meadoughlark
New Member
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2018
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Hi all,
I have a 10 gallon tank containing 6 zebra danios, 1 bronze corydoras and live plants (store bought). After 4 months of no issues, I came home 2 days ago to find 1 zebra danio dead and another swimming awkwardly on its back which died a few hours later. I am ashamed to admit that I bought my tank and fish on a bit of a whim without doing much research so have been doing monthly full water changes and complete tank cleans rather than regular partial water changes. Since I was due for one of these monthly cleans anyway and assuming the fish had died due to poor water quality, I emptied the tank, cleaned the gravel, glass and plants, refilled and put the fish back in. (After now reading too late about tank cycling etc, I feel awful writing this).
2 days later I've come home to find the water teaming with tiny white wriggly worms which I'm unable to photograph, but they look a lot like this which I found online:
Some are crawling along the glass as pictured, most are free swimming in the water (both look like the same type though). They range from a few mm to a couple of cm in length. They seem more like detritus worms than planaria to me due to their long, threadlike shape and lack of triangular head, but most websites seem to describe detritus worms as swimming rather than crawling on the glass - do they do both?
The most alarming thing is what I've photographed below, which seems to either be a mass of worms threading off into the water or one large worm clumped together. You can also see a few of the worms on the glass underneath.
Below is a photo of what I previously thought were snail eggs (there are a few water snails in the tank which I assume came in with the plants), but I now wonder if these become the 'worm mass' seen in the previous photo - pure speculation though. I have seen these before the deep clean both above and below the water surface, but never the worms until now. What baffles me is that these have appeared so quickly after the deep clean.
No fish or plants have been added and the gravel and glass were thoroughly cleaned, so where could these worms have come from? Could they have been hiding in the plant roots or the ornate rock I have in the tank?
I'm not sure if these worms killed the fish (I've read that parasitic worms don't swim in the water), I'm just worried that they could cause a problem to the remaining fish. Although my common sense tells me an aquatic worm is not adapted to survive in the human digestive tract, I'm also a little worried that I could have been infected with these things during cleaning. I live in the tropics in Thailand so these could be different from the planaria and detritus worms that seem to be common in US and European aquariums?
Sorry for the long post, I hope someone can put my mind at rest.
I have a 10 gallon tank containing 6 zebra danios, 1 bronze corydoras and live plants (store bought). After 4 months of no issues, I came home 2 days ago to find 1 zebra danio dead and another swimming awkwardly on its back which died a few hours later. I am ashamed to admit that I bought my tank and fish on a bit of a whim without doing much research so have been doing monthly full water changes and complete tank cleans rather than regular partial water changes. Since I was due for one of these monthly cleans anyway and assuming the fish had died due to poor water quality, I emptied the tank, cleaned the gravel, glass and plants, refilled and put the fish back in. (After now reading too late about tank cycling etc, I feel awful writing this).
2 days later I've come home to find the water teaming with tiny white wriggly worms which I'm unable to photograph, but they look a lot like this which I found online:
Some are crawling along the glass as pictured, most are free swimming in the water (both look like the same type though). They range from a few mm to a couple of cm in length. They seem more like detritus worms than planaria to me due to their long, threadlike shape and lack of triangular head, but most websites seem to describe detritus worms as swimming rather than crawling on the glass - do they do both?
The most alarming thing is what I've photographed below, which seems to either be a mass of worms threading off into the water or one large worm clumped together. You can also see a few of the worms on the glass underneath.
Below is a photo of what I previously thought were snail eggs (there are a few water snails in the tank which I assume came in with the plants), but I now wonder if these become the 'worm mass' seen in the previous photo - pure speculation though. I have seen these before the deep clean both above and below the water surface, but never the worms until now. What baffles me is that these have appeared so quickly after the deep clean.
No fish or plants have been added and the gravel and glass were thoroughly cleaned, so where could these worms have come from? Could they have been hiding in the plant roots or the ornate rock I have in the tank?
I'm not sure if these worms killed the fish (I've read that parasitic worms don't swim in the water), I'm just worried that they could cause a problem to the remaining fish. Although my common sense tells me an aquatic worm is not adapted to survive in the human digestive tract, I'm also a little worried that I could have been infected with these things during cleaning. I live in the tropics in Thailand so these could be different from the planaria and detritus worms that seem to be common in US and European aquariums?
Sorry for the long post, I hope someone can put my mind at rest.