Albino Cory won't descend - stays at top of tank - Sick or just weird?

IHaveADogToo

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I've had these 5 ablino corys for about 5 or 6 weeks now. They were one of the first fish I introduced to my tank when it first finished cycling, along with some neon tetras.

A couple of weeks ago, I noticed one of my corys, just one, was staying at the top of the water, and even floating vertically against the glass at times. When watching his behavior, it looked like he was unable to descend. After a day of fasting, and a reduced water level in the tank, he was fine for a couple more weeks.

Fast forward to this weekend, and he's doing it again. At least I think it's the same one. It's hard to tell the corys apart. He just stays at the top of the water, acting like he's unable to descend, and sometimes floating vertically (head up, tail down) against the glass.

Because he looks like he can't descend, I'm concerned he can't eat. This cory, unlike the others, is easy to catch in a net. I put him a breeder box, and he's okay. No more floating. But he doesn't eat in the breeder box. It's like, since he's closer to the surface, he isn't struggling to breathe, but like I said, no interest in food in the box.

I have not noticed any other symptoms. No redness around the gills. No worms sticking out of his anus. No discoloration. No white fuzzy areas. No sand-like white spots. His barbells are in tact. No rot or damage to his fins.

What changed in my tank recently:

1. It's been a week now since I introduced the betta sorority to the tank
2. I switched from Top Fin water conditioner to Prime
3. I started filling my tank a little more, because the water level was too low for the filter to recover from a power outage

Water is reading 0 ammonia and 0 nitrites. Cycle is in tact.

I did try reducing my water level again, but that didn't help. And although ammonia and nitrites are reading 0, a lot of things I've read have said this behavior can be symptomatic of water issues, so I changed the water every day for the last 3 days.

This tank is slightly taller than a standard 30 gallon, as if it is actually a reptile tank.

I have a few thoughts on what could be causing this and what to do about this, and I'd like to hear from you all.

1: Possible Swim Bladder condition - Isolate and treat
2: My Tank is too deep for this guy - I have considered getting a suction-cup reptile island, and putting it a few inches below the water's surface, as a more shallow surface for the corys to chill out on, but that would have to wait for payday.
3: My tank could be over-crowded. It's at 90% stocking level, according to aquadvisor, but 3 of the species in the tank are bottom feeders. In addition to the 5 female bettas and dozen neon tetras, there's 5 corys, 6 kuhli loaches, and a handful of ghost shrimp.
4: Other illness I haven't considered

The other 4 corys do not exhibit the same symptoms, although there is one other cory that hangs out at the top of the water with this one... but it appears to be by choice. This other cory can indeed descend, and I when I put the affected cory in the breeder, this one descended to the substrate and started basking with the other 3.

I did try catching all 5 corys, as I was going to try moving them to my 10 gallon to see if that helped, and I was able to catch 4 of them, but the 5th one was too good at evading me. So they didn't get moved to the 10 gallon. I freed them back into the 30 gallon. If I'm going to move them, I want to move all of them, not all but one.

Any advice, guys? Should I expect this cory to die? Should I keep him isolated in the breeder box? I don't have a quarantine tank right now. Should I just free him back into the tank and wait for this to pass? Does he sound sick, or does this sound like normal corydora behavior? Could he just have overeaten, and will resume swimming normally after he digests his food?
 
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Should I expect this cory to die?
don't ever visit me in hospital :)

How tall is the tank?
If it's more than 2ft then it could be problem. 18inches high or less is fine.

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Do you feed them on dry food?
If yes he might be ingesting too much air or he might be taking lots of air from the surface.
Try feeding them on frozen bloodworms or brineshrimp for a week and see if it helps. And monitor the fish and see if it is eating as much as everyone else. If the fish is not eating much it could have an internal or intestinal problem.

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It is not normal for them to hang out near the surface but the fact the fish is sticking to the side and has its head up, tail down, is not a bad sign. If the fish cannot easily swim down, and or floats around, then that is a problem.

Overcrowding does not cause this. And if it was water quality then other fish would have issues. This does not sound like a common disease like fungus, protozoan or bacterial.

Leave them in the tank, photograph or video the fish acting weird, video preferably. Live or frozen food for a week and monitor the fish.
 
don't ever visit me in hospital :)

Sorry Colin. I did a lot of googling before asking my question, and a lot of these vertical-floating corydora stories don't have happy endings. :(

But yes, the fish can not easily swim down. I have not seen him descend more than a few inches below the surface all weekend. Not once did he reach the substrate. It's like he can't. Every time I see him try to descend, he gets a few inches down, then starts to float up again. Like he can't control his buoyancy. The tank is 18 inches tall.
 
What do you feed the catfish?

Try him on frozen food for a week and increase aeration in the tank and see if that makes a difference. If it doesn't then it is probably a swim bladder issue. As a last resort you could put them into a shallow tank (no more than 8 inches of water) for a month and that can sometimes help but it depends on what the problem is with the swim bladder. But try frozen food first because it might have a heap of air in its intestine and that will cause it to float too.
 
Also, yes I do feed them on dry food, and frozen blood worms as well. In the mornings I feed the tank a mixture of dry foods, floating and sinking pellets and flakes, and in the evenings I feed frozen blood worms. I'm not a morning person, so in the morning it's just more convenient to throw the dry food in, and in the evening I actually take the time to thaw out a cube of frozen blood worms and feed that to them. On Sundays all my tanks only get peas. I don't think I've ever noticed the corys eat blood worms though. I've only ever seen them eat the sinking pellets.

Here is the sinking pellet I feed my corys (and kuhlis) - https://www.petsmart.com/fish/food-...r-premium-shrimp-pellets-fish-food-17329.html
Ingredients are listed on the page.
 
Thanks, I will try nothing but frozen bloodworms for this week and see if that helps. I will release him from the breeder box as well, but I might have to isolate him for feeding since he can't descend.
 
UPDATE:

I released the weird cory from the breeder box and he started acting weird again (floating at the top, head up, tail down, not descending to the substrate). But as soon as I put some bloodworms in the water, he found his will to descend and find food. I still never saw him eat any bloodworm, but I sure saw him go down to the substrate and stay down. He hasn't come back up and started floating since.

So weird.
 
maybe the fish doesn't like being white and wants a tan, eg: it is sun tanning under the fluoros :)

or it is sucking air and getting high :)

just monitor it over the next week and keep it off dry food during that time.
 

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