DeBuGti
New Member
Afternoon all,
Wondering if you could help answer some of my questions today regarding white spot and guppies specifically female guppies... Over the past few months now one in particular female guppy kept getting white spot. Some of the others had it as well, but after sufficient treatment it all went away.. Until the same female guppy got it again. I started reading forums and understanding that this attributes to stress at times, due to tank changes, temp etc... I started to realise my male to female guppy population was wrong, so I added some more female guppies to hopefully give the others a rest from the male rampage. Unfortunately it looks like the spot has come back... Maidenhead aquatics (fish shops in england) advised that the only way forward is to entirely change out my gravel?
But surely is this not a counter productive task? My tank has developed an eco system now and surely a biological aspect? Changing out all the gravel would surely destroy it all? Needless to say... I bought a bag of gravel there and then and got back home and decided to leave the bag in my car... I didn't want to do something massive like this without seeking other opinions.
Apologies, the other fish in the tank i should have mentioned are fine... And the male guppies show no signs of white spot either...
I did think at some point... should I use the gravel as an excuse to buy a smaller tank to treat the specific guppies and fish, and keep the male and females seperated? Any help would be appreciated.
My tank levels are all within acceptable ranges except for my nitrate which is slightly higher than the normal. I am working on reducing that as we speak by regular cleans and water changes.
Wondering if you could help answer some of my questions today regarding white spot and guppies specifically female guppies... Over the past few months now one in particular female guppy kept getting white spot. Some of the others had it as well, but after sufficient treatment it all went away.. Until the same female guppy got it again. I started reading forums and understanding that this attributes to stress at times, due to tank changes, temp etc... I started to realise my male to female guppy population was wrong, so I added some more female guppies to hopefully give the others a rest from the male rampage. Unfortunately it looks like the spot has come back... Maidenhead aquatics (fish shops in england) advised that the only way forward is to entirely change out my gravel?
But surely is this not a counter productive task? My tank has developed an eco system now and surely a biological aspect? Changing out all the gravel would surely destroy it all? Needless to say... I bought a bag of gravel there and then and got back home and decided to leave the bag in my car... I didn't want to do something massive like this without seeking other opinions.
Apologies, the other fish in the tank i should have mentioned are fine... And the male guppies show no signs of white spot either...
I did think at some point... should I use the gravel as an excuse to buy a smaller tank to treat the specific guppies and fish, and keep the male and females seperated? Any help would be appreciated.
My tank levels are all within acceptable ranges except for my nitrate which is slightly higher than the normal. I am working on reducing that as we speak by regular cleans and water changes.