Gootz
Fish Fanatic
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- Jan 31, 2012
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You are clearly knowledgeable, so why don't you tell me exactly what you need to know and I'll give you that information. I appreciate any help I can get at this point.byork said:You say you and the LFS agree that it is not water quality, it very well may not be, but with out knowing the specific parameters of the water and other specifics such as filtration, injection, fertilization, etc. it is very difficult to assist. Just from the photos you have posted it looks like you have low hardness or macro nutrient deficiency as evidence of the discolored leaf. Plants tend to grow vigorously at first and then tapper off after 4- 6 weeks not die or decompose (releasing NH3). I did not see any new growth. This could be evidence of very unstable water parameters complicated by the lack of buffering capacity. This may not be evident in the simple pH, NH3, NO2 testing that most LFS conduct for free due to the time that the water has to degas before arriving for testing. Additionally, you get what you pay for. Free water quality testing is a perfect example of that but I maybe I am wrong and the employees at your LFS have studied water quality and organic chemistry in great detail. Test strips are notoriously unreliable. IMO for the species you are keeping a 6.5 pH with a swing of no more than 0.2 from day to night should be maintained and all other parameters (NH3 NO2) should be maintained at 0 ppm. The fish show classic signs of NO2 poisoning.
My betta just died. I know it's just a fish, but I was really pulling for him and did everything I could (that I knew how) to help him make it. I am really bummed out right now and at a loss of what to do with my tank at this point. Here's a closeup of him right after he died:VickyChaiTea said:I've read that Pimafix is at best benign and at worst deadly to anabantoids, because it can coat the labyrinth organ and cause all sorts of trouble. I've also read anecdotes about it melting their fins. I never use it because it's just tea tree oil, and as far as I can tell it's a general antiseptic and nothing more. I've not seen anything scientific but I stay away from the stuff.
Test strips are also generally inaccurate and a liquid test kit is something you'll want to invest in.
Since cardinals are schooling you really want a group of 6 or more. So even under the best circumstances the stress of being in such a small group can cause illness and death.
Unfortunately, I think the fish were sick when you got them. That coupled with the small school was a problem. I say this because I've seen a very similar type of infection in bettas that spreads so rapidly that a fish can go from having a spot and overnight half his body will be covered. It honestly looks like dead tissue. grey and tattered. Here are some photos of when I've seen it. I don't know what it is exactly but It's not very nice, I can tell you that much. I'm not sure if it's the same as what your boy has, though.
(this poor guy also had a saprolegnia infection, secondary to whatever made that sore on his head. He did not survive.)
Since we don't know if it's bacterial or fungal it'll be best to treat with a medication that treats both, like Furan-2 http/www.drsfostersmith.com/product/prod_display.cfm?pcatid=4827
A 6 gallon is absolutely too small for cardinals anyway, they require a lot of horizontal swimming space and do better in large schools.
What are the exact results of your water test? Sometimes pet store employees will think an ammonia reading of 1.0 is perfectly safe.
I'm sorry this happened to you. As someone else suggested, a quarantine tank is going to help prevent this kind of thing from happening in the future.
The lighting is from my LED flashlight, so it has more of a blueish tint than it is, but it clearly looks like a fungus growing on him. And I found something else rather odd while inspecting the tank tonight. Little white pod-like sacs attached all over the glass of the tank. Not sure if you can make them out in this pic below. They're about 1 mm or so in diameter and they are attached all throughout the tank. I noticed I have small little snails hatching every so often, so are they snail sacs with embrios inside? I have an assassin snail, but he doesn't seem to be doing a damned thing.
It feels like it's one problem after the next and I'm almost thinking about tearing down the tank and starting all over. But I've put so much effort, work and money into it that I don't want to just give up. I could use a pep talk and some helpful advice right about now...