DrSlackBladder said:
I have neglected this forum for several months after getting some great help about a year ago when setting up my tropical community tank. Touch wood, everything has gone very well, with the only losses being a few neons very shortly after adding a group several months ago. But I'm back on here due to a sad loss of one of my German Blue Rams, which only yesterday I was admiring and trying to decide if it was male or female. It's a 100 litre tank, with inhabitants listed in my signature. All healthy and doing well until this evening when I found one of the rams floating, with fury mold like stuff around its head and both eyes missing. I keep excellent water quality, with regular API checks and 30% water changes each week. Temperature is 25-26C, ammonia zero, nitrite zero, nitrate around 20-40ppm and pH around 7.5. The only major change in several months has been only 4 days ago when I added three new neons to take my shoal back up to 7, thinking that 4 was too few for these shoaling shy fish. They were acclimatised slowly and added with only very little of the water that came from the LFS, and are doing well. I'll keep a close eye on everything, but have read that Blue Rams suffer Sudden Death Syndrome (SDS), so am worried for the remaining one. Any advice welcomed!
I've kept many GBR's over the past 4 years and with experience can say that GBR's succumb to disease where other fish do not during transition periods (i.e. when transferring the fish from one place to another) and when any sort of stressor is present.
Taking into account everything in your original post among other postulations, I think the GBR could have died due to one of the following:
1. The fish was insufficiently acclimatised to your aquarium which may have had significant pH, KH, GH and temperature readings to the LFS aquarium
2. Your pH level of 7.5 may be rising even higher which may be giving rise to skin irritation on the ram which can literally stress it to death.
3. The fish may have had a bacterial pop-eye infection, which for rams, usually comes about secondary to hole-in-the-head syndrome. If this is the reason, you would have witnessed, for an extensive period of 2-3 months, white faeces and the fish spitting out processed foods.
4. Your group of corydoras may have stressed it out if it was trying to compete for any sinking pellets which you presumably add. You may be thinking this is a farfetched explanation; but when it comes to GBR's remember that everything is opposites!
5. Large water changes are prevalent for upsetting GBR's. They prefer consistency, particularly when it comes to KH and GH. The KH and GH concentration are actively utilised to oxidise ammonia by the filters/plants so your tank will always have less KH/GH in it comparative to the source of the tank water. For this reason, smaller water changes of about 15% of the tank capacity are preferred if you have Rams. Your other fish probably couldn't care less.
I don't think your temperature of 25-26 degrees C would constitute a problem for GBR providing you reached that temperature over a VERY SLOW graduated period. GBR's, in the rainy season of their native Venezuelan river basins, will experience temperature dips which signifies the start of the breeding season for them. So this should be seen as a welcoming change providing it's a slow transition. You should be aiming for a temperature of 27 degrees C in a tank containing GBR's and other fish which require lower temperatures.