Page 1 of 1
sick pleco
Posted: 02 Jan 2007, 06:48
by gofish
sick Albino bn pleco
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I just noticed that my Long Fin Albino BN pleco is really bloated and he or she's head is white and it's fins looks bloody has this happen to anyone before I have included some pictures. (Sorry about the low quality)
Standard information
1. Tank size and how long it has been established 35 gallon 8 months
2. The fish (or multiple fish) in question as well as tankmates tank mates are breeding trio of reg fin albino bn plecos' 3other long fin albino bn pleco's and 9 sp 44 fri.
3. Water Parameters (temperature, Ph, nitrites, nitrates, ammonia, etc.) 78deg 0,0,0
4. Any recent changes to the tank, including any new additions (plants as well as fish and other related aquaria), new foods, substrate, chemicals, medications, etc. no changes in over 2months
Posted: 02 Jan 2007, 08:41
by Shane
I would immediately move the fish to a hospital tank and treat with a broad spectrum gram positive and negative bacterial medication. I like Binox by Jungle myself. I am not sure that you will be able to save the fish, but I would try the above and then keep the animal on a pure veggie diet for a month or so afterwards.
-Shane
SICK PLECO
Posted: 02 Jan 2007, 15:10
by gofish
I moved him as soon as I discovered his illness and I never feed them much protein before. Their diet is spirolia and kelp flake, cucumbers, Sera walfers and peas.
Hopefully my LFS has the meds you are talking about.
I also have another pleco that I bought about 2 months ago in a group of 5 and I have 3 left 2 are growing great nice color and size but one has never really grown and is very pale. I thouht that he just wasn't getting much food as the others so I moved him to a planted tank I just set up with another pleco hat I got at the same time. They both seem to be eating well but he has not improved any idea on this one?
Posted: 02 Jan 2007, 17:22
by racoll
Water Parameters (temperature, Ph, nitrites, nitrates, ammonia, etc.) 78deg 0,0,0
Hi.
A zero reading of nitrates is not normal if your filter is working correctly.
I have had a dud test kit give a zero reading.
.
Posted: 02 Jan 2007, 17:39
by CAtfishluvva
I agree with shane, get that fishy in a tank and treat! I lost a whiptail yesterday that also was bloated and started bleeding through the skin and the base of the anal and dorsal fin before she died...
Here and
Here are two threads I posted on PCF over the past few days regarding her.
Hope you get yours healed soon!
Posted: 06 Jan 2007, 05:34
by gofish
Just to update everyone she is still alive I treated her the other day with some Binox by Jungle.She is not eating much, she hasen't touched the zucchini but seems to have eaten the kale. She is not pooping very much short skinny pieces.Hopefully she gets better.
Posted: 25 Jan 2007, 05:16
by gofish
Just to let everyone know I believe she is cured. I used the Binox by Jungle and it seems to have done the trick. No more open soars and no more blood in the fins. She's beeen ok for about a week now how long till I put her in the main tank again?
Does anyone know whats wrong with my other pleco?
I also have another pl*co that I bought about 2 months ago in a group of 5 and I have 3 left 2 are growing great nice color and size but one has never really grown and is very pale. I thouht that he just wasn't getting much food as the others so I moved him to a planted tank I just set up with another pl*co that I got at the same time. They both seem to be eating well but he has not improved any idea on this one?
Posted: 25 Jan 2007, 20:05
by apistomaster
A month in quarantine would help make sure the cure was successful. It is a common problem in the use of antibiotics to assume the disease is cured too soon. Upon early cessation of treatment the resistant disease organisms rebound and are much harder to treat.
You have not made it clear what kind your other plecos are. If they are more albino longfin bn it is not uncommon IME that many have starved too long before you buy them which not only weakens them but many are never able to overcome their previous mistreatment and remain permanently stunted. LF albino BN are not as sturdy as reg fin or normal colored BN either which makes them all the more susceptible to mistreatment.
Posted: 25 Jan 2007, 22:12
by gofish
yes it's a long fin albino. I have had other die like this but this on is lasting a long time. I am just wondering if I should medicate it?
Posted: 25 Jan 2007, 23:19
by apistomaster
Deciding whether to medicate or not can be hard to decide. With a lot of experience one can usually tell if it is indicated or just a lost cause.
If you have the quarantine facility it would not hurt to try. I tend to toss an individual sick fish and treat when it has generalized to a valuable group. I mean this in the context of bacterial diseases where the success rate is low. If it is a skin parasite like ich or velvet I always treat the whole tank with malachite green preparations because these protozoans are easy to kill as they are external or at least the free swimming stages are.
Bacterial disease are usually at an advanced stage by the time I realize what's up and it is difficult to get therapeutic levels of drugs delivered internally as a general rule.