threecharacters
Fish Fanatic
I have 6 Bumblebee gobies (sold as Brachygobius xanthomelas, but they are not) I received about a week ago. I bought them off aquatic arts and they were shipped to me (first time I've done this). Today I noticed a cottony growth on one fish's eye while doing a water change. Another might be developing some cloudy eyes (very faint). I think this might be columnaris.
The water tests out to NH3 0 ppm, NO2 0 ppm, and NO3 ~5 ppm (before water change). However, I noticed a bit of protein foam on top of the water before the water change which would indicate sub-optimal water quality (or at least a lot of organics). This is a new tank, but it is well-cycled and planted (was processing >2 ppm NH3 in a day).
The package of fish was pretty cold when I got it (the weather's getting quite cold around here). I did not drop acclimate but I did slowly acclimate the fish over about 30 mins to 1 hr following aquatic arts directions. I imagine the fish experienced some shock from shipping, low temperatures, and the relatively fast acclimation period. I think this could have triggered an infection in some of the fish.
The Bumblebee gobies are proving picky eaters, they are taking baby brine shrimp and frozen blood worms, but that's it. I'm looking to get a grindal worm culture soon. The infected fish are still eating.
Bumblebee gobies can be quarrelsome, but I haven't noticed much aggression while I've had them. I did notice that they arrived already with some fin damage.
My question is, can I hope for the infection to pass if I continue to maintain good water conditions and feeding live foods or should I get some medicine?
The tank is planted and it has bladder snails, will the medications harm the plants and/or snails?
I've attached photos of the tank and the infected fish.
The water tests out to NH3 0 ppm, NO2 0 ppm, and NO3 ~5 ppm (before water change). However, I noticed a bit of protein foam on top of the water before the water change which would indicate sub-optimal water quality (or at least a lot of organics). This is a new tank, but it is well-cycled and planted (was processing >2 ppm NH3 in a day).
The package of fish was pretty cold when I got it (the weather's getting quite cold around here). I did not drop acclimate but I did slowly acclimate the fish over about 30 mins to 1 hr following aquatic arts directions. I imagine the fish experienced some shock from shipping, low temperatures, and the relatively fast acclimation period. I think this could have triggered an infection in some of the fish.
The Bumblebee gobies are proving picky eaters, they are taking baby brine shrimp and frozen blood worms, but that's it. I'm looking to get a grindal worm culture soon. The infected fish are still eating.
Bumblebee gobies can be quarrelsome, but I haven't noticed much aggression while I've had them. I did notice that they arrived already with some fin damage.
My question is, can I hope for the infection to pass if I continue to maintain good water conditions and feeding live foods or should I get some medicine?
The tank is planted and it has bladder snails, will the medications harm the plants and/or snails?
I've attached photos of the tank and the infected fish.