (10-25 degrees dH, pH 7-8.5). There's a strong
argument for adding a little salt to the aquarium where Guppies are kept
(2-3 gram/litre is sufficient, and won't affect most hardy plants) and
they also do very well in proper brackish conditions too (around SG
1.005 being ideal). As you can see, there's little overlap between their
requirements. In hard water,
Neons basically die off one by one, rarely living more than a year,
while Guppies are persistently disease-prone when kept in soft water.
Chilling weakens Guppies, making them sickly, while overheating Neons
shortens their lifespan still further. You could probably keep both if
you had precisely 10-12 degrees dH water, pH 7-7.5, at 25 degrees C, but
very few aquarists
get that kind of water out of the tap, most either having soft water or
hard water depending on what's supplied by their local water company
(and do note, softened water as produced by domestic water softeners is
not the same thing as naturally soft water, and actually shouldn't be
used in a fish tank).>
Now I have a guppy that is also developing a crooked back. My question
is:
Could the crooked backs be related to the Camallanus worm infestation or
is it probably fish TB. If it's TB do I just give up on the tank and the
20 or so fish in it?
<Do see above. Check the temperature, hardness and pH, and combined with
luck and/or genetics, you may well have your answer right there.>
Thank you for taking the time to reply.
<Most welcome.>
Warmly,
Eva
<Neale.> New fish, unwell tank, Mycobacterial/TB?
/Neale 10/2/14
Hi guys,
I'm new to your web page but have had a look at a lot of the info here..
I come with a pretty heavy heart as things are not looking good in my
tank.
Tropical 80L tank has been set up for 6 weeks. Temp 27C, pH about 7-7.4,
ammonia 0, nitrates 0
Got 2 new dwarf gouramis 2 weeks ago. I didn't quarantine. I know,
stupid.
I don't have a quarantine tank. I've never had trouble of this sort
before, and really only 'dabbled' in having fish. (I set it up, it
worked, I cared for the water and the tank and all seemed good... Never
needed to look further into it).
At that time tank contained:
Mature angel fish (about 3-4 years old)
Albino Cory catfish (about 3 years old)
Yoyo loach
3 male guppies
3 female guppies
1 Mollie
1 neon dart
all was ok for about a week until a Mollie died. I watched the tank and
noticed a bit of aggression from one of the gouramis. I put the death
down to this and hoped all would settle. A few days later, the guppies
started dying one by one and I noticed one of the male's tail had a tear
and a white/clear patch developing. I also noticed at this stage a
lesion on the face of one of the gouramis, and a 'graze' patch on the
other one.
I began treating with Melafix, but after a few days I realised the
bottle I had was out of date. I went to the aquarium and got a new batch
and some salt to add.
<Salt doesn't do much of use in most tanks, but it can/will help with
Guppies and Mollies, though at the cost of stressing soft water fish
such as tetras, barbs, gouramis and Rasboras.>
The gourami with the 'graze' - the one who was initially a bit
aggressive - got rapidly worse over 3 days. The graze patch spread
across it's side, over it's head and onto the other side. I euthanised
it yesterday.
All of the guppies have died except for 1 male, who seemed fine until
tonight - he has started swimming really limply and has a black spot in
his dorsal fin. The most recent guppy to die (female) was badly
emaciated.
I have the remaining gourami in isolation, but as I said it is not a
functioning tank so I am relying on water changes from the main tank. It
has developed a patch that looks like the graze on the first one - pale
and
loss of scales.
I called the aquarium and they said the MelaFix takes 7 days to work,
but I can see the second gourami getting steadily worse. I have also
called a vet, but need to wait about 14 hours before they would be
available and they have told me it will cost upwards of AUD$290 to test
and diagnose for Mycobacteria. Firstly I'm not sure if the fish will
last this long, and secondly am not really in a position to spend this
much.
<Quite so, and largely pointless. There's nothing you can do
medicate/treat with Mycobacteria or (equally likely) Dwarf Gourami
Iridovirus (DGIV). Both have similar symptoms: atypical behaviour,
wasting, lesions on the skin, eventual death.>
I'm concerned for my own health, as I most certainly have cleaned the
tank in the last two weeks with broken skin on my hands. I've bought
some shoulder length gloves online, but I am nervous at the thought of
getting infected. I noticed a spot on my hand a few days ago (before I
knew of Mycobacteria) that went away in 24 hours. I have taken a photo
of the faded site.
I include photos of the deceased gourami, the still-living gourami and
my hand.
<Indeed. I wouldn't worry overly much about catching Mycobacteria
infections, though it does happen, and some degree of common sense
should be used where Mycobacteria infections are suspected. Typical
symptoms are itchiness and a rash, and if you suspect this is the issue
here, consult with a doctor. Mycobacteria infections are transmitted by
handing infected fish directly and to some degree working inside the
tank, especially if your skin is cut. Wearing rubber gloves may look
silly but can help in such
situations. Regardless, washing your hands afterwards is a must. So far
as the fish go, isolation and hoping for the best are the way to go,
taking care that the hospital tank has as close to ideal conditions as
possible. DGIV is treated similarly, but isn't communicable to humans.>
Thanks in advance. I guess I know the chance of it being Mycobacteria is
slim, but I can't get it out of my head. Thanks for being there to help
with this kind of thing.
Hope to hear from you soon,
Meg
<In short, avoid Dwarf Gouramis (Banded and Thick-lipped Gouramis both
make slightly larger, slightly less colourful but infinitely hardier
substitutions). Mollies and Guppies need quite specific environmental
conditions, i.e., hard, alkaline water, possibly brackish -- and the
quality of farmed Guppies is notoriously poor anyway, making them doubly
sensitive. Do review WWM for suggestions of hardy, easy fish for casual
aquarists. Might suggest starting here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwlivestk.htm
... then following the links up top. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: New fish, unwell tank, Mycobacterial/TB? /RMF
10/2/14
Hi Bob,
<Meg>
Thank you for your reply.
<Welcome>
I'm still a little in the dark as to how to proceed.
<Understandably so>
I have read a lot of the info provided online and have gathered as such:
Vet/pathological tests= expensive but worth knowing?
<Mmm; well; I'd spend the money/time/resources on my/your own health...
seeing a dermatologist first>
Melafix = worthless. Change to antimicrobial medication (from the vet?
Or do aquariums sell this? - it's nearly 2am here so can't check
myself). This may help if it is NOT Mycobacterial.
<I would not treat, try to treat... as you point out, w/o knowing
particularly the susceptibility of whatever pathogen this is... and
likely not virulent at this time...>
Mycobacteria? = could well be. No way of knowing without expensive vet
tests
<Or medical...>
My hand = 'I am relieved', suggesting you think it is fine? From what I
have read it starts as a spot and comes back up to 4 weeks later as a
welt.
Fingers crossed this is not the case.
<Am guessing...>
Tank maintenance = I have ordered gloves. Is this feasible as long term
personal protection?
<Yes it is... elbow length plus... and/or remote tools... to keep hands
out. Always washing after you've been in the tank>
Update: the second gourami has faded and I do not have faith it could
have gotten better. It has been euthanised.
I am very disappointed that the aquarium has urged me on two separate
occasions to continue the MelaFix.
<... dump them. Go elsewhere>
My focus is now on the remainder of the tank. Is it viable to assume the
best outcome and treat with antimicrobial meds?
<Again; I would not treat. Not likely to be efficacious, nor likely
necessary at this time>
The vet I consulted yesterday told me that a live specimen is needed for
diagnosis (and would be sacrificed for the samples to be taken). I have,
however chilled the deceased gourami in case they tell me otherwise
tomorrow.
<Okay>
I have no idea about what this means for the future of the tank and my
still living fish.
<Really... not much... these disease organisms come and go... gain, lose
strength depending on... Let's have you read here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/mardisease.htm
Any further info you can supply would be greatly appreciated.
<Glad to assist your gathering awareness>
Regards,
Meg
<And you, Bob Fenner>
New fish, unwell tank, Mycobacterial/TB?
10/1/14
Hi guys,
<Meg>
I'm new to your web page but have had a look at a lot of the info here..
I
come with a pretty heavy heart as things are not looking good in my
tank.
Tropical 80L tank has been set up for 6 weeks. Temp 27C, pH about 7-7.4,
ammonia 0, nitrates 0
Got 2 new dwarf gouramis 2 weeks ago. I didn't quarantine. I know,
stupid.
I don't have a quarantine tank. I've never had trouble of this sort
before,
and really only 'dabbled' in having fish. (I set it up, it worked, I
cared
for the water and the tank and all seemed good... Never needed to look
further into it).
At that time tank contained:
Mature angel fish (about 3-4 years old)
Albino Cory catfish (about 3 years old)
Yoyo loach
3 male guppies
3 female guppies
1 Mollie
1 neon dart
all was ok for about a week until a Mollie died. I watched the tank and
noticed a bit of aggression from one of the gouramis. I put the death
down
to this and hoped all would settle. A few days later, the guppies
started
dying one by one and I noticed one of the male's tail had a tear and a
white/clear patch developing. I also noticed at this stage a lesion on
the
face of one of the gouramis, and a 'graze' patch on the other one.
I began treating with Melafix, but after a few days I realised the
bottle I
had was out of date.
<This tea extract is of no medical use. A sham that can/does make
matters worse>
I went to the aquarium and got a new batch and some
salt to add.
The gourami with the 'graze' - the one who was initially a bit
aggressive -
got rapidly worse over 3 days. The graze patch spread across it's side,
over it's head and onto the other side. I euthanised it yesterday.
All of the guppies have died except for 1 male, who seemed fine until
tonight - he has started swimming really limply and has a black spot in
his
dorsal fin.
The most recent guppy to die (female) was badly emaciated.
I have the remaining gourami in isolation, but as I said it is not a
functioning tank so I am relying on water changes from the main tank. It
has developed a patch that looks like the graze on the first one - pale
and
loss of scales.
I called the aquarium and they said the MelaFix takes 7 days to work,
but I
can see the second gourami getting steadily worse.
<I'd shop elsewhere>
I have also called a vet, but need to wait about 14 hours before they
would
be available and they have told me it will cost upwards of AUD$290 to
test
and diagnose for Mycobacteria. Firstly I'm not sure if the fish will
last
this long, and secondly am not really in a position to spend this much.
I'm concerned for my own health, as I most certainly have cleaned the
tank
in the last two weeks with broken skin on my hands. I've bought some
shoulder length gloves online, but I am nervous at the thought of
getting
infected. I noticed a spot on my hand a few days ago (before I knew of
Mycobacteria) that went away in 24 hours. I have taken a photo of the
faded
site.
<I see this; and am relieved>
I include photos of the deceased gourami, the still-living gourami and
my
hand.
Thanks in advance. I guess I know the chance of it being Mycobacteria is
slim, but I can't get it out of my head. Thanks for being there to help
with this kind of thing.
<Mycobacteria (the genus, condition) is not rare...>
Hope to hear from you soon,
Meg
<Do please search (the tool on every page) on WWM re this genus of
bacteria. Bob Fenner>
|
|
Fish Tuberculosis 7/13/14
I wanted to clarify something that has been bothering me for a while
now.
I believe, from reading posts and questions in various forums, that this
subject is a general cause for concern, but the bottom-line is never
truly addressed. As a laboratory professional, more specifically, a
microbiologist, the topic of "fish tuberculosis" has naturally piqued my
interest. Perhaps it's an unfortunate coincidence that the
Mycobacterial disease in fish was coined "tuberculosis", although the
actual microorganism that causes the disease is Mycobacterium marinum.
The microorganism that causes the dreaded tuberculosis (the pulmonary
disease) in humans is Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
<Yes and yes, and yes>
It is true that M. marinum can cause disease in humans, so I believe
care should be taken, especially if a person is immunocompromised or has
cuts or broken skin on their hands or arms. Usually, the infections are
opportunistic and are skin-related diseases (granulomas). The pathogen
that causes "fish tuberculosis" in fish does not cause tuberculosis, the
pulmonary disease, in humans.
<Indeed; this is so>
I hope I haven't confused the situation more...in proof-reading I had to
stop and think a second. Anyway, I don't want to downplay the dangers of
M. marinum as the pathology it may cause in humans is nothing to ignore.
I just wanted to clarify that "fish tuberculosis" is not the same as TB
in humans.
<Again; Stan Sniezsko was one of the first to be credited with this...
some sixty years back>
I also wanted to give a great big "Thank You" to all of you who help all
of us on a daily basis! Your knowledge and experience benefit us all so
much (well, I can only speak for myself...). Thanks!!
Kim
<I thank you for your efforts here, and your kind, encouraging words.
Bob Fenner, common progenitor of WWM>
Re: Stocking question for tank with Mycobacteria 9/20/12
Hi Rick,
<Carrie>
Thanks so much for your help. Yikes. I am in for a long haul, eh? Okay,
I don't think it's feasible to move the inhabitants of the big tank and
break it all down, so I am going to do the best I can. I have a couple
of questions about the treatment protocol you suggest:
<It depends. Are any animals sick right now?>
Preliminarily, is it worth trying just a UV sterilizer first to avoid
the more drastic measures of medicating and replacing all media? If the
answer is "no," then my other questions are:
<Depends again. Are any animals currently sick? When was the last death?
the UV sterilizer is kind of a finishing touch, not a first line of
defense. Shouldn't really need it at all, I just like the additional
step.
They are not cheap pieces of equipment.>
1) What antibiotic would you recommend I use? (keeping in mind the Kuhli
loach)
<I'd start with erythromycin or tetracycline, whichever you can find for
cheaper. I urge you to temporarily relocating the loach during
treatment, even if you have to get a Goodwill tank or borrow a tank.>
2) What would the order of treatment be (in other words, which comes
first -- UV Sterilizer, filter media change, antibiotics)?
<All at once. I'd change the filter media after a major water change,
add the antibiotics per directions and run. You're going to need a large
quantity of antibiotic, that's the real disadvantage of treating in your
display tank. Don't forget to remove any activated carbon in the filter
path. Then, once everything else is running, add the optional UV
sterilizer.>
3) Do you recommend a particular UV sterilizer?
<I don't have a preference. Get something on clearance if you can find
one at Petco or PetSmart.>
4) Obviously, I am going to destroy my biological filter with all of
this.
How should I deal with that during treatment?
<Not necessarily, or not completely. If you have ornaments and gravel
there will be some bacteria there to seed a new cycle. To prevent
ammonia spikes, you might get some empty filter bags at PetSmart (like
99c each) and a box of ammo chips. Put a scoop of ammo chips into the
filter bag and put that into the filter path. Most filters have space
for it. Ammo chips are useful for this sort of temporary situation where
water changes mid-treatment aren't necessarily the best idea. It's one
of the few legitimate uses for ammo chips in my opinion. Test for
ammonia daily.>
Thanks again. I know I made a huge mistake not quarantining.
<The most common mistake, even amongst experienced aquarists. My
quarantine tanks somehow keep ending up with permanent residents.>
My experience should serve as a cautionary tale. I would have avoided a
lot of heartache if I had simply followed best practices.
<Prevention is far easier and a lot cheaper than cure.>
Carrie
<Rick>
Re: Stocking question for tank with Mycobacteria 9/20/12
I know I am probably testing your patience,
<Back and forth is fully expected for a problem like this.>
but if I could get one last clarification it would make me feel much
better. I get so nervous before doing major stuff to the tank, I always
fear I will make a huge mistake and kill everyone.
<Understandable. Sometimes it happens despite doing everything right. If
that happens, use it as an opportunity and a learning experience.>
The last death was yesterday. No one is sick right now. Does you
still recommend the antibiotics, new media, uv sterilizer trio?
<At this time, I would just change the filter media, do a major water
change, and monitor the tank. At the very first indication of illness,
start the antibiotic treatment. If you do have a UV sterilizer,
you can put it in now and leave it in for several weeks, even if there
are no obvious illnesses.. I don't know if the cost justifies buying a
UV sterilizer just for this, but they are nice to have available as an
option.
I store mine in the cabinet 99% of the time, but I did defeat a
lingering string of mysterious illnesses in my 46 gallon tank
simply by changing filter media and running UV for 3 or 4 weeks.>
Also, I have a 10-gallon QT set up for future new arrivals that I could
put the loach in, however, I cycled it using filter media from the big
tank.
Should I treat the QT first, change the filter media in it and then put
the loach there while I treat the big tank, or is the risk not so great
that it makes a difference?
<If you do the above suggestions, then you may not need to move anyone.
If you do have another illness in the big tank, then I would move the
loach out and just monitor that tank also. Just be ready to act
quickly if you see signs of illness on any of the fish.>
Again, thank you so much. I will be making another donation to
your wonderful site.
<Thanks!>
Have a great weekend.
<Good luck>
Carrie
<Rick>
Re: Stocking question for tank with Mycobacteria 9/20/12
Thank you again. I will update you in a few weeks.
Carrie
<Good luck - Rick>
Stocking question for tank with Mycobacteria 9/20/12
Happy autumn my wet web friends!
<Still have another day of summer.>
Thank you as always for the wealth of information on your site. It is
the only Internet resource I consult.
<Lots of good stuff here, for sure.>
My 72 gallon bowfront has been up and running for 7 months. I was a
complete novice and utter fool when I got this tank, and did not
quarantine new livestock. I also purchased 9 platies from a big box
store soon after setting up the tank. Five died within a few weeks from
what I believe was/is Mycobacteria. The ones that survived were doing
okay, and had a number of fry that also survived, but a pattern soon
developed where one of the males would start harassing one of the
females, and a few days later, she would develop Mycobacteria symptoms
and die.
<What symptoms? Mycobacteria (aka fish tuberculosis) gets blamed for a
lot of things that are actually caused by something else. It's
fortunately somewhat rare. Please describe the symptoms and why you
believe it's Mycobacteria.>
My belief is that when the fish was healthy, she could fend off the
Mycobacteria, but as soon as she got stressed, it "got" her.
<Not uncommon. There's definitely a lingering problem of some kind in
your tank.
At this point, only 1 of the original 9 is still alive, and 7 fry have
reached maturity. I have 2 males and 6 females.
<This already is a good M/F ratio for livebearers, but regardless, I
would not add any fish until you understand what's going on and correct
it.>
I would like to get a few more females to spread the love, so to speak,
and have found a LFS with good husbandry practices, but is doing so
merely a death sentence for the new additions?
<Possibly, unless you correct the problem first.>
I have read on your site that Mycobacteria is present in most all
aquariums, but also read that a tank with a Mycobacteria outbreak should
be broken down and bleached in order to avoid a recurrence.
<Probably a little of everything is in every tank. Again, why do you
think this is Mycobacteria?>
So, can I in good conscience add platies?
<Fix the problem first.>
Would Endler's be a better choice (and would the platy males be
interested in them)?
<Anything you add will be at risk. Platy males might be interested in
Endler's females if they can't find a female platy.>
Or should I avoid livebearers all together?
<Livebearers are great fishes, so I would never tell anyone to give up
on them. That said, tell me about your water parameters, especially
temperature, hardness and pH. Livebearers are hard and alkaline water
fishes. If you have soft water, there are other steps you should take
for the health of your fish.>
Thank you for sharing your expertise.
<Welcome. - Rick>
Carrie
Re: Stocking question for tank with Mycobacteria 9/20/12
Good morning,
<Carrie>
I am sorry that I didn't give you the necessary information in my first
email. I have read so many FAQs I should have known better! The first
few weeks I had the tank there were some water quality issues, including
an ammonia and nitrite spike, because I didn't know about cycling. Since
then (the last 6 months), ammonia=0, nitrite=0, nitrate= between 10 and
20.
Also, it was at 77 degrees, 7.4 ph, KH=3, GH=6. When I began researching
on WetWeb, I realized the platies need harder, alkaline water, so I
began adding Neale's Rift Valley Cichlid mix (Epsom salt, marine salt,
and baking soda) until now the KH=5, GH=between 200 and 220 ppm or
between 11 and 12 gH degrees, Ph=7.6. The temp is set at 76.5, but
during the summer months I couldn't keep it below 78 or 79. I do a 25%
water change every week to 10 days.
<All good. After the crisis is resolved, you might experiment with using
crushed coral in the filter path to see if you can get a more passive
way of increasing the hardness and pH. Not your priority right now.>
In addition to the platies, the tank has zebra danios, neon tetras, a
harlequin Rasbora, a Kuhli loach, and a big Pleco. It is for them that I
don't go harder on the water. They seem largely unaffected by the
problem, with the exception of two Rasboras, which I will explain. The
"post-mortem" on the platies is as follows:
<I see.>
Platy #1 -- died within three days of entering the tank. Crashed on
bottom for one night, localized swelling on one side with small amount
of "white fuzz" on scales.
<By crashed on bottom, I assume you mean sleeping? White fuzz sounds
like a fungus. Given the month between this and the next fish, it might
be unrelated.>
Platy #2 -- A month after tank setup, crashed on bottom of tank, fins
clamped, flashing. A few days later, internal red "blotch" visible. The
next day, localized swelling at site of red "blotch," swimming
erratically, laying on side, heavy breathing. Euthanized (using clove
oil).
<Possibly an infection of some kind.>
Platy #3 -- One day after platy #2 died, crashed on bottom, flashing,
fin clamping. Died days later.
Platy #4 -- One month later, hiding, crashed on bottom, "sickly" color,
day later dropsical. Died two days later.
Platy #5 -- Two months after platy #4, platy harassed by male for
several days. Started hiding, hanging at top for a few weeks. Stopped
eating for four days, became dropsical and died the next day.
Platy #6 -- Around same time, started hanging by filter for a few weeks.
Developed dropsy. Euthanized the next day (a week after #5).
Platy #7 -- Traditional "wasting away" became very skinny over the
course of a month. Eyes became "sunken." Turned up dead in tank one
morning, two weeks after #6.
Platy #8 -- A month later, harassed by male for few weeks. Started
hiding more. Developed slight localized swelling on one side and eyes
appeared slightly "sunken." Began swimming erratically, crashed on
bottom, laying on side, heavy breathing. Euthanized. As I said, the only
other fatalities were two Rasboras. One had a large lesion develop on
his side and he got quite skinny before he died. The other had a large
white lump appear under the skin near his tail. He developed fin rot and
died despite antibiotic treatment in a hospital tank.
<Despite the failed antibiotic treatment, it still sounds like a
bacterial infection to me.>
I have concluded that this is some sort of Mycobacteria because it
appears to affect only the platies, and, honestly, after hours of
research I don't know what else it could possibly be.
<Would eventually impact all residents. Likely a gram-negative
infection.>
I am completely open to suggestions as I very much want to correct the
problem. All of these platies came from a store where, in my visits
since, I have seen many fish with clamped fins, dead fish left in tanks,
and other indicia of poor fishkeeping. Also, I am quite sure they were
farmed platies, so they may be genetically weak as well.
<Well, almost certainly they were farmed. But chances are it's some kind
of gram negative bacteria. Mycobacterial infections are somewhat rare
See this article. Discussion of Mycobacteria can be found but searching
the document for "tuber" as in tuberculosis. The entire article is worth
reading.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_6/volume_6_2/mycobactera.htm>
I very much appreciate any and all thoughts you might have. I am still
trying to make up for initial mistakes, and want to make a healthy tank
for all inhabitants. Thank you again. Enjoy the last day of summer!
<First mistake you made as a newbie was not quarantining your animals
before putting them into the main tank. Too late for that now. Ideally
you would get a culture of the bacteria to get a positive identification
whether it's Mycobacteria or something else. Failing that, the odds
still are on a gram negative, not a gram positive like Mycobacteria. So,
if you can't do a culture, then at this stage, I think you need to do a
thorough antibiotic treatment for gram-negative bacteria in the tank (or
better yet, in a smaller volume quarantine tank and thoroughly clean the
large tank.)
With a lingering problem like this, you want to treat the fishes, you
want to get any lingering bacteria out of the water with major water
changes (preferably before you add the meds) and completely replace the
filter media, since the nasty bacteria can hide in there just as easily
as the beneficial bacteria. I bought myself a modest UV sterilizer that
I use in this sort of situation. I install it in the tank and leave it
running for several weeks. When I'm confident the situation is
corrected, I remove the UV sterilizer from the tank and store it. That
kills free bacteria in the water. You also want to use medicated food if
possible.
I would assume this is not Mycobacteria unless treatment for
gram-negative has no effect. In that case, fall back to the Mycobacteria
theory, but recognize that it's very difficult to treat. (See the
article I linked.)
One other thing: Make sure you are protecting yourself. Always wash your
hand with soap and water after working with your tank, and be especially
mindful about it in a situation like yours, where the tank is sick. If
there is indeed Mycobacteria in the tank, it can be transmitted to you.>
Carrie
<Rick>
Sequential Platy Sickness/Death --
Mycobacteria? 4/3/12
Good morning all,
<Carrie>
I wrote to you several weeks ago as a "newbie" who had
completely botched the transfer of a friend's 72-gallon tank.
Since then, I have learned more about water chemistry and fish behavior
from reading your website than I ever thought possible, so thank
you. Unfortunately, I am humbly seeking your advice once again,
but this time because after much research I am considering drastic
measures in an attempt to curb what I fear is an outbreak of
Mycobacteria infections in my platies.
<Ok>
Here are the relevant stats: 72-gallon tank, inhabitants are: 6 platies
(plus 2 platy fry), 9 zebra danios, 5 neon tetras, 2 harlequin
Rasboras, 1 common Pleco, and 1 kuhlii loach. The tank was
transferred from a friend's house to mine six weeks ago. As a
result of initial ignorance, we had a mini-cycle and a nitrite spike
(to about .5) within the first week. Since then, ammonia and
nitrite have been zero, nitrate never higher than 20ppm, and ph
hovering around 7.4. Last week, I finally got my GH/KH testing
kit and discovered that despite the ph, my water is soft out of the tap
(KH = 3 degrees dh and GH = 5 degrees dh). I started adding
Neale's Rift Valley Salt Mix during water changes at about 1/4
strength to slowly harden the water and the tank is now at KH = 4 and
GH = 6. I know that is too soft for the Platies, my goal is KH of
5 and GH of 11 (I don't want to go too hard b/c of the neons and
the loach).
<Good>
We also had a mild Ich outbreak that was cured by keeping the heat at
86 degrees for two weeks (thanks, Bob F.!!). <Welcome> I
lowered the heat over a week and it has now been at 76 degrees for
several days. Okay, here is the problem. My platies are
getting sick and dying one by one. No one else seems
affected. I have scoured your site for hours and hours and the
best I can come up with is some sort of Mycobacteria infection.
The "post-mortem" is as follows:
Platy #1 -- died on 2/16 within three days of entering the tank.
Crashed on bottom for one night, localized swelling on one side with
small amount of "white fuzz" on scales.
Platy #2 -- crashed on bottom of tank, fins clamped, on 3/10, coming up
only to eat and occasionally flash. Three days later, internal
red "blotch" visible. The next day, localized swelling
at site of red "blotch," swimming erratically, then crashing
to bottom. Euthanized on 3/15.
Platy #3 -- crashed on bottom of tank on 3/14. No visible
symptoms except occasional flashing and fin clamping. Came up to
eat until 3/19 when she remained at bottom. Died hours later on
3/19. Never any visible problems.
Then, all was fine until 3/29 when another platy stopped eating and
started hanging listlessly at the top of the tank, then she started
hiding and occasionally flashing. She actually has a
"sickly" yellow color to her and has her fins clamped.
She now seems thinner than before (although it may just be the 4-day
fast). On Saturday, another platy started hanging out listlessly
at the top and sitting on the bottom, and yet another was swimming and
eating normally, but fin clamping and occasionally flashing.
The listless one is the only one that seems much thinner than the
others, although as of yesterday, he was still eating fine.
I have no idea what to do.
<Mmm, I wish... as too usual... that we/you could "go
back" a few weeks; treat the incoming Platies ahead of their
placement here... The possibilities of infectious and parasitic disease
are vast... One might treat the entire (present) system w/
Metronidazole and Prazi... or other vermifuge... in the hopes of
covering most all bases...>
I have a QT tank cycling, but it is not quite ready yet.
The remaining three platies, as of today, seem healthy. After
reading all the information on Mycobacteria infections, I am actually
considering pulling the three symptomatic ones and euthanizing
them. I could not bring myself to do this until I sought your
advice. I would hate to put down a fish that could be cured, but
I have not attempted to treat the tank yet as I cannot figure out what
to treat it for, and I have read your advice not to treat until you are
fairly certain with what you are dealing.
So, my biggest question is: does it sound like Mycobacteria to you
<Not able to tell w/ what is presented>
and, if so, should I euthanize the symptomatic fish in an effort
to save the healthy ones (and the two larger fry that are in the tank)?
If you think it is something else, is there any treatment you would
recommend?
<I would have you read re this species diseases:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/PlatyDis8.htm
and the linked files above... till you understand your options (from at
least our points of view)>
Thanks once again for sharing your expertise, and for taking the time
to read this lengthy email. You guys are the best. I am at
my wit's end, but nonetheless am trying my best to educate myself
and act rationally rather than haphazardly throwing chemicals in the
tank.
I hope life is treating you well.
Regards,
Carrie
<And you, Bob Fenner>
Re: Sequential Platy Sickness/Death -- Mycobacteria?
4/12/12
Good morning,
<Car>
It's me again. I took your suggestion and treated my main
tank with Metronidazole and Prazi. Last treatment was Thursday
4/5, 25% water change on Saturday, 4/7. The platies have almost
completely stopped flashing and appear happier. Thank you.
<Ah good>
I know that it is very difficult to figure out what exactly what is
going on in my tank and you have been very patient with my persistent
questions.
I am writing again because something happened yesterday that I think
may be a clue about the nature of the disease and I can't seem to
find anything about it anywhere.
I noticed four or five days ago that one of the (always
healthy-looking) platies had a spot on her head that looked like she
may have scraped it against something. The scales looked a little
translucent and indented if that makes sense. Yesterday, that
spot had turned black. Like a black patch or smudge.
<A healing site>
The patch is not raised or bumpy, it is flat with the skin, and
does not appear fuzzy. She is acting and eating completely normally and
appears pregnant (I can see the black eyes of the fry in her
belly).
When I saw this, I remembered that the last two platies who died had
similar areas of black on their backs, although not as
pronounced. Only the tips of their scales in the area appeared
black. I noticed the change 10 days or so before they sickened
and died. This does not sound consistent with any of the platy
disease symptoms I could find discussed in the FAQs.
My little 10-gallon tank is finally cycled and ready, so I can pull the
affected platy and treat her separately. Does the black patch
give you any other idea what might be happening?
<I think this is what you speculate. A trauma>
If not, is it worth treating her with a wide spectrum
antibiotic? Is it something that might heal on its own?
<The latter>
Thank you again for continually answering my questions. I made
another donation to your site this morning. It is something I
have been meaning to do for weeks because you have been such a help to
me. I wish I had some useful skill to offer in kind, but, alas, I
am a lawyer, so I do not.
<We're all doing what we can>
Regards,
Carrie
<And you,
BobF>
Re Fish are getting better...? Lost...
Mycobacteria f' 3/4/12
Just a little update on the fish and how they're doing.
They've gotten so much better, and they no longer seem
panicked or stressed. I do have one more little problem..
The golden female platy in my tank has become very, very thin,
and her spine is starting to curve strangely.
<Hmm… do suspect Mycobacteria infection… very common among
farmed livebearers (including Platies but especially Guppies).
Essentially untreatable; would recommend at least isolating, else
euthanising.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_6/volume_6_2/mycobactera.htm
http://wetwebmedia.com/euthanasia.htm
To some degree Mycobacteria infections are
environmentally-triggered, but that said, the quality of farmed
livebearers (and a few other groups of fish) is so low that these
bacteria are especially likely to become a problem.>
She also has developed little black speckles all over her body,
all of them no bigger than a fleck of pepper. She shows no
signs of illness, she's eating properly, nothing wrong with
her digestion, but it still worries me. (The angelfish also
has very tiny flecks of black on the bases of its ventral fins,
but I'm pretty sure they've always been there, since
she's white with black patches/spots)
<Yes.>
My little sister recently purchased four neon tetra and a fancy
guppy for my tank, so to spare her feelings, I had to keep them
(and the fact that she threw away the receipt..) Despite the
addition of the fish, the ammonia stays at zero, nitrites at
zero, and the nitrates at 10-15 ppm. I also got a big piece
of Mopani, and I soaked it for five days in a separate container,
but it leached more tannins into the water when I put it in the
tank.
<And will do, for months if not years. Do check the pH;
livebearers mustn't be exposed to pH below 7, so it's
important to ensure at least moderately hard and alkaline
conditions to keep the pH in the 7-8 range.>
So there are two possibilities for the platy to have the black
flecks: contraction of disease from the guppy and tetra, or
something from the driftwood's tannins.
<Or a third possibility, that "post hoc, ergo propter
hoc" isn't true, and the Platy got sick at a time purely
coincident with the arrival of the new fish.>
All of the fish are still doing fine, but I'm just a little
worried. The black specks do not protrude or intrude on the
body, so it looks like part of her coloration. She is a
panda platy, but she is mutated, so she's completely yellow
instead of both yellow and black. She originally had little
flecks of black around her tail area, but I'm not sure if her
coloring is just coming in a little more, or if it's
something else, like a parasitic or bacterial disease.
There's also the fact that she looks anorexic, and her body
is starting to curve a little bit, her back arching up more and
her tail curving down. Do you think she could have a disease
that's making her so thin and curving her spine?
<See above, and the linked articles.>
Should I be feeding her any special foods?
<Platies are herbivores, as are Guppies, so a Spirulina-based
flake is recommended.>
I feed them all Ocean Nutrition: formula two flakes, which has a
lot of protein and vitamins for the fish, and the only one
that's getting fat off of this stuff is the baby platy.
The momma is starting to get a little bit bigger, but I don't
know if that's because I'm feeding her a little more or
because her back is starting to arch more.
All of the other fish are fine, except that the male guppy loves
to watch himself go up and down the glass every other hour, and
they're all eating fine. I'm cleaning the tank more often
to keep algae from building up, keeping the nitrates lower,
etc. I'll have them in a bigger 30 gallon tank by the
end of this spring, so I'll just have to work harder on this
tank until then.
If you could reply back, that would be great :)
Thanks again, Jenny.
<Most welcome. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Fish are getting better…? (RMF, photos consistent with
Mycobacteria?)<<Could be>>
3/4/12
Thank you for the reply.
<Welcome.>
I've read both of the links, and I now realize that the
infection may not be treatable, but if I were to try and treat
her, what medication should I use?
< Mycobacteria? Not really worth medicating, if it is
this.>
There should be two pictures attached, but I don't know if
they will show up. In the first picture, the black specks
didn't show up very well, but you could see that her tail is
slightly curving downwards and her back is arched more than
usual. You could also see that she's very. very thin.
The second picture kind of shows the black speckled area near her
tail which has always been there, but the new specks that have
appeared look like the specks in that area, so again, it could be
part of her coloration.
<The black specks could be anything. "Black Spot" in
pond fish is a parasitic infection, and when it happens in
aquarium fish, generally clears up by itself because the parasite
can't complete its life cycle in aquaria.
Black patches on a fish are more likely to be bacterial
infection, dead tissue, defective colouration cells in the skin
-- a variety of things.
What makes me think this is Mycobacteria is the deformity and
thinness of the fish, entirely consistent with Mycobacteria
infections of livebearers.>
I forgot to mention this, but she started getting thin a little
while ago, long before we got the new fish and the Mopani wood,
so that excludes the possibilities of the new fish or the wood
contracting the disease. I just wasn't very worried then
because she was still eating, and she seemed perfectly fine other
than that she was starting to get thin. But when her spine
started to curve like that, I got a little worried. I probably
should have emailed sooner.
But she seems to be getting better, eating a little more than she
used to and grouping together with her tank mates more, looking a
little bit bigger than she was before.
<Since Mycobacteria are opportunistic, it is possible for fish
to get better under their own steam. Rare, but possible. Treating
is difficult.
Mycobacteria are considered to be Gram-positive bacterium from
the perspective of medication, so an antibiotic that treats
Gram-positive bacteria, such as Maracyn, as opposed to a
Gram-negative antibiotic like Maracyn 2, is the way to go, and if
the fish is feeding, may help the fish's own immune system
pull the fish through.>
I read in that first link that you can treat the fish three ways:
through immersion, feeding orally, or injection. It seems
that oral would be the easiest way to treat, since she's
gulping down food just as well as the others, but I wouldn't
know how to feed her the food with the medicine. I could do it
one of the mentioned ways, food mixed in with the jello, but
again, I don't know which medication to use. (are any of the
medicines listed on that first forum oral medications, or can be
used for food?) In the end, I'd probably have to
euthanize her, but I at least want to try to help her: she's
a very nice tank mate to have and she has a very good
temperament.
<Do refer to the instructions on the antibiotic used.>
And thank you for the links, and I'm sure they'll be very
helpful to me.
I'll try to set up a separate tank for her, but I don't
have anything over 1 or 1.5 gallons. Maybe I can get a bare 5
gallon for her, and I'll need to buy a new filter to go with
it. I also mentioned getting a 30 gallon at the
end of this spring, so this new tank will be disease free. :)
<Antibiotics can be "hard" on biological filters --
after all, the things do the filtration are bacteria, and
you're treating with a bacteria-killed chemical! So use of
zeolite instead of a biological filter, plus regular (ideally,
daily) water changes will help.>
Thanks, Jenny
<Cheers Neale.
|
Re: Fish are getting
better…? 3/6/12
Actually, just one more really quick question: can you use
medicine for immersion in food instead of putting it in the
water? <If you're a vet and know how to dose
according to body mass. Otherwise, no, not if the medicine
doesn't come with instructions for doing this.>
I'm going to set up a separate 2.5 gallon, using water from
the tank to avoid any more stress from uncycled water, and have
her in there for a little while, feed her the food, then put her
back in the main tank, just to avoid any mess-ups with the water
quality in the main tank. I went to the LFS, and they
didn't have any five gallons, just 15 and up or 2.5 and
below.
If I were to feed her the medicine, I will use the gelatin
method, blending the food with the medicine and some water,
mixing in some gelatin and freezing it. Then I can give her the
recommended dose on the box.
-Jenny
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Fish death 3/30/12
Well, it's very sad, but I had to euthanize the fish.
<Too bad.>
I ordered the medicine (can't remember the name off the top
of my head..)
It ended up coming a day late, and my fish was completely
degraded, wouldn't even swim up for food. But
she's been put out of her suffering, and since the
suspected fish TB is still in my aquarium,
I'll be able to use the medicine for any future
confrontations with the disease.
<I see.>
I had a little mix up with the angel and the younger platy,
though. I had come home from my classes and all of the fish
seemed okay, I fed them, and left. But I came up about an hour
later and I found (for the platy's size) a rather large
lesion a few centimeters behind the right eye. I'm
surprised it didn't go for the guppy or any of the neon tetra
first, though. The wound looked just about the same size as
the angel's mouth, so I guess we have a culprit here.
<Can be. Angels eat small fish, including Neons. They
don't, however, normally take pot-shots at fish they
can't swallow whole. So keep an open mind here, and don't
place blame on the Angel without considering alternative
issues.>
Now I'm going to need a tank divider.... I'm
looking online for a couple of different antibiotics for the
platy, but I saw one called "Bio-bandage," using
a gel-based formula to heal open wounds and abrasions. (too bad
it's ten dollars for a little 6 oz. bottle..)
<Pretty pointless, but if you want to spend the money go
ahead. Otherwise, if water quality is excellent (zero ammonia and
nitrite) and you do 10-20% water changes every day or two, fish
with open wounds will heal quickly, within a week or so.>
There's no sign of stress or any fungus growing on the wound,
but I don't really want to waste any time that I could be
using to heal the wound.
I'll look into this "bio-bandage" stuff, but
I'll need some more options.
Thanks for all of your help, though. I'm sure that the
platy will be fine, but I'll just have to wait and see.
-Jenny
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Fish death 3/31/12
Well, there could have been some alternative causes, but it
looked like the angel had gotten a bit agitated
lately, probably because I stopped feeding her as much food as I
used to. I added some Melafix,
<Not a medication I recommend once a fish is actually infected
with something; better used as a preventative when healthy fish
are physically damaged, e.g., by fighting.>
hoping it could help keep any rotting or fungus away, and whether
it was the Melafix or not, the fish seems to be getting better
already! :)
<Good.>
I'm thinking it was partially the neon tetras, too, because
they were lightly picking at her before I separated the injured
fish from the rest. I guess they kind of "cleaned" her
of the dead/dying tissue, so that could have helped prevent any
rotting on the wound. (hoping that it wasn't painful for the
poor fish..) I've bought a tank divider to separate them
while the fish heals, fits snugly so none of the other fish,
especially the angelfish, can get to her.
Thanks for the reply, hope you have a nice day :)
-Jenny
<Glad to help, and have a nice day yourself! Cheers,
Neale.>
|
Sick gouramis! Please help?
10/31/11
Hi, I have searched Google and your website and can't seem to
find anyone who has had the same symptoms as my two gouramis
currently have. We have a 250 litre tank with 2 gouramis, 5
mollies, 2 silver sharks and 1 angel fish. The water levels are
all fine.
<Meaning what? Mollies require water that is hard and
alkaline, and ideally brackish; such conditions are the opposite
of what Gouramis want. It's hard to create conditions that
both species enjoy.>
We have recently treated the tank for Ich (approx 3 weeks ago)
and now all the other fish seem fine, except the gouramis. Our
rainbow fish died today and when we removed it from the tank we
found that the gouramis had been hiding in the plants (plastic).
When we disturbed them by removing the rainbow fish they came out
and we noticed a White patch on one of them and both of them
appear to have a rotting top fin and swelling on their heads.
<Not good. Does sound like Mycobacteria
infection. Quite common with gouramis, especially the
small Colisa species (e.g., Dwarf Gouramis) and the hybrids based
on them (Sunset Gouramis, Red Robin Gouramis, etc.).>
They seem to be clamping their side fins too.
<Indeed; a common trait among sickly fish.>
I can't see any problems with and of the other fish. I
haven't come across this before but they really don't
look well. I have attached a picture below.
<Does look like a bacterial infection. But the cause? Hard to
say.>
The big White area is on the fish behind and is quite blurred but
you can clearly see the White areas on the one at the front. This
also looks as if the skin is shedding/peeling. Do you have any
idea what this could be?
<Bacterial for sure. Antibiotic may help; Mycobacteria are
gram-positive, Finrot bacteria typically gram-positive, so choose
accordingly. Ideally, choose one or two antibiotics that allow
you to treat both sorts of bacteria at the same time.>
Thanks in advance for any help you can offer. Laura
<Cheers, Neale.>
|
|
Danio with fish TB or merely bad water quality or old
age? 9/16/11
Hi,
first of all, Id like to thank you guys for running this website its
helped me out many times and its always my first stop when there is
something wrong with my fish and I need an answer.
<Thanks for the kind words.>
I have a tropical fish tank with a mix of loaches, Platies, a Cory, and
four (or, as of yesterday, three) zebra Danios. I feed them mainly with
fish flakes and some additional sinking food for the loaches. I cant
recall how big the tank is, but from previous calculations I know that
it isnt overstocked (since I had a few deaths recently its rather a bit
under-stocked, but more of that later). As for food occasionally they
get bloodworms or daphnia but they havent had much variety recently
because we were on hold for a few weeks and its easier for the fish
feeder to just give the flakes.
<Sounds fine. Good quality flakes can make an adequate staple,
though offering occasional live or wet-frozen foods really can help
with constipation problems.>
Now, to give you the back-story. I have to admit that in recent months
Ive been a very bad fish keeper indeed. I am pregnant and the constant
exhaustion and nausea has thrown me for a bit of a loop, meaning that
Ive been less than diligent with cleaning out the tank. Add to that
that every time I clean it I seem to have to flush a fish or two
afterwards (is it the shock of all that clean water?) and tank
maintenance hasnt looked too appealing recently and the tank has on
occasion looked pretty bad.
<I see.>
Through this neglect I have lost a few fish recently, but there was
nothing in particular about those deaths that alerted me to anything
like an illness fish would stop eating, keep themselves separate, and
eventually die. There were no sores, discolouration or anything else
odd. Losses were varied an aquatic frog, a couple of guppies, a Cory,
and some Platies, but with many weeks in between). Its bad, I know, and
I feel rather guilty, but I attributed it to the bad water quality and
tank hygiene rather than any disease.
Now the Danio A while back (at least a month or so ago) he developed a
curved spine. Looked really odd, like he had a hunchback or something
like that. Initially this didnt seem to bother him much at all, but
during the past week or so he got slower and stopped swimming around
much. Eventually I found him at the bottom of the tank, kind of
crumpled up he looked almost paralysed, his spinal deformity looked
that bad. He wasnt moving and I thought he was dead, but when touched
he roused himself and swam off. The next morning I found him floating
at the top of the tank, dead, but get this by the time I got round to
fishing him out (had to get kids off to school, etc, so it was a couple
of hours later), he was gone! This was two days ago and Ive done two
water changes since and I havent found him. Perhaps he was eaten?!
Granted, I have a lot of plants in there, but I did check through them
and nothing!
<Could be a combination of things. Crooked spines typically appear
either at birth if genetic or in older fish as a result of
environmental stress and/or poor diet. Simply being old shouldn't
cause this problem, but it might I suppose.>
Since he died in such an odd way, today I sat down to Google the
hunchback syndrome and after reading about Fish TB for a couple of
hours I am more than a little freaked-out, in particular as it can be
passed to humans. As I said, I cleaned the tank twice in the past two
days and I did discover a little wound (cuticle) on my hand, so that
wound was definitely in contact with the water! In particular as I am
pregnant Im rather worried that I may have contracted something... Do
you think it is likely the Danio died of Fish TB? He didnt appear to
have any sores, etc. that I could detect, but then, that appears to be
optional. He was quite big and I think I must have had him for at least
1.5 years so perhaps it was just old age? Or it was the dismal
conditions that the tank was in for a while? I have today discovered
that another of the remaining Danios has a slightly curved spine,
although not nearly as bad as the one that died. He is also a rather
large (so Im guessing one of the older) Danios. So far he seems fine
otherwise.
What is your opinion? Fish TB? Old age? Bad water and nutrition? Or
some other weird and not so wonderful fish problem? And should I go to
the doc to get this TB thing checked out?!
<If the aquarium is otherwise fine, and the fish all seem healthy
now, I wouldn't worry. The Mycobacteria infection aquarists call
Fish TB (probably erroneously) is likely latent in most tanks anyway,
but provided the fish are healthy and well cared for, there's no
particular reason to worry about it. Nonetheless, I would wait a good 6
weeks before adding any more fish. And if finding the time to maintain
the tank is likely to be hard, then understocking the tank will really
be a good idea.>
Any help would be much appreciated. Thank you!!
Best regards,
Iris
<Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
MB and Panda Platy 2/21/11
Dear Crew
<Patrick>
I've emailed your fantastic team over this sick fish in the past.
Although I've successfully halted most problems my female Panda
Platy over the past few weeks, it appears that the fish TB
(Mycobacterium) is taking hold now.
<?... what evidence?>
She developed fin rot and has stopped eating. I put her into a hospital
tank where I do a twice daily water change and put it some liquid
vitamins.
I treated the fin rot with some salt and JBL Ektol Fluid for two days
and the rot appears to have stopped. I gave her two days free from meds
and she appeared to be swimming fine albeit with a wobble now. She
hasn't eaten for a week and is now looking painfully thin. Is it
now time to put her out of her misery with some clove oil?
<I would not give up...>
She appears to be happily swimming about so I don't want to deny
her a few last days if you think she is not in pain. However, if you
think that this is unkind, please tell me and I will perform the
euthanasia as soon as.
Finally, will I need to strip down all my tanks?
<I would not do this either>
She has been in all of them for one reason or another. The other fish
all appear fine and I have read that there could be up to 25% of all
fish sold commercially with TB. Any advice?
<To stay the course... cleaning these tanks and just replacing the
supposedly infected fishes won't cure or stop
Mycobacteriosis>
Thanks so much once again,
Pat
<Mmm, have you read here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_6/volume_6_2/mycobactera.htm
and the linked files (Related...) above? Bob Fenner>
Re: MB and Panda Platy 2/21/11
Dear Bob
<Pat>
Thank you so much for responding.
<Certainly welcome>
The evidence for the fish MB is as follows for me. I've had my
tanks now for nearly a year. The shop that sold me my first batch of
Panda Platy's finally admitted they had something wrong with the
fish/tanks when I complained after they kept dying. They all wasted
away pretty fast.
<There are quite a few possible etiologies/causes for this>
The only one to survive was one Panda Platy despite having a curved
spine.
About seven months down the road, she started to show a lump and
strange flaking on her tail (almost like dropsy). After communications
with Neale (he wasn't sure from the pictures I sent), I decided to
try a 30mins bath in JBL Furanol 2 antibiotic and it appeared to help.
She did well in the main tank again for a few weeks but then became shy
and stopped keeping food in. I also noticed she had developed fin rot
and was looking painfully thin. This is when I moved her to a hospital
tank and treated her with JBL Ektol Fluid. The fin rot appears to have
stopped but she just now wobbles at the bottom of the tank and appears
very very thin and weak.
I have indeed read the page you suggested to me, thank you. I
understand that the JBL Furanol 2 does not treat MB. Is there anything
else I can do?
The param.s in the other tanks are ok and detailed below:
Ammonia 0ppm
Nitrite 0ppm
Nitrate 10ppm
PH - 8.2 (tap water is 7.6 but I cannot get the PH down in the tanks
despite bog wood added)
Phosphates 2mg/L (I know this is high, but the tap water is the
same)
Water Hardness (hard - 16 degrees?)
<Is okay>
The water in the hospital tank is being changed almost twice a day
although due to her lack of eating, the ammonia and nitrate levels are
pretty much zero.
What should I do?
<If it were me, mine; nothing treatment wise>
Thanks so much!
Dr Patrick Nunn
<Do you have a sufficiently high-powered microscope, or access to
one/folks who know how to use? Mycobacteria are easily discerned...
gram neg., non-motile rods... BobF>
Re: MB and Panda Platy 2/21/11
Dear Bob
<Hi Pat>
Once again, many thanks.
<As many welcomes>
I'm not sure whether I will be able to get it checked out via
microscope, I'll have a think on that one (I am a doctor of music,
not medicine unfortunately in this case).
Should I be able to tell from a water sample?
<No>
Or do I actually have to get a scraping from the fish (can't
imagine how on earth I would manage that!)
<Is actually easily done... but need proper light microscopy... And
not really worthwhile in view (as you've stated) of the commonplace
occurrence of Mycobacteria... Better (in this life period) to
"shoot for" good initial health livestock, optimized
environment, nutrition... and boosted resistance>
If I find anything, I'll come back to you.
cheers
Pat
<And you, BobF>
Re: MB and Panda Platy 2/21/11
Dear Bob
<Mr. Pat>
That's great. Thanks. I'll try and make Platy's life as
comfortable as possible as there appears to be not much more I can
do.
<Yes>
A quick question on tank maintenance if I may take one further minute
of your Sunday. My tanks are pretty heavily planted and I have a JBL
Manando substrata with some white sand that has since become rather
dirt coloured.
I try as much as I can to clean out fish waste with a battery
vacuum
<Better by far to just siphon the water and waste out and put it on
your plants, replace w/ new water>
but there always appears to be so much waste left behind (when I change
water it stirs up in the tank for a good hour). I've searched the
net for ages and found nothing much more than others advising not to
bother, the waste will act as a fertiliser for the plants.
<Mmm, most systems are too crowded, overfed for this...>
Is this correct or should I continue to get as much as I can out (along
with the snail shells etc.)
cheers
Dr Patrick Nunn
<Please read here: http://wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwh2ochgs.htm
and the linked FAQs file above. BobF>
Fish TB
(RMF, anything to add?)<<I don't care for spectator sports
period>> 10/4/10
Hello from the UK. I will try to keep this brief. Have a 720l
freshwater tank, which I intend converting to a marine FOWLR. Plan was
to give most of the fish to a mate, and sell the rest.
<OK.>
Was going to keep substrate (mix of pea and coral gravel),
<Wouldn't bother. Can't see the cost factor being
beneficial, and all the crud in the old gravel will just boost nitrate,
phosphate levels in the marine tank. Start with good quality, clean
sand of appropriate particle size for the fish and inverts being
kept.>
external filter (for chemical media and floss),
<Again, you may want to review this; assuming we're talking a
canister filter, invest in good quality mechanical filtration media
like Siporax or Eheim ceramic noodles. Live rock will be handling the
biological filtration, so what you want in the canister is something
you can whip out and rinse under a tap every few weeks.>
add new water and bring SG up to 1025. Leave for a week, then add 75kg
of live rock and leave to cycle for a month. After this slowly add
stock.
Unfortunately after a few deaths, diagnosis from a vet. Mycobacteriosis
(fish TB) and to euthanise all stock, which is sad as I have had some
of these fish for seven years.
<Indeed, sounds depressing.>
Anyway back to my question, do I have to do anything specific to rid my
system of this bacteria, or will the simple addition of salt sort it
out.
<Very, very difficult to say. The Mycobacterium species that affects
marine fish aren't usually the ones that effect freshwater fish,
but there is occasional crossover, as in the case with M. marinum.
Whether these are distinct strains as opposed to the same strain
adapting to both environments is hard to say. For what it's worth,
given you're starting from scratch, there's no reason not to
throw out everything you don't need,
and then use household bleach or hydrogen peroxide to sterilise
anything you want to keep. Of course, rinse anything bleached will need
thorough rinsing afterwards.>
Hoping your countries impending loss in the Ryder Cup does not affect
the advice you are going to give. Many thanks, Paul.
<Couldn't care less about golf. And my side won anyway. Cheers,
Neale.>
Re: Fish TB (Bob, thoughts on euthanising fish in tanks with
TB)<<At times expedient>> 10/4/10
Re fish TB- Hello again, from a citizen of the continent who now holds
the Ryder Cup.
<Well, okay. I'm English but don't really care about golf --
a good walk ruined, as someone once said.>
Thanks for the info, will chuck gravel and replace with sand. I'm
also checking out the media you mentioned. Was wondering at what
temperature these Mycobacterium perish at, and if there would be any
point in heating the empty tank up to and over this temp.
<No point at all. Bacteria tend to be very hardy, and the cost of
heating the water and running it that way for a few days would be
excessive. A common rule of thumb in microbiology is that boiling
bacteria for at least 15 minutes kills most types. I don't see that
being viable in a fish tank!>
A quick question on the grisly task of disposing of a tank full of what
looks like perfectly healthy fish.
<And may well be healthy. Mycobacteria infections are latent in most
tanks, but only affect fish that are weakened for one reason or
another. If the fish are asymptomatic, there's no reason to assume
that they'll become sick and die. They may well be, and remain, in
fine health. Do read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_6/volume_6_2/mycobactera.htm
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/euthanasia.htm
You said you'd had the diagnosis made by a vet; that being the
case, your vet is perhaps the best person to state whether the
remaining fish need to be destroyed.>
I intend using clove oil, unless you can advise me of a better
method.
Again thank you Paul.
<Cheers, Neale.>
TB? 6/26/09
Hello,
I've attached a photo ( sorry about the quality but I believe
it shows what I am talking about) of my Rasbora trilineata. I
have had him for 1 month and slowly I have noticed his spine in
the caudal region has become bent.
Until now I believed it to be a birth defect that merely became
more noticeable as he grew.
<Indeed. Well, it's untreatable but unlikely to spread, so
would remove/euthanise this fish, but otherwise not worry
over-much.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/euthanasia.htm
>
I have "trained" the fish to eat when I signal them so
I can observe them eat. For the past 3 days he has stopped eating
even though he comes when I signal, he does not eat. I have moved
him into a quarantine tank to isolate. He was in my 90 gallon
tank with 5 neon tetras and 2 other Rasbora trilineata. All added
without quarantine as they were held in the same tank together at
the store for me for one month while my tank fully finished off
cycling ( I don't add until Nitrates are low and or algae is
present).
Cycle was done using a fishless method with a grocery store
bought and rinsed shrimp in a rinsed stocking. I did not know
fish could carry TB until I came across a FAQ by Don and I am
alarmed by the symptoms similarities.
<Fish TB is actually extremely rare, particularly among
freshwater fish.
The vast majority of bacterial infections of fish are
opportunistic, meaning that they're caused by
otherwise-harmless bacteria in the aquarium that are *allowed* to
cause disease because the aquarist isn't doing something
right in terms of water quality, diet, or whatever.>
While his trunk does not appear to be swollen compared to the
others his sudden loss of appetite and elusiveness are setting
off alarms. If the most prudent plan of action would be to put
down the animals, what is the most humane way to do this and also
to dispose of the bodies without contaminating anything else. If
this does not seem to be TB what are my next steps. Ammonia and
Nitrite are 0 and Nitrate is 10 ppm. Lush bright green algae on
sides and back. I do 30 gallon water changes once a week.
Filtered with Aquaclear 110. The substrate is Eco-Complete plant
substrate one inch thick across entire bottom. Temp 76F pH 7. Two
Maxi-Jet 1200's for water movement. One bubble wand for
oxygen. No Co2 injection. For lighting I use Corallife 96 watt
6700k bulbs. Quarantine tank is a 12 gallon nano cube that has
been stripped down to have a sponge filter and is cycled.
<The tank sounds fine. In this case, I simply think you were
unlucky, and whether this fish has a birth defect, a viral
disease, or some type of obscure bacterial infection, I honestly
don't think the other fish are at major risk. So I'd
certainly euthanise him (if he's not eating, he's not
going to get better) and then simply observe the other fish to
see what happens.>
Long term plan for this tank is heavily planted without co2 only
using common low light plants. Any advice is welcome I work with
the public and can not risk carrying/having/spreading TB.
<While Fish TB certainly exists, it's very uncommon.
I'm not a medical practitioner, so if you need public health
advice, I have to recommend you consult a qualified MD or vet.
But in general, fish tanks are not a major health risk, hence
their wide use is hospitals, waiting rooms, shops, sushi bars and
the like.>
Thank you in advance.
<Cheers, Neale.>
|
|
Re:
TB? 6/26/09
Neale,
Thank you so much for your advice. I think I will take the fish to
a vet to be euthanized and possibly get them to run some tests on
it to make 100% sure.
<Hmm... would sooner you euthanised the fish yourself: I
wouldn't trust the average aquarium shop to make an effort to
euthanise the fish humanely; most simply feed sick fish to any
predatory fish or turtles they have in stock.>
Although I no longer believe TB is an issue I figure it can not
hurt to make certain. I feed TetraColor tropical flakes by Tetra
and have decided to include frozen bloodworms to mix up the
nutrition values.
<Good. While a good quality flake like Tetra Min should be
perfect, adding variety is always a good thing. I'd tend to
recommend against colour-enhancing foods as a staple; indeed,
unless you have red fish, they will have little/no impact on
colours at all, and they don't do anything that crustaceans
such as daphnia won't do just as well. Carotene is carotene,
wherever it comes from...>
While I have your ear I would like to run a short stock list to be
added no sooner then a month from now. Hopefully then I will be
sure there are no pathogens, odd chemistry or poor nutrition taking
place in this tank.
I want to add in this order.
3 Crossocheilus siamensis
3 (possibly more) Corydoras panda
5 Gasteropelecus sternicla
<All fine, though Gasteropelecus are flighty and prone to
throwing themselves at the hood if kept with boisterous fish or
tanks without floating plants.>
Do you think the TSAE will stress the hatchets out too much?
<Depends how deep the tank is; if the tank is something over 50
cm in depth, I'd expect that the two fish would barely meet,
since Crossocheilus tend to stay at the middle to lower levels. But
if the tank is very shallow, say 30 cm, then you might have
problems. Boosting the number of Hatchets would make a big positive
impact: they're a lot more reliable in swarms of ten or
more.>
My tank is covered with eggcrate but I still don't want them
freaking out.
<Floating plants help.>
I am unsure of what will come after but I believe I am pushing the
stocking limit of my tank. They will be added in family groups as
to keep the load on my quarantine tank low. Also how long should I
allow my quarantine tank to sit fallow before I can quarantine more
fish? In closing I have to thank all of you for the knowledge that
has accumulated on this site. Neale has helped me with other tanks
in the past that have absolutely flourished.
Another invaluable article on tap water preparation, storing and
polyvinyl has saved me oodles of money/livestock. I have even
earned a free True Siamese Algae eater through helping my LFS
separate their Flying Foxes, False Siamese Algae Eaters and their
True. Much of my success I owe to this site. I wish I could
remember all the authors of the various articles I have read that
have made me very skilled at aquatic husbandry.
<Thanks for your kind words!>
Also I would like to urge my fellow aquarist to get out there and
shop the local mom and pop fish stores. They do not seem to be
doing well with the economy, mega store and online competitors.
<All very true. But ultimately it does depend on the Mom &
Pop store being at least reasonably decent; too many of them had
dingy tanks, limited selections of fish, and questionable husbandry
practises. Competition is a good thing, and those family stores
that can meet the demands of modern aquarists can do rather well,
particularly if they gear themselves up to providing "value
added" services such as setting up tanks in offices and shops
(a real money earner!) or visit aquarists at their homes to help
with marine and jumbo freshwater tanks that can cause problems to
less experienced hobbyists.>
Thank you!
<Cheers, Neale.> |
Tuberculosis in a
Well-Maintained Tank 11-5-08 Hi Bob :-) This is Anna. <Hi
Anna, this isn't Bob, but Merritt today.> Before I start I
wanted to let you know that I've learned a lot from the WetWebMedia
site, especially regarding fish tank maintenance. I am a big fan
of partial water changes (up to 1/3 of a tank) which I perform every
single week. <That is quite a lot of water changes; you should cut
back on them due to the stress they are causing on your fish.> My
tank is freshwater, 35 gallon, with a score of live plants and just 15
fish - mostly tetras, 1 Pleco, and 3 albino Cory fish. There are no
real problems although this morning I noted that one tetra had a few
red wounds (?) along its nape region and dorsal fin. The wounds are
approx. of a size of a head of a needle. There are approx. 10 of
them. I studied Dr. Dieter Untergasser's "Handbook of
fish diseases" and concluded, based on content and pictures, that
my tetra may have tuberculosis or be affected by a type of Sporozoan.
Attached are some pictures of the fish under the mentioned conditions.
<The wounds do not look like tuberculosis, watch them to see if they
show more signs of tuberculosis, like the bending of the spin, fish
wasting, skeletal deformities or loss of scales and coloration .>
The description of either illness suggests that bad water condition be
a culprit. The ammonia level in my tank is 0.00, the pH is 7.2-7.4. I
run 2 Marineland filters and take a good care of my tank. This is why I
am a little confused... <Like I said, your tank may have great
conditions but constant water changes stress fish out which lessens
their immune system allowing for disease.> Anyway, I transferred the
infected tetra to a 5-gallon hospital tank. <Great move!> Will
you be able to shed little light as for the cause of my fish's
condition? Am I able to help that fish? What should I do? I would not
like to sacrifice it. I hope there is a cure... Besides, do you think
that my display tank is in danger? I just changed 50% of the water and
replaced all filter pads. Is there anything else I should and could
do? I will appreciate any insights. Your experience is extremely
valuable and needed :-). <It would be best to treat your sick tetra
for a protozoan infection due to the wounds resembling protozoan
infections other than tuberculosis. I would watch the other fish for
any signs of sickness and cut down on the water changes. If the
symptoms persist after you medicate for the protozoan, then
tuberculosis could be the culprit. Tuberculosis is of bacterial origin
and you will have to switch the medication. Watch yourself if the
symptoms for tuberculosis do develop because you can catch it from your
fish. Mainly persons of low immune systems are susceptible but, just be
careful. Here are some links about disease and medication that should
help you. http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fwfishmed
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/fwdistrbshtart.htms.htm and
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/woundbactf.htm> Thanks in advance for
your help. ANNA <You are welcome and please email updates! Merritt
A.>
Question re: TB, and Fin damage - 4/3/08 Good
day, First off I want to thank you all for this extremely
valuable resource for us fishkeepers and your time and knowledge-
You have saved a many of fish I assure you. Couple questions: In
my 100 gallon main tank I have 4 Bala sharks that are still
fairly young. The tank is cycled with Am-0 ,nitrite-0,
nitrate-10- There are lots of Amazon sword plants and a few other
plants I am not sure of. All except one of the Bala's have
either frayed or split fins but are otherwise very healthy and
growing fast. Should I be concerned or should I just keep a
watchful eye on them? The one with fins intact seems to have a
belly unlike the others so I don't know if they are
squabbling over "her " or what. Some of my other
inhabitants can be fin nippers so I realize that this is not the
only possibility. My next question involves Goldfish (a.k.a zebra
Danios) I went to my dads last night (not the best fishkeeper)
and I saw that his Goldfish was sort of floating vertically,
listlessly. Not only that but he has a definite "bump"
or hunched back (see attached pic, hopefully you can see it) I am
not sure of his water parameters but I snatched him, brought him
to my house and put him in my QT tank so my dad wouldn't
flush him. After researching I have concluded that it could be
either be TB or just old age (even though I don't think
he's more than a year old but one "expert" stated
that Danio's can get a hunch back just as they age (I
don't know how reliable they are) Well, immediately after
getting into my QT tank he has perked up and is swimming around
and everything...He "acts" like he is eating but I
honestly think he is just spitting it back out- its hard to say
for sure. Do you think it is indeed TB and if so, exactly how do
I disinfect my tank after he "succumbs" and what do you
recommend as an ideal method for Euthanization (I realize
everyone has their own opinions but I am looking for the easiest
for both me and the fishy) I am nervous about using bleach to
disinfect the tank because when I was a young'n I did and I
guess I didn't rinse well enough because it killed all of my
fish immediately :(- Lastly, (I know, sorry this is a lot) About
two weeks ago I had a big oops. In my QT tank (at the time had 5
Neons and one female Pregnant guppy) I was stupid and decided to
buy the cheapest heater there was. Well, little did I know there
was absolutely NO safety feature on this thing whatsoever. I
plugged it in and fell asleep woke up an hour later and the
thermometer read 115 F !!!... Amazingly only 2 of the Neons and
possibly the fry in "utero" didn't make it. In my
frenzy I decided to forgo the "gradual" temp change
rule and kept putting ice directly into the tank until it was
WNL. Well, the second the ice started melting the lifeless fish
that were laying on the bottom perked up and swam to the top to
get more so I couldn't deny them. ANYWAYS- My question here
is this: I know that this stress could very well open the doors
to many of illnesses and now 2 of the surviving Neons have white
areas on their body's that are opaque and completely block
the "neon" and all color. Is this "neon
tetra" disease or something else and how do I handle it? FYI
I will never buy such useless and dangerous equipment again- I
assure you. One more thing I promise....A month or so ago, I
emailed in with problems regarding Dwarf Gourami's- I was
told that it was probably DGD and it would be best to put them
down. I did lose 2 but on the third I decided to try something.
He had all the symptoms of DGD BUT the lesions. Well, I treated
with Parasite Clear for 4 days (it took two treatments to see
results, I thought he was dead many times) a few weeks later he
is better than he has ever been!! Has tons of energy and eats
like a pig. I just thought that this might be helpful and others
might be able to try this if they suspect DGD but want to try and
save their pets. Again, thank you all for all that you do and
please know that I (as I am sure others) are extremely grateful
for every second you devote to helping. Very Respectfully, Grace
question re: TB, and Fin damage - 4/3/08 Good day,
First off I want to thank you all for this extremely valuable
resource for us fishkeepers and your time and knowledge- You have
saved a many of fish I assure you. Couple questions: In my 100
gallon main tank I have 4 Bala sharks that are still fairly
young. The tank is cycled with Am-0 ,nitrite-0, nitrate-10- There
are lots of Amazon sword plants and a few other plants I am not
sure of. All except one of the Bala's have either frayed or
split fins but are otherwise very healthy and growing fast.
Should I be concerned or should I just keep a watchful eye on
them? <Yes, be worried. Either Finrot (caused by poor water
quality, regardless of what your test kits say) or physical
damage (fighting/fin-nipping). Treat with anti-Finrot medication,
e.g.. Maracyn or eSHa 2000, but not Melafix or "tonic
salt".> The one with fins intact seems to have a belly
unlike the others so I don't know if they are squabbling over
"her " or what. Some of my other inhabitants can be fin
nippers so I realize that this is not the only possibility.
<Remove the fin-nippers to another tank.> My next question
involves Goldfish (a.k.a zebra Danios) I went to my dads last
night (not the best fishkeeper) and I saw that his Goldfish was
sort of floating vertically, listlessly. Not only that but he has
a definite "bump" or hunched back (see attached pic,
hopefully you can see it) I am not sure of his water parameters
but I snatched him, brought him to my house and put him in my QT
tank so my dad wouldn't flush him. After researching I have
concluded that it could be either be TB or just old age (even
though I don't think he's more than a year old but one
"expert" stated that Danio's can get a hunch back
just as they age (I don't know how reliable they are) <One
year isn't "old" for a Danio. They easily live for
3+ years when properly cared for.> Well, immediately after
getting into my QT tank he has perked up and is swimming around
and everything...He "acts" like he is eating but I
honestly think he is just spitting it back out- its hard to say
for sure. Do you think it is indeed TB <Unlikely; quite rare
in freshwater fish. I'd simply feed him up and see how he
does. Nothing to lose. If he gets fatter and healthier, then
he'll be fine; if not, painlessly destroy.> and if so,
exactly how do I disinfect my tank after he "succumbs"
<Clean and air dry the hospital tank.> and what do you
recommend as an ideal method for Euthanization (I realize
everyone has their own opinions but I am looking for the easiest
for both me and the fishy) I am nervous about using bleach to
disinfect the tank because when I was a young'n I did and I
guess I didn't rinse well enough because it killed all of my
fish immediately :(- <See here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/euthanasiafaqs.htm > Lastly, (I
know, sorry this is a lot) About two weeks ago I had a big oops.
In my QT tank (at the time had 5 Neons and one female Pregnant
guppy) I was stupid and decided to buy the cheapest heater there
was. Well, little did I know there was absolutely NO safety
feature on this thing whatsoever. I plugged it in and fell asleep
woke up an hour later and the thermometer read 115 F !!!...
Amazingly only 2 of the Neons and possibly the fry in
"utero" didn't make it. In my frenzy I decided to
forgo the "gradual" temp change rule and kept putting
ice directly into the tank until it was WNL. Well, the second the
ice started melting the lifeless fish that were laying on the
bottom perked up and swam to the top to get more so I
couldn't deny them. ANYWAYS- My question here is this: I know
that this stress could very well open the doors to many of
illnesses and now 2 of the surviving Neons have white areas on
their body's that are opaque and completely block the
"neon" and all color. Is this "neon tetra"
disease or something else and how do I handle it? FYI I will
never buy such useless and dangerous equipment again- I assure
you. <Observe for a while before deciding this is Neon Tetra
Disease; stressed Neons will indeed lose their colour. But Neons
with NTD also lose weight and become strangely shy, separating
off from their school. NTD is unfortunately not curable.> One
more thing I promise....A month or so ago, I emailed in with
problems regarding Dwarf Gourami's- I was told that it was
probably DGD and it would be best to put them down. I did lose 2
but on the third I decided to try something. He had all the
symptoms of DGD BUT the lesions. <In that case, not DGD!>
Well, I treated with Parasite Clear for 4 days (it took two
treatments to see results, I thought he was dead many times) a
few weeks later he is better than he has ever been!! Has tons of
energy and eats like a pig. I just thought that this might be
helpful and others might be able to try this if they suspect DGD
but want to try and save their pets. Again, thank you all for all
that you do and please know that I (as I am sure others) are
extremely grateful for every second you devote to helping.
<Very nice to hear this story. It's worth repeating the
point that while Dwarf Gourami Disease is a common reason Dwarf
Gouramis get sick, not all sick Dwarf Gouramis have Dwarf Gourami
Disease. Sometimes they get other things!> Very Respectfully,
Grace <Good luck, Neale.>
Re:
question re: TB, and Fin damage 4/4/08 Hi again, You say that
TB is unlikely in FW fish but after reading numerous pages on
this site I've gathered the complete opposite. <I
don't agree with them. Fish TB has historically been cited by
aquarists for all sorts of "mystery deaths", and recent
work by scientists has certainly proven that some Mycobacterium
strains are common in aquaria. But in my experience, almost all
"mystery deaths" are better explained by other factors:
Hexamita, poor water quality, genetics, use of feeder fish, and
so on. In any event, because Mycobacterium is untreatable, you
may as well try to concentrate on things you can fix, in the hope
that the fish will recover. If it doesn't, no harm is
done.> Most other people state that if its an adult fish with
a bent spine (and its even a Danio ((Glofish but they are the
same thing))- at any rate tonight he's laying at the bottom
of the tank barely breathing- Hopefully my husband gets home soon
because I cant bring myself to euthanize him. Does this mean that
this QT tank is now infected? <What the Czech scientists who
looked at Mycobacterium discovered was that the bacteria are
present in 75% of fish tanks.
http://www.practicalfishkeeping.co.uk/pfk/pages/item.php?news=1055
In other words, you probably have the bacteria that could cause
Fish TB anyway, but then so do I and so do most other
fishkeepers. So why don't 75% of fishkeepers have fish dying
from Fish TB? That's the question! While you should certainly
clean the hospital tank as a precaution -- something you do with
a hospital tank anyway -- don't bother getting paranoid about
the Mycobacterium itself. By the way, the variety of
Mycobacterium that can infect humans is the one most common in
marine aquaria, Mycobacterium marinum.> After reading your
email I put two other sick fish in my QT tank with him (I found
my black Sailfin molly with skin that looks like it is
"decaying" he has holes in his Sailfin and body and the
rest of his skin looks like its going to fall off) and the Neon
(of which got even MORE white on his body after putting him in
there. <Mollies are never that healthy kept in freshwater
tanks. The vast majority of Molly deaths come down to high
nitrate and the wrong water chemistry, and I'd bet all the
money in my pockets that that's the issue here.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/fwsubwebindex/mollies.htm Neon Tetras
are very prone to a disease called Pleistophora (or Neon Tetra
Disease) that is incurable.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwdistrbshtart.htm If
you're suddenly getting a bunch of fish looking sick, then
I'd first turn to my water test kits. Check the water
quality. Neons and Mollies for example require completely
different water chemistry, and choosing what's right for
Mollies will stress/kill your Neons. So you have work to do
there. I'd review nitrate especially, as that's a killer
for Mollies. Neons need soft/acid water, and Mollies hard/basic
water with salt added at a dose of about 6 grammes per litre.>
Have I gave these fish the death sentence? If they didn't
have it already? If not how would you recommend me helping them?
<If the Neon has Pleistophora, it'd doomed so you may as
well destroy it painlessly. Mollies usually recover quickly when
kept in brackish or marine aquaria, so that's what's
required there. As for the Danio, it doesn't look that good
to me.> With my Balas in my 100 gallon how do you recommend I
treat that? Like I said they do have some spits/ and frays on
some of their fins but otherwise act VERY healthy and seemingly
fine. <Depending on where you are, you'd use different
medications. In the UK, I've found eSHa 2000 very safe and
effective. Americans like to use Maracyn instead.> I am
hesitant to treat in this tank because its my main and so large
yet I cant put them in the small 10 gallon with all the other
terminally ill fish- <Treating the fish in the 100 gallon tank
is fine. Used correctly, no modern fish medication should cause
undue stress on the fish.> Ugh...Couldn't I just put in
some salt and keep and eye on the fins? <No. Salt doesn't
really have any useful impact on Finrot. Salt can help with
Fungus, but only up to a point. Anyway, the salt would stress
these freshwater fish rather more than medication.> And if
they start to get any worse treat the whole tank with Maracyn
like you said? <No.> What a mess I have here. I really
shouldn't have "saved" this hunchback Glofish from
my dad but at the time I didn't know I had two other
"sick" fish. <No good deed goes unpunished!> The
Molly started with a shimmy and I had him in the qt tank for a
few days with salt- put him back in the main tank and 3 days
later looks horrible. <Precisely. I know people sell Mollies
as freshwater fish, but they really aren't reliable as such.
Sorry, but that's just the way it is.> and was either
laying on the bottom listless or hiding in my deco. in the past
24 hrs. I haven't slept in 2 days because I am trying to
change all the water and take care of all of these issues ( I can
only do it at night when my baby is sleeping) so if this is a
little hard to follow I apologize. Any guidance would be greatly
appreciated. <Gosh, I'm sorry you're having such a bad
time! Obviously you have to put children before animals. This
being the case, painlessly destroying sick fish would be
completely understandable. Lesser of two evils.> V/R Grace
<Cheers, Neale.>
Re:
question re: TB, and Fin damage 4/4/08 Thank you for your
prompt reply- I usually keep my mollies in the 100 gallon which
is my "semi-aggressive" some salt tank and my Neons in
my 20 gallon "community" tank - its my QT tank where
they have to be combined. I've been testing my water every
few days since my Bala's first started showing the frayed
fins (I think it might have been from a new decoration we just
put in there) <Hmm... physical damage can cause symptoms
similar fin-nipping. Spiky ornaments can scratch fish that bomb
around the tank when alarmed. Though that does raise two points:
firstly if your fish are getting scared, that's something
that needs to be fixed. Secondly, even if the fins are scratched
rather than bitten, Finrot is still a problem. I'd also
mention that if physical damage is the issue here rather than
nipping, you'd expect to see scratches on the body and/or
missing scales, not just frayed fins.> Am-0, Nitrite-0 and
Nitrate 15(aprox)- So do I get all the money in your pocket?
(lol). <I guess!> I am in the US so I guess I need to go
out and get a huge box of Maracyn today....should I take my
BioWheels out and put them in a bucket of aquarium water so I
don't destroy the biological filter? <None of this is
necessary. Maracyn is completely harmless to your filter when
used as instructed.> I was hoping the neon with the white
"insides" was a fungal infection from the broken heater
issue and not the NTD and I was going to try and treat him and
the Molly (and I suppose the Glofish too because today he is
swimming around again! <All sounds very perplexing. NTD
typically has the Neon losing colour, becoming shy, hiding away
from the group, not eating, and then wasting away. It's
highly contagious to other Neons and perhaps other tetras, though
rarely affects other types of fish.> He was acting SO
"dead" last night) for fungal/bacteria issues. <Well
maybe there's hope!> The molly's skin looks REALLY
bad. Mollies can sometimes be improved by giving them dips in
"seawater" -- a litre of aquarium water with 35 grammes
of salt, ideally aquarium salt but rock or kosher salt will do.
Dip the fish for 2-20 minutes depending on how it reacts. That
should clean up the skin quite a bit. Repeat daily.> I do have
4 other molly's in the 100 gallon and they seem perfectly
fine as I am in South Texas and the water here is naturally
"hard" (high lime content) actually my Ph naturally
runs 8.2 -.4 out of the tap- I was told to not bother treating it
as long as its constant they will be fine? is this the case?
<"Liquid rock" water is certainly what Mollies
prefer. Quite why Mollies are so unpredictable in health when
kept in freshwater is unclear. They are common enough in
freshwater in the wild. While 100% of the Mollies sold thrive in
brackish water aquaria, in my experience, only some Mollies will
do well in freshwater aquaria.> And I have never tested for
hardness or softness (not even sure what a test for these would
be) because in the things I have read they never stated it
necessary- should I? <If you have rock hard water, then
chances are you have hard, basic water conditions. Ideal for
livebearers, Goldfish and many cichlids, but not necessarily
ideal for fish from soft water environments, including Neons. To
be fair though, your water is probably similar to mine here in
Southern England -- out of a chalk aquifer -- and most fish adapt
just fine.> Thank you again. I pray my issues get resolved
soon. <So do I! If you have a digital camera to hand, some
photos of the Molly and the Neon might help us diagnose things
further. Good luck, Neale.>
|
|
Curved Spine TB? 9/11/07 Hi WWM Crew,
I've read and read and now have become confused. Is a curved spine
a definite telltale sign of TB or could it be a symptom of swim bladder
disease or something else? I have a convict cichlid. She is very tiny 2
inches at most. She's about 3 years old. She was fine and a spunky
little fish. There is another adult pink convict (a male about 4
inches) in the tank who is sometimes a bully. Most times they are
compatible. They are in a 10 Gal. tank with water changes every week.
Yesterday I saw her floating on her side in a curled up position. Her
fins were moving and it seemed she was trying very hard to right
herself. When I noticed this I put her into a breeding net to keep the
male away from her. I didn't notice any visible signs of trauma. No
bloating or bleeding or missing scales/fins. I did a 75% water change
and cleaned out the filter and treated the water with Epsom salt. I
didn't know fish could get TB until I visited your site. She is
very thin, no appetite and curling up as if in pain. I feel really bad
for her and want to ease her suffering. The male isn't showing any
signs of illness (yet). He keeps swimming past her outside the breeding
net though and she tries to move toward him. It's very sad. I am
hoping you can help me try to diagnose my little girl. Do you think it
may be contagious and is it possible the male will be infected too?
Please help! Thanks, Maureen <Hello Maureen. Just as in humans,
physical deformities can be caused by any number of reasons, and
it's important not to assume that because something is symptomatic
of a particular diseases, that it's ONLY caused by that disease.
Also, Fish TB isn't the same thing as the TB humans get. Fish TB is
caused by a bacterium called Mycobacterium marinum, whereas human TB is
caused by a number of closely related species including the
appropriately named Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Fish TB is very
uncommon in freshwater aquaria, and almost always when freshwater
aquarists blame fish deaths on Fish TB they're really making it up
and have no idea what killed their fish. A bit like those
"internal parasites" people mention for similar reasons,
citing Fish TB amounts to nothing more than a scapegoat alternative to
actually admitting their tank was overstocked, they used live feeder
fishes, they didn't quarantine new stock, and so on. In your case,
you have a couple of problems that are likely factors. To start with, a
10 gallon tank is not nearly big enough for convicts. I'm assuming
you're talking 10 US gallons (= 8 UK gallons, 38 litres). Even for
a matched pair of convicts you wouldn't be able to keep them in a
tank that small. While you might consider them to be small specimens,
the fish don't know that, and adults in the wild are anything up to
around 15 cm long and defend territories something of the order of 1-2
metres in diameter. Males are notoriously belligerent to unreceptive
females when kept under aquarium conditions. You have to remember that
evolution hasn't needed to come up with a "play nice"
gene; in the wild, if a female enters a male's territory but she
doesn't want to breed, she just swims away. In the aquarium, she
has nowhere to go, and the male's natural territoriality (which, in
the wild, is a good thing by making him a reliable father) ends up
becoming destructive. It is entirely possible she's received
internal damage from being attacked by the male. You don't say
anything about water chemistry or quality either. Convicts need
moderately hard to hard water with a pH somewhere in the slightly
alkaline range; pH 7.5-8, 10-20 degrees dH is what you're aiming
for. Water quality needs to be excellent, as just like any other
cichlid, dissolved metabolites in the water do harm over the long term.
Water changes must be of the order of 50% weekly, and given your tank
is so tiny, I'd be doing two such water changes a week. Regardless,
you're after 0 ammonia, 0 nitrite, and nitrates ideally 20 mg/l or
less and certainly not more than 50 mg/l. Finally, diet is an issue.
Convicts are omnivores, and that means you need to include green foods
in their diet as well as flake or frozen. Algae pellets and flakes are
probably the easiest things to use, but tinned peas, Sushi Nori,
spinach, blanched lettuce, and so on can all be tried. Very few
cichlids don't eat greens in the wild, and for many it provides
important vitamins as well as fibre. You may want to send along a photo
so we can better diagnose your sick fish, but in the meantime, I'd
encourage you to review some of the factors mentioned above and act
accordingly. Cheers, Neale>
Tuberculosis, FW bacterial and goldfish dis.
f's 1/25/08 Hello there, I'm hoping that
you can help me with a problem I've been having with my fish
tank. I have been keeping a fairly good diary of everything over
the past 2 years that I have had the tank so can give you pretty
thorough information. <OK.> The tank is 60 gallons with a
60 gallon filter in it. <What in heaven's name is a
"60 gallon filter"? If you mean, the manufacturer
states the tank is suitable for up to 60 gallons, that's
fine. But I will make this point: manufacturers universally give
"best case" scenarios when selling filters, for the
same reason motor manufacturers quote glowing fuel consumption
rates you'll never see in real life. As soon as you put media
in a filter, or worse, put the filter under the tank so it has to
pump against gravity, your filter's turnover drops. So if you
have a 60 gallon tank, you need to be careful. I'd always
recommend getting *at least* the next size up in a filter range
for a tank of any given size, rather than trying to scrape by on
the *absolute upper limit* of one particular filter. In other
words, get a filter with not less than 4 times the volume of the
tank in turnover per hour. I'd recommend 6x for dirty fish
like Goldfish, Plecs and cichlids.> H20 measurements have
always been good. <Meaning what? Please give us NUMBERS...
lots of people thing their water quality or water chemistry is
good, and then it turns out it's rubbish. For example:
Goldfish need hard, alkaline water, yet lots of people don't
know that, and wonder why their little Goldies keep getting sick
in apparently clean but soft/acid water!> 25% H20 changes once
a week. <Good. More would be better though!> Average number
of fish in the tank at any give time is 5 fancy goldfish (average
length is about 1.5-2 inches not counting the tail), 3 Cory's
and a Pleco. <Odd mix, but what the heck! If they get along,
great.> There is also quite a bit of plant life in the tank
which all the fish love. <I bet. Goldfish tend to be
herbivores when given the chance.> Tried a couple of Apple
snails but they didn't do too well - I think the water was a
bit too hard for them maybe... they are harder to diagnose than
fish. <No, this wasn't the situation here. For a start,
Apple Snails want water that is as hard as possible, like snails
generally. Usually Apples fail because they get harassed, and
can't eat or get damaged in the process. Many fish will
nibble on their tentacles, scrape on the shell, or whatever. Best
kept in their own tanks, where they're great fun.> I feed
the fish almost exclusively peas, and occasionally some soaked
fish flakes. <Sounds good, though the Corydoras would
doubtless like a bit of protein every day rather than just
vegetables. Corydoras do indeed eat a lot of algae and decaying
plant matter in the wild, but they're also micro-carnivores,
taking insect larvae and worms of various types. Vegetarian flake
food (sold for livebearers) and algae wafers (sold for Plecs)
would work great for ALL your fish.> Temperature is about 78
degrees. <Slightly warmer than I'd go for this collection.
Does depend on the Corydoras species being kept though. The genus
Corydoras ranges across subtropical to tropical environments.
Peppered and Bearded Corydoras for example prefer cooler
conditions than most tropical fish, around 20C/68F being just
right for them. I'd tend towards the 24C/75F level if keeping
Fancy Goldfish with low-end tropicals just to balance warmth and
oxygen within a safe zone for all the fish.> Other than that I
have had some goldfish live for the whole 2+years I've had
the tank with not much in the way of any symptoms, and some live
for only a week. before showing distress. I always use the salt
quarantine method with in conjunction with Melafix before adding
new fish. <Not a big fan of Melafix.> After the quarantine
period, I add them to the main tank. Some survive, some die
quickly, some last a couple of months. In general, the more
exotic the variety, the more unwieldy the body type, the sooner
they die... though Plecos and catfish are susceptible as well.
<This really isn't normal. If you're losing even 10%
of the new fish you're buying, that's a far greater
mortality than normal. Goldfish should have, easily, a 95%
survival rate within the first year, and Plecs about the same,
maybe even better. All else being equal, if you're seeing
dramatic losses in fish, then you have to check two things: water
chemistry and water quality.> Some will start spending all
their time at the top going for the oxygen-rich air; some will
hide behind plants or in a corner or sit on the bottom having a
hard time breathing; some will develop a fungus or ich or
septicemia. <All consistent with poor water quality.> Some
have never shown any symptoms in the 2 years. Many will develop a
bent spine in the latter stages of their decline. I used to think
that all of these symptoms were the problem and have concentrated
on curing these, which is easy enough but the fish themselves
never really recovered and eventually died for no outward signs.
About a month ago however, one of the fish I've had for 2
years started developing bumps under his scales. He is my biggest
fish at 2.5 inches and some of the bumps were as large as a small
pea! I would look at him the next day however, and the bump would
be gone, but another one or two would have appeared somewhere
else! It was very disconcerting to see a rotating series of bumps
on him every day when I checked in on him. I have since seen
these bumps open up with a type of... I'll say it looks like
yellow processed cheese. After the cheesy stuff squishes out at
detaches itself (takes about an hour or 2), you would never know
there was a problem, though a new bump will quickly start forming
if it hasn't before the other one burst. I am able to keep
these bumps at bay by feeding all the fish (I no longer bother
taking this fish out of the tank into quarantine) an erythromycin
based gel that I mix in with their peas. I can feed this to them
for 2 weeks, but a day after I stop, the bumps return for the one
fish and some of the other fish start showing signs of sickness -
breathing at the surface or sitting on the bottom. The fish with
the cheesy blisters never seems to be suffering too much - he has
always been pretty hardy but you can tell it is getting harder
for him to swim and he isn't quite as energetic... though
always ready to eat! <Sounds like some sort of systemic
bacterial infection... Aeromonas or something similar. That's
why the erythromycin is helping. But the bottom line is that
these things almost only ever happen in tanks with chronic
problems, typically poor, or at least variable, water
quality.> After spending a lot of time reading on the net -
your site and others - I have decided that it is probably
tuberculosis and that treating individual fish is probably not
the answer anymore - I have to treat the whole tank. <Unlikely
Fish TB; Fish TB is almost entirely an issue in marine aquaria
rather than freshwater aquaria, and even then it isn't
common. Most of the time people *think* it's Fish TB,
it's actually something much more prosaic. Regardless,
identifying bacterial infections is virtually impossible for the
home aquarist, unless you happen to be a microbiologist as well,
in which case take a swab and ID the bacteria under a
microscope.> I live in Canada and I know that some medications
for fish are no longer available here... I'm not sure which,
however. <Can't speak for Canada, but in the UK at least,
pet owners can only get antibiotics from the Vet. Not expensive,
but it is another step in the chain. In the US, antibiotics have
traditionally been more readily available to pet owners under
brand names such as Maracyn.> I was hoping you could give me
some feedback - do you think that tuberculosis is the problem.
<No.> How should I treat the tank? <First tell me
something about the water quality and water chemistry. Not what
you think the results are (so don't tell me "fine"
or "good") but tell me precisely what your test kits
report, i.e., the pH, the hardness in degrees dH or KH, the
nitrite in mg/l, and (ideally) the ammonia in mg/l as well. Tell
me the turnover of the filter in litres/gallons per hour --
this'll be written on the pump somewhere ("gph" or
"LPH" usually).> Oh, one important note may be that
there are only 6 goldfish and 2 Cory's currently in the tank.
Thanks, Matt <Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Tuberculosis (RMF, feel free to
comment) 1/25/08 Wow! You guys are fast! <One
tries...> I feel like a bad fish keeper now. <We all make
mistakes and we all go wrong. What matters is learning and
changing.> Here is some more specific data on the aquarium:
The filter is an Aquaclear 70 that can filter 300 gallons per
hour and hangs on to the back of the tank. I don't have it
cranked though as the goldfish are so small that if they swim to
near where the water comes in it can throw them to the front of
the tank. There are 3 inserts in it - Aquaclear Foam, Biomax, and
Ammonia remover. <Not a big fan of Ammonia Remover (i.e.,
Zeolite). In a proper aquarium, biological filtration is
altogether more effective and reliable. Zeolite needs to be
replaced as often as once a week! Few people do that, and often
tanks with Zeolite in the filter have unsafe levels of ammonia
because of it. Mostly, Zeolite is a marketing gimmick: it sounds
useful, but outside of a certain set of situations (e.g.,
hospital tanks) it really isn't useful.> Upon checking my
fish diary and in-tank thermometer again the temperature in the
tank is actually at 76 degrees. This is the lowest temperature
the heater will keep the water. I have the heater set to 72
degrees, which is it's lowest setting, but it doesn't
correspond to that temperature in the tank which is always at 76
degrees. It has been stable at that setting since I purchased the
heater about 2 years ago. Before that the temperature of the tank
always fluctuated and we had constantly spawning goldfish.
<OK.> As for the water measurements, here they are and they
haven't really fluctuated much from these norms in the past 2
years: pH is 7.6 (though will vary between 7.4 and 7.8 over time)
KH is 120mg/L <A little less KH than I'd like with
Goldfish, and explains somewhat the fluctuations in pH.> GH is
180 mg/L Ammonia is 0.1-0.2 mg/L Nitrite is less that 0.1 mg/L
<Here's your problem: Ammonia and nitrite should both be
zero, all the time. "Less than 0.1 mg/l" isn't
acceptable. It HAS TO BE zero. No deviations. If it's like
this all the time, that's why your fish are so unhealthy. Too
many fish, too much food, or inadequate filtration. Pick and
choose from those, because they're what's on the table as
far as explanation goes. Do read Bob's article on
establishing proper Bio filtration, because that's your next
job: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwestcycling.htm
I'd streamline the filter by chunking out any media other
than medium to fine sponges or ceramics. What you want is optimal
bio filtration.> These are all the measurements I have the
ability to take with the test kit I have. I await your further
instructions on how to make my fish happier! Cheers, Matt
<Hope this helps. Cheers, Neale.>
Re: Tuberculosis (RMF, feel free to
comment) 1/25/08 OK, so I can do more frequent or
larger H2O changes and maybe feed the fish a little bit less and
add a smaller, 2nd filter perhaps to increase the water quality.
<Likely need to do ALL those things. Try them out and see if
the nitrite and ammonia drop to zero. If they do, BINGO!
You've cracked fishkeeping.> Should I not worry about
treating the tank as far as the apparent bacterial infection goes
because it should disappear with better water quality? <Need
to do both. Without better water quality, the fish won't stay
healthy, regardless of how often you treat. Even if you fix the
water quality, the bacteria are in your fish now, and need to be
dealt with.> Thanks again, Matt <Cheers, Neale.>
|
Two general questions... Fish-TB, and "easy fish"
2/1/08 Hello all, <Neale> Two quick questions, germane to
some FAQs I've done tonight. (1) Fish-TB. For real, or a myth?
<Mycobacteriosis in piscines? Real> My books seem to suggest
it's more an issue with marine fish, which is probably why I've
never seen it in the flesh. The old Fish-TB suspect in gouramis turned
out to be the Dwarf Gourami Disease Iridovirus. <Yes> (2) What
are the easiest freshwater fish to recommend to people? I plumped for
peppered Corydoras and zebra Danios. Any others? <Mmm, for
"most" general water conditions about the world... likely the
small Danios, Rasboras and barbs... Perhaps Platies would score high...
given local acclimation... The more "cultured" Corydoras
I'd agree with as well... C. aeneus, paleatus as you mention...
Given the proviso of numbers/keeping in groups... BobF> Cheers,
Neale
Catfish and TB I have a 20 gal freshwater tank which has been
up and running for 13 months. I have recently had problems with a
disease affecting my neon tetras and zebra Danios. The symptoms include
wasting and bent spine but normal feeding. My LFS recommended EM
treatment but now my research indicates a bacterial disease such as TB
or Neon disease. Advice seems to be that any bacterial disease is
untreatable and that the best thing to do is clean the tank and start
again. The majority of the fish are tetras and Danios with a couple of
guppies. Research again suggests that these species are most
susceptible to these diseases. I am hoping to be able to save my Cory
cat who has been in the tank for nearly a year but I'm not sure if
he will remain a carrier even if he doesn't develop symptoms. Can
he be saved, if so how long should I quarantine him, and how best to
clean the tank. I am probably just being sentimental and should
euthanize the lot but I would like to do the right thing. Hope you can
help. Tim <A subject I asked about not too long ago. I also had some
bent Danios in with my Corys and Plecos. Most of the people I have
asked about this subject say all the fish in the tank should be put
down and the tank bleached. But one person pointed out that she could
find no reference to TB in catfish. At that time I had four Corys and
five Plecs in that tank. No way I could put them all down. So I only
removed the dither fish. All the cats are still alive, active and seem
healthy. One pair of Plecs have bred four times since the outbreak. All
the fry seem fine. So, the combined wisdom of our site is to start
over, completely. But my one time experience is that the Cory should be
fine. My own personal theory, based on nothing at all, is that nature
has endowed these mud sucking, bottom dwelling scavengers, that I love
so much, with one hell of an immune system. At least that's what
I'm betting. But with only the one Cory, you may decide not to
gamble as I did. That would be the smart play. Don>
Wasting symptoms in Zebra Danio 3/15/06 Hello,
<Sharon> I had a 30L freshwater BiOrb containing 3 White Cloud
Minnows, 2 Zebra Danios and a living plant. Water condition is good -
Ammonia 0, Nitrates 0, Nitrites 0 and pH 7.6. About 6 weeks ago I lost
one of the Minnows. Symptoms included enlarged abdomen (I initially
thought it may have been pregnant) followed by (48 hours before death)
bent spine, floating near surface and lack of appetite. In recent weeks
I have noticed:
* one of the
Danios appears to be wasting away i.e. is very skinny (although it is
still eating normally and active),
* one of the
Minnows appears to have an enlarged abdomen (also eating normally and
active). I lost a second Minnow last night - not the one with the
enlarged abdomen. I had been away for a couple of days and returned to
find it with looking skinny with a bent spine. It also had swim
difficulties (probably due to bent spine), lack of appetite and was
floating near surface. I quarantined it immediately in salt water, but
to no avail. I have searched your website and come to the conclusion
that my fish may have either an internal parasite (bad) or TB (really
bad). What do you think? <Could be... perhaps from just
"initial" troubles (you bought them with this)... But could
be environmental to a large extent... or nutritional. What do you feed
your fishes?> And, if you could provide some advise for on my next
course of action that would be much appreciated? Regards, Sharon Bell.
<Mmm, I would ask your stockist/LFS if they've been having
trouble with their minnow fishes... You can/could become involved in
sequential antimicrobial "trials"... in the hope of blocking
something at play here. My first choice would be a Furan compound
(likely Furanace). Bob Fenner>
Mystery Wasting Disease... Help...!
3/10/06 I have a sick tank. It's 55 gallon, all of
my parameters are good: ammonia-0, nitrite-0, nitrates 20 - 40,
<I'd keep under 20 ppm> ph-7.6. Water temp 78
f. Planted. UGF and jet heads. This tank has been up since
last summer and has been extremely stable. I had one of my
original Gouramis die a couple of weeks ago. I have no idea
why she went, she was a red (honey sunset?) Gourami, and the only
"sign" of illness she showed was losing all color the night
before she died. She was truly ashen and looked very
"old." Within a week of her death, her partner
developed dropsy. <Mmm, well, this species, Colisa lalia, does have
some standard "problems" nowadays...> He is still with us,
but not doing well, so far he hasn't really responded to
treatment. Just a little... He is in a 2.5 gal
QT. Since he has been in quarantine, I lost one bloodfin whose body
became very sunken and bullet shaped, head very bony. Best
way to describe it is total emaciation. Another bloodfin has
fallen sick with this, I unfortunately had to put him in with Gourami
due to lack of another QT tank and in hopes of him responding to the
treatment. This morning I have another bloodfin and neon
that are showing early signs of this mysterious
disease. Fading colors, body shape thinning, hiding in
plants, not eating. My LFS will give me some advice after seeing a
water sample but not until then. I can't make it there
before the weekend. Any ideas? Thank you so much, Mary. <Mmm... your
system may have a Mycobacterial infection... the same genus of microbe
that causes TB in humans... I do encourage you to read:
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=treating+mycobacterium+in+aquarium+fishes&spell=1
and consider a treatment with an efficacious antibiotic. Bob
Fenner>
Re: Mystery Wasting Disease... Help...! FW TB...
3/23/06 Hi Bob & Company, Thanks for your reply. I
am still losing fish to this bacterial infection. I have treated the
tank with Kanaplex and an erythromycin gel food that the LFS
recommended. <Use of such antibiotics is a hopefully hit, mostly
miss proposition...> They looked at one of my sick fish and called
it "wasting away disease," and picked these medicines to
help. The Kanaplex had a three time maximum dosage, and that
was finished a week ago. Yesterday I discovered one of my
African dwarf frogs had taken ill, he had been hanging around in the
floating plants a lot, but I thought he was just digging them. Then I
noticed that he looked like he might be shedding, so I took out my
camera and put the micro lens <Good technique> on it and found
that poor froggie was sick. I panicked and put him in
quarantine, with 1/2 tsp kosher salt per gallon, don't know why I
did that because I had Melafix and Pimafix on hand, but he died within
a half an hour. I don't know if the salt did it or
not. I have attached two of the pictures I took of
him. Do you have any other suggestions? <Once these
conditions get to such an extent... very difficult to remit> Would
taking the tank apart and boiling the gravel and wash down everything
help? <Mmm, as a last resort...> Unfortunately, I REALLY love
these little animals (fish included in that statement) and last night I
cried until I couldn't cry anymore. It's breaking my
heart and I don't want to lose everyone in this
tank. Anymore suggestions, ideas? <Don't know enough
from what we've sent back/forth to render any more substantive
direction, focus... other than to encourage you in the short/er term to
read of other folks circumstances... to find if there are parallels>
P.S. I did read up on fish TB and the Mycobacterial
infection. My LFS laughed when I first mentioned fish TB to
them and told me that if I had that, not to touch the water, or
anything in the tank, and to euthanize the fish. <Mycobacteria are
"nothing to laugh about"... kill many humans daily... Are
very real human health issues in Eastern Europe, elsewhere> Well,
how do you find out if you have it? <"Culture"...> No
one seems to be able to say... (shrug) (Comment not meant for you)
<Ask your M.D. re... or do a bit more look/seeing on the Net, large
library... worth investigating, and being very careful when working in
fish tanks... wear long gloves and/or thoroughly wash after... And not
place in such systems with open wounds. Bob Fenner>
Re: Mystery Wasting Disease... Good news!
3/28/06 Bob, I just wanted to let you know
that the chain of disease finally broke. It has now been 6
days since my last casualty, and no others fell sick, or have fallen
sick. This has been the first few days in over 6 weeks where
I didn't have at least one sick or dying fish. I still
have no clue as to what the infection was, but it seems to have run
it's course. Yeah! Take care, Mary. <Thank you for
this update. Am tempted to draw parallels, express my worries re events
such as "Bird Flu", Ebola type viruses similarly
"running their course" amongst our species. Bob
Fenner>
Sailfin Molly Illness (02/27/04) Please, help me determine a
possible cause of illness in my Sailfin mollies. <Ananda here to
help try, with Sabrina helping out...> I have a 55 gallon tank that
is brackish. The contents of the tank are 2 Gourami, 2
red-eye tetra, 4 black Neons, 3 black-skirt tetra, 3 lemon tetra, 2
adult red velvet platies, 1 Plecostomus, 1 rainbow shark, 4 adult
silver mollies, 1 adult Dalmatian molly (lyre-tail) and approx. 15
molly fry. <Uh... the only fish in that whole list that are brackish
are the mollies. Platies can tolerate some salt. But the rest of them
should not have any salt at all, except perhaps a "tonic"
dosage of about 1 tbsp of salt per 10 gallons of tank water. (Which
doesn't qualify regarding making the tank brackish.) What's
your specific gravity?> All parameters of the tank are stable, all
other fish are healthy....except the adult Dalmatian
molly. I have had a total of 4 (including this one)
Dalmatian mollies in the past 6 months and at least 2 of them have
suffered similar fates. It starts with patchy loss of
scales/color, fins become translucent and there is progressive weight
loss. They still eat and swim normally. The first
one that developed this illness had me so concerned about
cross-contamination and looked so pitiful, that I euthanized
him. The first time I've had to do that! Then
the other adult Dalmatian started developing the same
symptoms. None of the other fish in the tank show any signs
of illness, and are breeding well. I'm concerned about
fish T.B. <Sabrina and I agree that it does sound like
mycobacteriosis.> That is why I didn't want the first sick fish
to die in the tank. I read the other fish ingesting the dead sick fish
is sometimes the way it is transmitted. <I have read the same thing.
You were wise to remove the affected fish from the tank.> This is a
very slowly progressing process. It takes weeks or months
before they reach the full extent of the illness. What is
the lifespan of a molly? <About four years.> Could
these fish just be old? <Most mollies I've seen at stores are
6-10 months old.> Why don't any of the other fish display
symptoms of illness? <Mycobacteriosis, aka fish TB, is a
funky thing. You can have fish that are infected that display *no*
symptoms. Meanwhile, other fish exhibit slowly degenerating health.
Sometimes, things progress fairly quickly. And the list of possible
symptoms is staggering.> I have treated the tank in the past with
antibiotics, Methylene blue or malachite green, and
MelaFix. I can't figure out if it is a parasite or other
disease, why it takes so long for it to affect the fish and why other
fish aren't simultaneously ill. What should I do? Debbie
Bronson <The best thing to do is try to prevent any more fish from
becoming sick. The way to do that is to maintain impeccable water
quality; a UV sterilizer *may* help. For you, always wear long-sleeved
aquatic gloves while working in the tank and see your physician if you
develop any funky bumps on your hands/arms (and do mention the
possibility of TB to the physician). The one possibility Sabrina's
read about that may possibly cure the disease is Kanamycin,
administered in food. However, this does not always work, and can be
expensive to boot. If you have fish that exhibit symptoms, it is best
to remove them from the main tank. Then, you can either keep them in
isolation (possibly attempting to treat them), or euthanize them (I use
clove oil; do a search both on the WWM site and at http://wetwebfotos.com/talk for more
info). I wish I had better news for you. Fortunately, even though your
mollies may be affected, the rest of your fish seem healthy, and you
could raise the fry in a different tank. --Ananda>
More Bent Spines I currently have a dozen Platy fry and
I'm wondering about some physical deformities. We had 11
babies from 2 females just days after getting them from the pet store
(so obviously not from my male). I raised them in a 2g tank,
and then found a new fry about 5 weeks later in the big tank and moved
him in as well (he was newborn... the rest of his batch got eaten or
sucked into the filter). I had a new female in a QT tank for
a few weeks, and as soon as she was moved to the main tank I separated
my babies into 2 tanks (both 2g). I thought maybe they'd
grow faster. The first 11 are approx. 9 weeks old now, and still seem
pretty small (too small to trust with my adults in the main tank). So
my first question is am I stunting their growth somehow? Is the tank
too small for all of them?
<If I understand this correctly you have a total of 12 fry in two, 2
gallon tanks. That should be fine for now. Even if they are all in one
2 gallon tank you should be OK. Just move them as soon as they are big
enough not to be eaten. Test the water and watch for ammonia and
nitrite build up. Both must be at zero. Nitrates below
20ppm.> 2nd question - and of much more
concern - is about some of them with very bent spines. There are 2 in
particular that are pretty bad and it makes them swim in a very wobbly
fashion. One of them seems to rest on things all the time because he
has such difficulty swimming. But he does get up to the top to eat, and
he's been behaving this way for a week now. I feel bad for him and
wonder if I should put him out of his misery? There are some with less
pronounced bent spines, and most of them are beautiful and look
perfectly fine. Is this a product of water quality or environment? or
is it just genetic? The bent spines weren't evident
right away, but have been noticeable for about a month
now. My kids have gotten so attached to them that I hate to
lose any right now, but I also hate to see them miserable. Also, if I
need to, um, "get rid of" any of them, what is the most
humane way? <Let me first say you are not alone with this problem.
Not only are we seeing a lot of questions about bent spines, but I have
the same thing going on in my tank. Although it is possible for this to
be genetic in your fry, it is most likely TB. I'm sorry to say that
the only treatment has about a 10% success rate. Also, it is caused by
a bacteria that can be transmitted to humans through breaks in the
skin. Some say that the bacteria is always present and keeping your
tank and water pristine will allow the fish's own immune system to
keep it at bay. Others suggest sterilizing the entire system and
starting over. Personally, I would suggest to you to go the
sterilization route. At very least, remove the bent fish and keep the
water clean and fresh. This is what I am doing since I have some nice
catfish that seem to be unaffected. Make sure you and the kids do not
put your hands in the tank if you have any cuts in the skin. Another
point is that no bacteria can spontaneously generate in your tank. It
came in somehow. Maybe with Mom. Watch all your tanks. I don't want
to scare you into thinking an aquarium is dangerous to the family, they
are not generally, but I need to make you aware of the potential
problem. In our forum you will find a thread titled "Hunchback
Danios". Please read. The best way to put down a fish is to add a
few drops of clove oil to a cup or so of water and add the fish.
Freezing is another option. Chill the water to the point of "skim
ice", then add the fry to the cold water. Do not flush them,
living or dead. Bury or put in trash. Don> Any advice would be
appreciated. Thanks. Jennifer
More Bent Spines Thank you for your quick response. TB in the
tank is quite scary! <Please, not my intent to scare, just make you
aware.> I put 2 of the worst to sleep because they were
really struggling. <OK> Right now I have 8 fry that
look just fine, and 2 with slightly bent spines. <Remove
them> I test the water regularly and have had both
ammonia and nitrite at 0 since I cycled the tanks. On my larger tank I
do water changes weekly, but the smaller 2g tanks I do 2x a week
(approx 30% each time). And I use a gravel vac when I do the
changes. <All good, great in fact> The adult fish are
fine and healthy (at least they appear to be). Are there any other
signs of TB? <Red or bloody wounds, advanced stage> Also, I
stopped by the pet store where I bought the pregnant females (had to
pick up fish food), and in the Platy tank they have a... well..
"stubby" looking male. He looks like his spine is bent just
enough to make his body look short and a bit strange. I didn't
notice if this fish was in the tank before, but it very well could have
been.. and maybe I'm getting it's offspring? <Unlikely they
bred in the store> They look very similar in body shape. <Could
also have TB> Maybe I'm looking for an excuse for this to be
genetic. <Understood> And I'm having a hard time getting
myself to put the other 2 fry down, since they seem healthy enough and
can swim ok. Should I put them to sleep or let them go to see if they
get worse? <If they are showing the bent spine, I'd remove them
at once> Thanks again, Jennifer
More Bent Spins, Again Okay, now I'm a little nervous
after running through the FAQ's and reading about "hunch back
Danios" having TB, transmittable to humans. I've had some
Danios die over a period of the last year, but never noticed a
hunchback problem. <Good> I'm now down to two (from a start
of 6) in my 55 gal tank. I've had several 3'rd generation
mollies develop problems, usually their spine assumes an "S"
shape, and swimming becomes erratic. <This could be TB, but mollies
are very inbred. Could be genetic in nature.> I've put several
of them down in the last few months due to this, the victims usually
being about half grown. A couple were in the 55 gal. tank, but most
were in a 29 gal tank containing only mollies. I thought this might be
a genetic flaw from some inbreeding, but now I wonder. In a separate 15
gal. tank with Swords & Platys, I've had similar instances
occur with a couple platys. <If this is happening with adult fish
then it is TB. Most genetic problems will show from an early age.>
My other tanks seem fine, but I'm watching all ten of them closer
now. <Then we have done our job here.> I do frequent testing, and
change water frequently, whenever the nitrate levels start getting too
high. <Great> The ph is just on the high side, LFS advises that
since our aquifer contains massive limestone it would be never-ending
battle to try to lower it, and the yo-yo effect would be far worse for
the livestock than leaving it as is. <Agreed. Very, very good
advice> Please clarify this possibility of TB before my wife decides
I need a safer hobby! <I'd pass on skydiving> Any input, or
advise, as usual is much appreciated! Jess <Hi Jess, Don here,
trying hard not to scare the hell out of everyone. TB is something to
be aware of, but not overly feared. Some say that it is always present
in our tanks and is kept at bay by the fish's immune system. If
this is true then transmission to humans seems pretty rare. But I did
just suggest to another person to sterilize her fry tank. She had young
children in the house and I would hate to advise otherwise when kids
are involved. It can enter through cuts in the skin, and kids tend to
have more cuts than adults. Your excellent tank maintenance will help a
lot. It could be that the high pH stressed some of your fish just
enough to weaken their immune system and allowed the bacteria to get a
foot hold. But there are many very well respected people here that
suggest sterilizing whenever TB is found. That is a very hard call, but
harder to argue against. I would at least remove any bent fish before
they die in the tank. Also watch for red or bloody wounds on the fish.
Another sign of TB. Remove those fish at once. I would not give up the
hobby over this potential problem. Just be aware, wear gloves if you
have any breaks in your skin.>
Lumpy Loach Mycobacterium Infection? 01/11/2005 Hi,
<Hello!> I have a 75-gallon tank with three 14 year-old clown
loaches and two large green kissing fish. <Must be some
pretty large loaches, at that age! It wouldnt be a terrible
idea to try for a larger tank, if possible.> One of the loaches has
large lumps all over his body under the skin, appears to be very
swollen even his eyes appear to be bulging. He is hiding in
the back of the tank and will not come out to eat; he just stays in the
same place breathing very rapidly, in an upright position, leaning on
tubing. He has been like this for about a month and I really
didnt expect him to be alive this long since I just noticed his illness
right before I went out of town. I assumed that he had an
age related problem since a couple of his tank mates have passed on
over the past couple of years. I havent been able to find
out anything about this particular illness. <To be quite
honest, this sounds to me like a very good indication of
mycobacteriosis. The swelling, pop-eye, and
lumps/tumors/granulomas are very strong symptoms of this myxosporidian
bacterial infection. Its really quite a good thing that the
critter did not die while you were gone a dead fish can release
literally millions of spores that can infect other fish in the
tank!> The nitrates in this tank stay fairly high even with frequent
water changes and Poly-filters in the filters.
<Yes.... These are very large fish in a (comparatively)
small tank; increased water volume would really be a good idea.>
There are no indications (redness, etc) on his outward appearance that
would suggest a bacterial or fungal condition. I would try
to treat him in a separate tank if I knew what to try, or at this point
would it be better to euthanize him? <Sadly,
mycobacteriosis is essentially incurable. There is some
indication that Kanamycin sulfate may have some effect, but recovery is
unlikely, Im so sorry to say. Either way, should you choose
to medicate or not, definitely remove the fish as soon as possible from
the healthy animals I can assure you, you do not want this to spread,
if that is, in fact, what it is. Also, PLEASE read the
following link, so you can understand what risk this illness might pose
to you: http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2003-07/sp/feature/index.htm
. Do please understand that without seeing the fish for
myself, I cannot guarantee that this is an accurate diagnosis but based
on the symptoms you describe, it is my best guess. Gah, I
hate being the bearer of bad news.> I appreciate your consideration.
Thank you, Karen Chaney <Wishing you and your loach the
best, -Sabrina>
Dorm Room Betta What are other signs of fish TB? One site
told me that a curved spine (which Jack's straightened out) is a
sign of swim bladder issues? Thanks. Ann <Wasting away, getting very
thin along with the curved spine. In some cases the fish will bloat. In
extreme cases you may see a sore or blister with red edges. It is
always fatal to the fish. The only known treatment involves a three
drug cocktail with only a 10% survival rate. Swim bladder problems are
also very difficult to treat. If he is improving I suspect he was
constipated to the point he was becoming bloated. Try to feed a pea or
add some Epsom salt to treat. Don>
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