NorthPoleFish
New Member
Back in November 2023, I set up my son's 3 gal cylinder fish tank and stocked it with too many fish. I didn't know any better being new to the hobby. After several fish dying, we ended up with 1 female blue platty and 3 male mollies (can't remember the types) that are still alive. For the 3 gal tank, it ended up doing the nitrogen cycle with fish in it. The 3 gal tank has been happy for months now, with no problems, the fish living in it is another story. After posting on another fish forum, I was told I had way too many fish in the 3 gal tank and that is why one of the mollies kept sinking and not swimming right. Up to this point, which would have been the beginning of June 2024, I was only changing the water every week or so. I started doing daily water changes of 1/3 of the water and the red molly started doing much better and would swim around and was eating just fine. I bought a 20 gal tank around this time and had it go through the nitrogen cycle with no fish and the nitrogen cycle is complete and the platty and mollies are now in the 20 gal tank. I understand now that the red molly was very stressed being in such a small tank for so long. I was hoping that being in a bigger tank would help, but he hasn't changed at all. The fish have been in the adult tank for about 3 days now (I know that isn't a long time) and I fasted all the fish for 3 days. The 3 gal tank is now home to 6 fry that the platty had.
The red molly that is sick and really stressed was doing better (and still alive) up until Wednesday, July 3. Up to this point, I was changing about 1/3 of the water every day and I believe that made a big difference for the red molly. I went out of town on Monday, July 1 for a week. I did a water changed and vacuumed the gravel before I left (there was a bit of fish poo and uneaten food). It was 2 days later when my friend came over to change the water (she changed the water on July 3) and the red molly was sitting on the bottom of the tank, alive, but not moving. And the red molly has been that way since. My friend came over every day after that while I was gone and did a water change, about 1/3 of the water. My friend also feed the fish every other day. He can swim, sort of, but mostly just sinks to the bottom of the tank. His left pectoral fin rapidly moves and he opens and closes his mouth all the time. This little fish is quit the tough guy to be hanging in there like this (he has been sick for about a month now like this) and would like to help him get better if it is in my power to do so. I'm new at this, but I'm learning.
Is there anything that I can do for him? I know it is hard to tell with fish what the problems are, which is why I'm asking since maybe someone else had a similar problem. Is this a wait and see what happens/how the fish is doing after a couple days and then go from there? I fasted all the fish and gave the red molly and the golden molly an epsom salt bath this morning and tried feeding them a cooked, skinned pea. The epsom salt bath was 1 tablespoon per gallon of water for 10 minutes and then 1/4 tablespoon of espom salt per gallon of water for 5 minutes and then back into the 20 gal tank. Neither fish wanted anything to do with the pea. Fasting didn't make any difference in either conditions of the either sick fish. So far, the epsom salt bath doesn't seem like it has made a difference either. I was wondering if I could give them another epsom salt bath later today or tomorrow? I have read online that twice a day for extreme cases can be beneficial and even leaving the fish in a low concentrated epsom salt bath overnight can help. I am wondering if both sick mollies have a swim bladder problem which is why I've done the fasting, epsom salt baths, and trying to feed peas. I'm pretty sure the golden molly has a swim bladder issue since he was fine, swimming normally, until yesterday morning when he is now upside down.
I tested the 20 gal tank this morning:
Ammonia = 0ppm
Nitrites = 0ppm
Nitrates = 5 ppm
High pH = 7.8
kH = 11 dKH
gH = 6 dGH (although I'm not 100% sure on this one, I used a Sera test and according to the directions, you add one drop of solution to 5 ml of tank water and swirl after each drop, waiting for the color to go from red to brown to eventual green, never got red and it was a green hue about 4 drops in)
I changed about 20% of the water on July 8 to try and get some of the old fish food (from trying to start the nitrogen cycle) cleaned up.
For the first couple months, I only feed the fish Fluval Bug Bites flakes. They now get a variety of food that includes Hikari micro wafers (slowly-sinking), Hikari micro pellets (semi-floating), Hikari algae wafers, and I recently introduced freeze-dried bloodworms. After a lot of trial and error to figure out how much to feed the fish (I know I was overfeeding them for a number of weeks now), I now only feed once a day and generally two small pinches of flakes and one of the other foods. Could the problem with the red molly be a food related issue? Should I be feeding the mollies and platy something else or anything in addition to what I am already feeding?
I am starting to wonder if I need to think about euthanizing the red molly at this point since I don't want him to suffer any more than he has. I was hoping he would hang in there to get better, but now I'm hoping he will pass away on his own since I don't know if anything can be do to save him. I'm hoping that I can still save the golden molly.
The red molly that is sick and really stressed was doing better (and still alive) up until Wednesday, July 3. Up to this point, I was changing about 1/3 of the water every day and I believe that made a big difference for the red molly. I went out of town on Monday, July 1 for a week. I did a water changed and vacuumed the gravel before I left (there was a bit of fish poo and uneaten food). It was 2 days later when my friend came over to change the water (she changed the water on July 3) and the red molly was sitting on the bottom of the tank, alive, but not moving. And the red molly has been that way since. My friend came over every day after that while I was gone and did a water change, about 1/3 of the water. My friend also feed the fish every other day. He can swim, sort of, but mostly just sinks to the bottom of the tank. His left pectoral fin rapidly moves and he opens and closes his mouth all the time. This little fish is quit the tough guy to be hanging in there like this (he has been sick for about a month now like this) and would like to help him get better if it is in my power to do so. I'm new at this, but I'm learning.
Is there anything that I can do for him? I know it is hard to tell with fish what the problems are, which is why I'm asking since maybe someone else had a similar problem. Is this a wait and see what happens/how the fish is doing after a couple days and then go from there? I fasted all the fish and gave the red molly and the golden molly an epsom salt bath this morning and tried feeding them a cooked, skinned pea. The epsom salt bath was 1 tablespoon per gallon of water for 10 minutes and then 1/4 tablespoon of espom salt per gallon of water for 5 minutes and then back into the 20 gal tank. Neither fish wanted anything to do with the pea. Fasting didn't make any difference in either conditions of the either sick fish. So far, the epsom salt bath doesn't seem like it has made a difference either. I was wondering if I could give them another epsom salt bath later today or tomorrow? I have read online that twice a day for extreme cases can be beneficial and even leaving the fish in a low concentrated epsom salt bath overnight can help. I am wondering if both sick mollies have a swim bladder problem which is why I've done the fasting, epsom salt baths, and trying to feed peas. I'm pretty sure the golden molly has a swim bladder issue since he was fine, swimming normally, until yesterday morning when he is now upside down.
I tested the 20 gal tank this morning:
Ammonia = 0ppm
Nitrites = 0ppm
Nitrates = 5 ppm
High pH = 7.8
kH = 11 dKH
gH = 6 dGH (although I'm not 100% sure on this one, I used a Sera test and according to the directions, you add one drop of solution to 5 ml of tank water and swirl after each drop, waiting for the color to go from red to brown to eventual green, never got red and it was a green hue about 4 drops in)
I changed about 20% of the water on July 8 to try and get some of the old fish food (from trying to start the nitrogen cycle) cleaned up.
For the first couple months, I only feed the fish Fluval Bug Bites flakes. They now get a variety of food that includes Hikari micro wafers (slowly-sinking), Hikari micro pellets (semi-floating), Hikari algae wafers, and I recently introduced freeze-dried bloodworms. After a lot of trial and error to figure out how much to feed the fish (I know I was overfeeding them for a number of weeks now), I now only feed once a day and generally two small pinches of flakes and one of the other foods. Could the problem with the red molly be a food related issue? Should I be feeding the mollies and platy something else or anything in addition to what I am already feeding?
I am starting to wonder if I need to think about euthanizing the red molly at this point since I don't want him to suffer any more than he has. I was hoping he would hang in there to get better, but now I'm hoping he will pass away on his own since I don't know if anything can be do to save him. I'm hoping that I can still save the golden molly.