biensurmacherie
New Member
Hi,
I have a male three-spot gourami who has been in the family for more than 5 years. He had been on his own in an 80L tank for quite a few years until I decided to give him some companions and take advantage of all the space going to waste. I got a silver shark, two salt and pepper mollies (one male, one female), and then when the male molly had a stroke and had to go back I replaced him with two scissortail rasboras. A few weeks after I got the new fish, the gourami showed large red spots under his scales (about 5mm in diameter, they looked like sores, but under the surface), and had something that I'm assuming is referred to as pineconing scales. The silver shark also had red spots, but they were smaller and on his fins as opposed to his body.
The red spots went away after a few days, and that was about two months ago. Since then I have added 6 harlequin rasboras and two bristlenose plecos. We had a bit of a tank accident recently and they were all a bit stressed when they were moved around and stayed in a smaller tank for a few days. Everyone seemed okay when they were moved back into an 80L tank and it's been a week since then.
Now the gourami sits on the bottom of the tank or on his rock quite often, which he's never done before. The other day he seemed to be having a buoyancy issue and was waving his fins wildly to stay in place. I replaced a few litres of the water and used warmer water, which seemed to liven him up a bit. Could the water temperature be the reason he's seeming a bit ill? Our heater has probably been broken for years but he was fine before.
If there's anything I can do for him apart from trying to keep him warm? Sorry for the long post, I wanted to include all the details.
Thanks,
Emma
I have a male three-spot gourami who has been in the family for more than 5 years. He had been on his own in an 80L tank for quite a few years until I decided to give him some companions and take advantage of all the space going to waste. I got a silver shark, two salt and pepper mollies (one male, one female), and then when the male molly had a stroke and had to go back I replaced him with two scissortail rasboras. A few weeks after I got the new fish, the gourami showed large red spots under his scales (about 5mm in diameter, they looked like sores, but under the surface), and had something that I'm assuming is referred to as pineconing scales. The silver shark also had red spots, but they were smaller and on his fins as opposed to his body.
The red spots went away after a few days, and that was about two months ago. Since then I have added 6 harlequin rasboras and two bristlenose plecos. We had a bit of a tank accident recently and they were all a bit stressed when they were moved around and stayed in a smaller tank for a few days. Everyone seemed okay when they were moved back into an 80L tank and it's been a week since then.
Now the gourami sits on the bottom of the tank or on his rock quite often, which he's never done before. The other day he seemed to be having a buoyancy issue and was waving his fins wildly to stay in place. I replaced a few litres of the water and used warmer water, which seemed to liven him up a bit. Could the water temperature be the reason he's seeming a bit ill? Our heater has probably been broken for years but he was fine before.
If there's anything I can do for him apart from trying to keep him warm? Sorry for the long post, I wanted to include all the details.
Thanks,
Emma