Hi
1. Water parameters. (ammonia, nitrate, nitrite, PH, temp', Hardness etc) - cant answer this myself but will ask tomorrow. The levels are checked every other week though.
2. A full description of the fishes symptoms. No symptoms except they start to look raggy once they are dying
3. How often you do water changes and how much. Water is topped up and part changed every 2 weeks.
4. Any chemicals and treatments you add to the water. None since we established the tank last year.
5. What tank mates are in the tank. As below
6. Tank size. 5 ft long
7. Finally Have you recently added any new fish? Not for about three or four months.
I wrote in the forum a while ago about grieving fish - two kissing gourami, after the big plec died. We bought over a dozen smaller fish, including two new kissing gourami, and the other two immediately came back to life - they've been amazingly healthy since.
However, over the last week we've been losing fish every day. We have a fish keeper who comes fortnightly to top up the water and check the chemical levels, and filter, and keeps an eye on them for us. He put plants in and we feel he's doing a good job (after all the trouble we had, we wanted someone who know about fish to look after them for us).
His speciality is marine aquariums though. He's checked out one of the dead fish and says there's no apparent reason for the deaths - the water quality and temperature are fine, there's plenty of oxygen and light, and there is no sign on any of the fish of a disease of any kind. They just die. From when they show signs of trouble it's only a matter of an hour or two.
Does anyone have any ideas please?? At this rate we will lose all the fish within another few days The gourami look fine but they are bigger than the others. We've lost the siamese fighter, a small catfish, two sharks and several tetras, all within a week to ten days.
Thanks
Sue
1. Water parameters. (ammonia, nitrate, nitrite, PH, temp', Hardness etc) - cant answer this myself but will ask tomorrow. The levels are checked every other week though.
2. A full description of the fishes symptoms. No symptoms except they start to look raggy once they are dying
3. How often you do water changes and how much. Water is topped up and part changed every 2 weeks.
4. Any chemicals and treatments you add to the water. None since we established the tank last year.
5. What tank mates are in the tank. As below
6. Tank size. 5 ft long
7. Finally Have you recently added any new fish? Not for about three or four months.
I wrote in the forum a while ago about grieving fish - two kissing gourami, after the big plec died. We bought over a dozen smaller fish, including two new kissing gourami, and the other two immediately came back to life - they've been amazingly healthy since.
However, over the last week we've been losing fish every day. We have a fish keeper who comes fortnightly to top up the water and check the chemical levels, and filter, and keeps an eye on them for us. He put plants in and we feel he's doing a good job (after all the trouble we had, we wanted someone who know about fish to look after them for us).
His speciality is marine aquariums though. He's checked out one of the dead fish and says there's no apparent reason for the deaths - the water quality and temperature are fine, there's plenty of oxygen and light, and there is no sign on any of the fish of a disease of any kind. They just die. From when they show signs of trouble it's only a matter of an hour or two.
Does anyone have any ideas please?? At this rate we will lose all the fish within another few days The gourami look fine but they are bigger than the others. We've lost the siamese fighter, a small catfish, two sharks and several tetras, all within a week to ten days.
Thanks
Sue