Help!! Red Zebras
Help!! Red Zebras
I did a water change at the weekend as usual & the zebs seemed fine then last night I noticed one out in the open & its body was red & ragged looking - the other 2 seemed fine. I treated with eSHa 2000 funguf,finrot & bacteria treatment. This morning that one is dead & one of the others looks red - the 3rd looks ok but is not hiding.
I keep 3 corrys with them 1 died 2 weeks ago but I could find no cause & the others are fine.
Any advice? Should I remove the 'healthy looking' one, or the sick one, I don't have a Q tank at present but could move some of my other fish around.
Water peramaters are as normal.
suggestions please.
Lucy <><
I keep 3 corrys with them 1 died 2 weeks ago but I could find no cause & the others are fine.
Any advice? Should I remove the 'healthy looking' one, or the sick one, I don't have a Q tank at present but could move some of my other fish around.
Water peramaters are as normal.
suggestions please.
Lucy <><
Interpet No 9 is a good treatment that could be a septicemia have you tested your water for high readings this is a good starting point, have you added any fish recently say in the last month, how long has your tank been running
L number plecos and pleco products worldwide delivery www.rareaquatics.co.uk
Hi Jo
Thanks for your reply!
The tanks been running over a year & the water perameters are as usual - the only high I've got is phosphate - but that's an ongoing battle with the levels in the tap water & is not significantly different to usual.
I've added no new fish (other than the baby endlers that are born in the tank).
I've done a small partial water change & added some charcoal to clear out an unwanted 'things' in the water that I cant test for - I'm not sure I should have but I had to DO something if you know what I mean.
The 2 remaining zebs are out in the open & both showing 'red' signs. The corrys & endlers are fine.
Should I try another treatment or leave them? What would cause septicemia - high readings of what?
The charcoal is in the external filter so easy to remove again.
Thanks for your reply!
The tanks been running over a year & the water perameters are as usual - the only high I've got is phosphate - but that's an ongoing battle with the levels in the tap water & is not significantly different to usual.
I've added no new fish (other than the baby endlers that are born in the tank).
I've done a small partial water change & added some charcoal to clear out an unwanted 'things' in the water that I cant test for - I'm not sure I should have but I had to DO something if you know what I mean.
The 2 remaining zebs are out in the open & both showing 'red' signs. The corrys & endlers are fine.
Should I try another treatment or leave them? What would cause septicemia - high readings of what?
The charcoal is in the external filter so easy to remove again.
- Andrew C
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Lucy, sorry to hear about your zebs !
Not sure what could be happening, though i did invest in an RO Unit for my tap water as Neil from Pier Aquatics told me high phosphate readings are detrimental to a plecs health over the long term.
Though the RO Unit still hasn't helped me with random fry deaths.
In cases like this i would run some Underworld Polyfilter on the tank; http://www.aquatics-online.co.uk/catalo ... ilters.asp
"PolyFilter will remove excess nutrients, toxins and unwanted pollutants", it is much better than carbon.
Most aquatic stores have it, the only downside to it, is that is a bit expensive and you also need a spare internal filter for it.
To use it remove the media from a Fluval 2 internal, cut a bit of polyfilter to fit inside the chamber that held the sponges and just put it in the tank, it also dosen't leech anything back into the tank when it's used.
The Esha treatment you used is what i would also have tried, but i am not sure what you should do apart from daily 40% water changes for the next few days at least and keep the Esha treatment going, as from what i have read septicemia is a bacteria.
http://www.nippyfish.net/septicemia.html
Not sure what could be happening, though i did invest in an RO Unit for my tap water as Neil from Pier Aquatics told me high phosphate readings are detrimental to a plecs health over the long term.
Though the RO Unit still hasn't helped me with random fry deaths.
In cases like this i would run some Underworld Polyfilter on the tank; http://www.aquatics-online.co.uk/catalo ... ilters.asp
"PolyFilter will remove excess nutrients, toxins and unwanted pollutants", it is much better than carbon.
Most aquatic stores have it, the only downside to it, is that is a bit expensive and you also need a spare internal filter for it.
To use it remove the media from a Fluval 2 internal, cut a bit of polyfilter to fit inside the chamber that held the sponges and just put it in the tank, it also dosen't leech anything back into the tank when it's used.
The Esha treatment you used is what i would also have tried, but i am not sure what you should do apart from daily 40% water changes for the next few days at least and keep the Esha treatment going, as from what i have read septicemia is a bacteria.
http://www.nippyfish.net/septicemia.html
I didn't think it could get any worse but it has.
It was bad enough losing one tank of fish - now it's 3 tanks - all to the same thing.
The only 'common factor' that I can think of is that I added some TetraAqua SafeStart to all these tanks when I last cleaned them (I usually do - it was not a 'new' thing) but I had not noticed that the bottle was 1 month out of date.
Even more gutting is that my more mature Zebs (Big Mumma, Midge & Titch) who were all dead this morning had laid eggs in the small cave.
The 3rd tank contained 14 corys that I had bred - 2 have survived.
I don't have words to describe how awful I feel but I do thank you all for your kind thoughts.
Lucy <><
It was bad enough losing one tank of fish - now it's 3 tanks - all to the same thing.
The only 'common factor' that I can think of is that I added some TetraAqua SafeStart to all these tanks when I last cleaned them (I usually do - it was not a 'new' thing) but I had not noticed that the bottle was 1 month out of date.
Even more gutting is that my more mature Zebs (Big Mumma, Midge & Titch) who were all dead this morning had laid eggs in the small cave.
The 3rd tank contained 14 corys that I had bred - 2 have survived.
I don't have words to describe how awful I feel but I do thank you all for your kind thoughts.
Lucy <><
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