Complacency causes a lot of climbing accidents. You've traversed potentially avalanche-prone slopes hundreds of times and nothing has happened, and you stop paying as much attention to slope angles and snowpack layers. Then one day, the slope falls off on you.
I haven't been quarantining new fish because it seemed like a pain and a lot of faff and got away with it. Now I've f&(&*('ed it. I got an L471 about ten days ago, a small species of Hypancistrus plecos, and added it to my 125L tank, which it shares with two other Hypancistrus, an L260 and an L262, some corys, otos, and a couple killifish.
This Wednesday, one of the killis keeled over dead for no apparent reason. Okay, these things happen, and killis aren't very long lived. Tested water, which seemed fine, and did a water change. On Thursday, the L260 and L262 were being really active, swimming up and down during the day. That was unusual. They generally hide all day. But I got a couple photos. Then Friday, I noticed ich on the tail of the one of the killifish and on the L471. I swore a lot. Then I raised the temperature of the tank to 30C. That evening, I noticed all three plecos near the surface of the tank. They are rheophilic fish and I wondered if the temperature change deprived the water of too much oxygen. I did a small water change and bought another powerhead, but as it was about 9pm, the soonest I could get one was the next day. By 2am, the L260 was dead. The next morning, I found the L262 dead. Neither had the telltale symptoms of ich. But I could see ich on the killis, the L471, and one of the otos.
The L471 lived another two days, but I found it DOA this afternoon. One of the pygmy corys has also died. Keeping the temp at 30 and hoping the rest survive. I don't know what else I can do. I'm worried malachite green would kill off my remaining corys and otos.
This sucks. Should the hyperactivity of those plecos -- before anyone showed up with obvious symptoms -- have been a warning sign?
I haven't been quarantining new fish because it seemed like a pain and a lot of faff and got away with it. Now I've f&(&*('ed it. I got an L471 about ten days ago, a small species of Hypancistrus plecos, and added it to my 125L tank, which it shares with two other Hypancistrus, an L260 and an L262, some corys, otos, and a couple killifish.
This Wednesday, one of the killis keeled over dead for no apparent reason. Okay, these things happen, and killis aren't very long lived. Tested water, which seemed fine, and did a water change. On Thursday, the L260 and L262 were being really active, swimming up and down during the day. That was unusual. They generally hide all day. But I got a couple photos. Then Friday, I noticed ich on the tail of the one of the killifish and on the L471. I swore a lot. Then I raised the temperature of the tank to 30C. That evening, I noticed all three plecos near the surface of the tank. They are rheophilic fish and I wondered if the temperature change deprived the water of too much oxygen. I did a small water change and bought another powerhead, but as it was about 9pm, the soonest I could get one was the next day. By 2am, the L260 was dead. The next morning, I found the L262 dead. Neither had the telltale symptoms of ich. But I could see ich on the killis, the L471, and one of the otos.
The L471 lived another two days, but I found it DOA this afternoon. One of the pygmy corys has also died. Keeping the temp at 30 and hoping the rest survive. I don't know what else I can do. I'm worried malachite green would kill off my remaining corys and otos.
This sucks. Should the hyperactivity of those plecos -- before anyone showed up with obvious symptoms -- have been a warning sign?