I think that may be more likely than Anthrax IMHO.........

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I think that may be more likely than Anthrax IMHO.........
It will kill off your beneficial bacterial colony in your filter. Be prepared for having to re-cycle your tank after (and possibly during) your treatment.Nifurpirinol is a highly efficient preparation, which effectively combats most gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria, e.g. aeromonas, pseudomonas, corynebacterium, streptococci and many others, except for fish tuberculosis. JBL PondFuranol is well-tolerated, is absorbed very easily through the gills and can be found in therapeutically effective concentrations in all organs after only a few minutes.
Mike, with all due respect, that is unlikely in the extreme given the circumstances. Do you really think that the dispersion of red patches shown in wass's photos could be caused by simply lying on a rock?One possibility is simply that the animal was lying on a stone when it died and the redness formed in the underbelly about the time of death or perhaps after the death. I've seen this a couple of times....
It is unlikely but not impossible (and of course, I did look at the dispersion). Please do pay at least a minimal attention to my post before criticizing: the previous sentence was "...the type of redness shown on your picture may come from other causes. " I provided an example of one possible cause; I did not say this what is what happened.shari2 wrote:Mike, with all due respect, that is unlikely in the extreme given the circumstances. Do you really think that the dispersion of red patches shown in wass's photos could be caused by simply lying on a rock?One possibility is simply that the animal was lying on a stone when it died and the redness formed in the underbelly about the time of death or perhaps after the death. I've seen this a couple of times....
Is it really necessary to go into high gear with "ill-advised"? The goal of this thread in my understanding is to help Wolfram, not continue an old fight in yet one more thread. It would be considerably more helpful to the OP if you explained why I'm wrong.Please don't throw out random, ill-advised ideas as 'food for thought' when clearly there is convincing evidence that what he is looking at is a tank wide problem.
Mikev.Please do pay at least a minimal attention to my post before criticizing: the previous sentence was "...the type of redness shown on your picture may come from other causes. " I provided an example of one possible cause.
Is it really necessary to go into high gear with "ill-advised"? The goal of this thread in my understanding is to help Wolfram, not continue an old fight in yet one more thread. It would be considerably more helpful to the OP if you explained why I'm wrong.Please don't throw out random, ill-advised ideas as 'food for thought' when clearly there is convincing evidence that what he is looking at is a tank wide problem.
Please do clarify if "ill-advised" was coming from Shari-poster or Shari-moderator.
As for explaining why you are wrong? It would be pointless because you failed to recognize my point or my authority in the first place.Now, back to the topic:
Do notice that while he is having a tank-wide problem, redness occurred only in one of -- I'm assuming -- 4 sick or dead animals (3 striatas, 1 rafael). Thus IME it is prudent to allow that the redness on the body may not be a symptom.
Dissecting with my limited skills would be just checking for worms and swollen organs. Swollen liver for example points to bacterial infection and thus calls for desinfecting the entire tank. And I`m just interested in what´s going on in such a big belly.Mark in Vancouver wrote:before you dissect your fish to look for (??) clues, (??) you might want to inquire with a local public aquarium or speak to a certified veterinarian
Sorry about your nice bag full of kuhlis, I guess sometimes transportation causes trouble, even after point of sales. The weather over here is just dropping too cold at some times, perhaps some shipping was not adjustedc to that properly…Martin Thoene wrote:
This is why we quarantine because problems are not always obvious.
I'm looking at these pictures and the red patches suggest to me some form of sepsis.
Martin.
Thanks for the effective links and even your extra step checking the jbl ingredient. There is quit a bunch pointing into direction of BHSshari2 wrote: Thought I'd throw this out there as if it is what you think you are dealing with you should treat the tank, pronto.
Not really matching the conversation... but I found that you see the heartbeat at Striatas similar to the hillstream-flat-type loaches ...mikev wrote:Undetected heart problem,...
Thanks, I did check, water was ok, except ph was up 7.6 (due to interrupted Co2 addition. This happenes while adding a new tank to the system) One filter was new - and still hat some odour (surprisingly even only 3 days after cleaning).Tinman wrote:... My suggestion is to look over your filters well with eyes and nose...
Chen, I will do. I froze it for now, as I was short on time. I´ll post any pictures once I´ve made someckk125 wrote:Open that stratia up, then we can know the cause and prevent such things from happening again.
I also have that feeling, they behave different than Botine loaches, thea are cute thoughcybermeez wrote:... Probably among the most sensitive of the Botias...
I had my CO2-bottle out for refill during rearranging tanks… I have it on again now, I will meassure again tomorrow, but something like that coulod tick them off…cybermeez wrote:... Depending on what the pH was before the CO2 issue, that could have been the stressor since pH increases/decreases exponentially. If I'm remembering my high school chemisty correctly every point increase in pH means a 10 fold increase in alkalinity. A point decline is a 10 fold increase in acidity…
Yes, it´s to fast for BHS in my case…it looked very similar, but I guess it isn´t …cybermeez wrote:…Bacterial Hemmorrhagic Septicimia (and its viral cousin) have been the scourge of catfish keepers for years. It's very difficult to treat because it attacks the interanl organs first and usually by the time the fish is showing any outward symptoms it's already too late. That hasn't stopped me from trying though.
I tried to cure some fish, but I was not as successful…as a teenager I cut the caudal of a guppy who had fin rotting, that helped it lived as lomg as a guppy lives… I respect your commitment towards your Cory very muchcybermeez wrote:… The little guy is still with me today. Most sick fish unfortunately won't eat meaning he's out lived many, many tankmates.
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