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FAQs on
Anabantoids/Gouramis & Relatives 1
Related Articles:
Anabantoids/Gouramis & Relatives, Genera
Ctenopoma & Microctenopoma,
Betta splendens/Siamese Fighting Fish,
Related FAQs: Gouramis 2,
Gourami Identification,
Gourami Behavior,
Gourami Compatibility,
Gourami Selection,
Gourami Systems,
Gourami Feeding,
Gourami Disease,
Gourami Reproduction,
Betta splendens/Siamese Fighting Fish,
Colisa art at home done by my friend Sue. |

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My Gourami fish
Hi the other day I purchased two flame Gouramis from my local pet store. Can
you please answer the following questions for me? How can I tell which one
is a male or female?
<Males are a bit larger, much more colorful, with unpaired fins that will be a
bit longer, more pointed... they act a bit more aggressively than females...
have the folks at the store where you shop show you these differences. Very
often folks just get/have males with no females...>
How can I get them two [sic] breed?
<A bit involved, and best searched on the Net... under the terms "Gourami
breeding"... elevated temperature, a covered system (to prevent drafts... damage
to young labyrinth organs, conditioning of adult breeders, their separation,
joining... preparation of foods for the fry...>
What other Gouramis go good with them?
<Other small Colisa, Trichogaster species>
Which is the easiest Gourami to bred?
<Mmm, likely Macropodus species, Paradisefishes. Bob Fenner>
A Sick Red Gourami
Bob - hope you can provide some insight. I'll make this short. Two days ago,
my Red Gourami came out from behind of his hiding plant (which was unusual.) In
looking closely at him, I noticed a dark gray area behind each gill. This,
obviously, was not normal and I had no idea what it was. The only thing I put in
the tank (10 gal.) to assist him was a recommended dose of "Melafix" that I
purchased at the pet store. The only other foreign matter I had put in the tank
was about a week ago when I added some Epsom Salts to a small breeding tank that
had a constipated Guppy in it. (The Guppy didn't make it.) Unfortunately,
neither did my Gouramis. I had intended to totally change the water this
morning, but when I arose, the Gourami had died. I'm just trying to figure out
what possibly the gray areas could have been and what I should have done. I'd
had the Gourami for about 6 months and he'd been very healthy. Between the
time I noticed the gray around the gills and it's dying was very quick. - 2
days. Appreciate any insight. Riley
<Likely the damage about the gills was environmental in origin... perhaps the
treatments you added had something to do with this... maybe not... Many imported
Gouramis (and livebearers for that matter) from the Far East suffer such
mortalities... mysteriously. The best one can do is to keep systems optimized,
stable and offer good foods. Bob Fenner>
Gourami Bubble Nest
Hi Bob,
I've got a 6-week old 29 gallon tank that has cycled successfully with
Bio-Spira. So far it's had only two inhabitants, a neon blue dwarf Gourami and a
female Betta, who have been cohabitating nicely. Although Mr. Gourami likes to
show her who's boss by turfing her around a bit, Miss Betta seems ok with it.
Just today Gourami has built himself a bubble nest and is definitely acting
hormonal!
<Yikes... well, they are closely related...>
More aggressive, jumping out of the water, things like that. Here's my two
questions: since Bettas and Gouramis are both labyrinth bubble-makers, is this
going to confuse them?
<Apparently so>
Any chance he might get more aggressive with her to get her to mate, after all
she's the only girl in town, AND she sucks air! Just want to make sure
she'll be safe.
<Me too... all should be fine though>
Also, I'm assuming that while he's doing this and guarding his creation this is
probably not the best time to add new fish....yes? I was planning this weekend
to add some Cory cats and a couple more female Bettas? Would this bother
Mr. Boss-man while he's busy trying to procreate? Thanks for your advice....
Leslie
<Actually... adding these other fishes my be a good idea... help diffuse, defuse
Mr. G's amorous attentions... Bob Fenner>
Sick Pink Kissing Gourami
A friend recently gave me his a fish tank that had a very small fish and a
Kissing Gourami. The fish sat in his office's lobby where almost nobody noticed
them. I took them home and put them in the same tank they had lived in their
entire lives, with the decorations exactly the same. The small fish is doing
great and swimming all the time, the Gourami is sitting on the bottom of the
tank with its fin and barely ever moves. When it does move, it swims around the
tank once and goes up to the surface and shoots back down and sits on the bottom
of the tank again. I first thought I had ICH, so I treated the water, but It
didn't seem to help anything. What should I do? What's hurting my fish
Thanks, Ryan
<Mmm, well, Kissers do "sit about" quite a bit... If your tank is large enough
(twenty or more gallons) and otherwise not overcrowded I would add another
kisser... they're social... hard to "kiss yourself"... and this should stir the
present one to be more active. Bob Fenner>
Long poop on Gourami, not white, dark tannish color
Wonder if it's normal for my Gourami to have a long trail of poop (about 1.5
times body length) trailing. It isn't white colored, it's a sort of darkish tan
or very light brown.
<Can, yes... depending on the food its getting>
It's swimming around quite happily, color is good, but that poop, it's hanging
there forever it seems (well it's been there over 15 minutes now). I feed my
fish dried shrimp at least two times a week, sometimes more, so it should be
getting enough fiber. Is this a sign of a parasite even though the poop looks
the right color, doesn't seem hollow or stringy, but looks like a constant poop
that is in dire need of being squeezed off.
<I would not be concerned here. Bob Fenner>
Injured Dwarf Gourami
Hello. I have an injured Dwarf Gouramis. He was being attacked behind his
eyes by a Platy.
<Unusual>
It looks as if its scales are gone and there are sores on both sides. I have it
in a 10 gal. tank with a male Betta (with no problems. my Betta is mellow), 2
platies, 3 white clouds, 2 albino Corys, an angel fish, and a rams horn snail.
My water is perfect condition. I took the aggressive platy out of the tank and
have him in a bowl for the time being. The Gourami has been hanging out in the
corner of the tank by the heater. Will he heal eventually heal and grow his
scales back?
<Likely so>
I have started treating the tank with MelaFix. Will this help?
<Probably more than hurt>
Plus the angel has been hanging out on the bottom lately. Any Ideas what could
help?
<Time going by. BTW, the plural of Gourami is Gouramis, platy is platies. Bob
Fenner>
Gourami stopped eating
HELP!!! I have a 30 gal tank. Perfect water except cloudy- I put cloud
reducer in last night. Opaline stopped eating this morning & not eating since.
Shares tank w/ gold Gourami, dwarf Gourami, 2 swordtails, 3 Cory cats, 2
Danios,& 1 Plecostomus. Have had all for over 2 months w/no prob.s till today.
Usually feed them trop flakes & algae wafers, but gave them whole brine shrimp
gel pack as a treat for the 1st time yesterday. Everyone ate heartily! Went back
to flakes & wafers today w/no probs. All ate except the Opaline Gourami. Gold
picks on him time-to-time, but otherwise peaceful tank. Has been up in corner
for a few days, but ate when fed- till today. All tank mates look great w/no
visible signs of illness or disease. Possible parasite? I'm baffled, PLEASE
help! Michelle in N.C.
<Very likely the feeding bout is due to the addition to the clarifying agent. I
would not worry unless this fish is not eating a week from now. Bob Fenner>
Sick dwarf Gourami
I have a 30 gallon community tank with various types of Gouramis, some Plecos,
Corys and mollies, plus a large apple snail and some small Danios. Everyone gets
along beautifully. My two dwarf Gouramis are acting peculiar. I think they're
the same gender, but I don't know which. One hides all the time and rarely comes
out from the driftwood, even for feeding time. The other feeds well, but looks
to have a swollen belly and swims in a slanted position. His swimming is labored
and he often rests against plants. Also their color sometimes looks drab. There
are no other visible signs of illness (i.e. no protruding scales, ich, fin rot
or damage, wounds). My water parameters checked out normal. Any ideas?
< Could be an internal bacterial infection. Isolate the fish in a quarantine
tank and treat with Metronidazole.-Chuck>
- Sara
Blue Gourami trouble swimming
Hi Wet Crew,
I have a 33 gal tank (3 yrs). pH is around 7 and temp @ 74 degrees. Penguin
dual BioWheel filter, plants etc. I change about 1/3 of the water every three
weeks.
<Hello, Jorie here...sounds like your tank is well-established and stable - good
deal.>
Fish are 2x Blue Gourami, 1x Black Angel, 1x Chinese Algae Eater (who doesn't
seem to eat algae),
<LOL! I've got a Siamese Algae Eater who pretty much eats everything *except*
algae!>
and 1 or 2 glass shrimp. All my fish seem to be fine except for one of the
Gouramis. It has trouble swimming and quite often just sits on the bottom with
it's tail spread on the bottom of the tank. It is eating, but struggles when
swimming. There are no abnormal spots or any visible fungus growth. It's been
doing this for about a week now.
<First off, I'd suggest putting the affected fish into a QT tank just in case it
has something capable of spreading to the others. Also, if he's experiencing
trouble swimming, a more peaceful environment without other fish to eat his
food, potentially bully him, etc. would be good. Since there are no visible
signs of illness except for the trouble swimming, could he have somehow injured
himself...one of his pectoral fins, for instance? This once happened to a molly
of mine and it rendered her pretty much incapable of swimming. It could also
potentially be constipation...is the fish pooping normally? You should be able
to better determine this once the fish is in QT. Fasting and/or feeding a
frozen, thawed pea works well for treating constipation, if that's the
problem. Finally, worst case scenario, it could be swim bladder disorder, which
can be caused by bacterial or viral disease. After you've ruled out the other
ideas above, you may want to consider treating the fish with a broad-spectrum
antibiotic (but only in the QT tank!) I would resort to this as a "last ditch"
effort...hopefully the fish is somehow injured and just needs some healing time
in his own tank. And, by the way, if you do notice that one or more fins are
damaged, missing, once the fish is in QT, you could add MelaFix to the water to
aid in the affected part's regeneration.>
Thought the water change I did on the weekend might help, but I was wrong. The
tank does seem to be producing a lot of algae - water has a slight green tinge
and b4 I changed the water and cleaned, there was algae visible on the glass.
Any ideas?
<With regards to the algae, I'd suggest cutting down on feeding and stepping up
the water changes. I have a 29 gal. tank and I change 5 gallons of the water
every weekend. When I have algae bloom problems, I'll even do 5 gal. twice per
week. Also, is the tank in direct sunlight? This will cause algae outgrowths.
Finally, what type of lighting is in this tank? Have the bulbs been switched
recently? You could always add more plants (you mentioned this was a planed
tank), as they'll use up more of the nutrients the algae needs to survive.>
Thanks,
Derek Horne
<You're welcome. Good luck, Jorie.>
Re: Blue Gourami trouble swimming
Hi Jorie,
Thanks for the help. I bought a small tank (5.5 gal) and half filled with fresh
water and half with water from my existing tank (balanced up the salt as well,
of course). Put in a
couple of peas - they are gone now.
<Sounds good, Derek...glad to hear it.>
The Gourami didn't seem to be damaged at all, nor did he seem constipated -
seemed a bit thin actually - and didn't appear to be eating much. It seemed to
be having trouble breathing, so I put in these drops for fungus. I was told it
wouldn't hurt him even if he didn't have fungus issues. Anyway, he seems to be
doing much better now. Swimming a lot stronger etc. I'll keep him separate for
another few days to see what happens.\
<Glad to hear he's improved. Please consider keeping him separated for at least
a couple of weeks, more conservatively (and the choice I would opt for) a month.
If all's still well, then it's definitely time to re-unite him with his fishy
friends.>
Thanks again for your help!!!!
Sincerely,
Derek
<Glad I could help. Best, Jorie.>
Tumor in Gourami
I have a male neon blue Gourami (Colisa lalia) sharing a 5 US gallon hex
tank with 8 neon tetras and 2 albino Corys. <Maybe a little overstocked for a 5
gallon, but not bad> The tank has been stocked for 8 days, after fishless
cycling, although I had the Gourami in quarantine for a couple of weeks prior to
that. <Wow, a fishless cycle and QT! Your fish and I thank you.> Water
parameters are fine, pH 7.6, ammonia 0, nitrIte 0, nitrAte 20. <Yep, All good>
The other fish are all healthy.
I usually feed OSI Staple Granules (floating/sinking), with occasional flake
food, frozen brine shrimp, freeze dried bloodworm, and, 2 days ago, cooked
crushed de-shelled peas and carrot. <A good varied diet. Outstanding! But I do
wonder who is eating the vegetables. Corys and tetras are more carnivorous. The
Gourami may take them. Be careful not to over feed.> For the last 2 - 3 days,
the Gourami, Ginger, <A boy named 'Ginger'?> has been very quiet and not eating.
His belly seemed a bit swollen and I suspected constipation or just overeating.
However, the swelling is now larger and markedly asymmetrical, mostly on his
right side, behind and slightly below his right pectoral fin. Otherwise, his
colour is normal, no sign of fungus, parasites, cloudy skin or eyes or raised
scales. He's just hanging around near the top of the tank looking
uncomfortable.
Could it be constipation, or intestinal blockage, internal parasites, internal
infection or even a tumour? Please, any suggestions on what the problem could be
and anything I can do about it? It's all happened in the last couple of
days. Thanks heaps!
<Hi Vicki, Don here. It could be any of the things you mention, but the fact it
is asymmetrical points towards a tumor. If so there is really nothing you can do
for him. I would put him back in the QT and try a Metronidazole based med for
internal parasites and cross my fingers. Good luck>
Vicki PS
Queensland, Australia
Tumor in Gourami
Hi again Don
Thank you so much for replying so promptly. <My pleasure>
It's just getting-up time here, and unfortunately I just found my Gourami Ginger
dead. <Sorry to hear> I examined his internal organs (not fun, but I thought I
owed it to him) and found what looked like a blood clot in his digestive tract.
It was hard to tell, but I couldn't see any other signs of inflammation, white
spots or whatever. His digestive tract was empty, so not constipation I guess.
My concern now is whether an infection of some kind could have caused bleeding
in his stomach. <Maybe, could also have been an old blockage/damage or
infection> Is it best to just adopt a watch and wait approach with the rest of
the tank? <Yep> I should mention that fish meds in Australia are fairly
restricted for over-the-counter sales -- tri-sulfa and tetracycline seem to be
the only ones easily obtainable, and I haven't seen medicated fish food at all.
Thanks again for your help, and for the great web site.
Vicki PS
<Yes, I would just watch for any other problems. Please resist the urge to
replace him. Frankly, I think he was a problem in the 5 gallon. Add another Cory
if anything. Watch your nitrates and do water changes to keep them below 20ppm.
Good luck and welcome to the hobby. BTW have you joined us in the forum yet? If
not, please do. I'm "Fish Soup" in the forum. Hope to see you there. Don>
Re: Tumor in Gourami
Help! My very 1st fish (purchased in May) was a Flame Gourami who lived
happily until I got a 2nd Gourami (a Blue one). They lived together for
about 2 months but the Blue Gourami was too aggressive and nipped at the
fins of the Flame. Fearing this would be too stressful I have recently moved
the Blue into another tank. This 10 gallon tank also contains 3 Tetras, 3
small Ghost Catfish, and now 2 new Black Mollies.
The Flame Gourami appeared to be getting stressed from the other Gourami and
began hiding and evading most of his day. Now ever though the Blue Gourami
was removed, the Flame Gourami continues to spend most of his day hiding and
rather than coming to the surface at feeding time as he used to, now "runs"
and hides as fast as he can when I approach the tank, sometimes running into
the side of the tank in his hurry to get away.
Yesterday I found this Gourami laying on his side, seemingly gasping for air
and I assumed he was dying. However he has moved around but now he is
swimming around, but in odd ways, as if he is disoriented. He seems unable
to stay right side up and even swims in corkscrews patterns to get around
the tank.
Looking at all your information about fish disease the only thing I can
attribute this to is stress but other than staying away from the tank as
much as possible so as not to care him, I do not know what else to do. He
has no growths on his body nor are there any oddities about his general
shape/appearance. He has some fins nips on his tail fin, which were from the
other Gourami, but they have never affected his swimming before. His other
fins appear fine. The blue stripe on his dorsal fin varies in brightness
from day to day--but always has.
The Ph level to the tank was a little acidic so I have fixed that and I
increased the output to the filter to increase airflow into the water. None
of the other fish appear to be bothered if it were a general tank condition
issue.
How can I de-stress my fish before it is too late or is there another
explanation?
<The stress may have weakened you fish and caused an internal bacterial
infection. Do a 30% water change and clean the filter. I would treat with
Metronidazole and leave the light off for most of the day unless you have
live plants.-Chuck>
Thanks for any help you can provide.
KMR
Dropsical Moonlight Gourami - 10/06/2004
My 80 gallon freshwater, planted tank contains six discus and two
moonlight Gouramis. Everyone is happy, healthy, eating, and generally utterly
normal-- but one of the Gouramis has, for the last week or so, developed the
hugest belly I have ever seen-- like he swallowed a monstrous marble. He (it)
doesn't have "pine cone" like scales, just this gigantic bulge. He's not eating
for the past two/three days-- not surprising, I guess, with whatever's happening
probably taking up all the room in his system and more.
<Could be simple constipation causing these Dropsical symptoms, or could be
something more daunting - internal bacterial infection, damage to or infection
of the swim bladder.... For now, I would hope that it is simple
constipation. Quarantine the fish (carefully! Use a container to catch, not a
net) and add Epsom salts (magnesium sulfate) to his water, at one or two
tablespoons per ten gallons. Do not feed for now, and see how it goes. When
you do begin to feed again, feed *only* foods of high roughage content: daphnia,
adult brine shrimp, thawed pea with the shell removed....>
I feel like I should take a pin to his side and deflate him, he's so bulgy!
<Yikes, don't do *that*! ;) >
Any thoughts as to what might be going on? (feed is one small feed of beef
heart, one small feed of bloodworms and one small feed of frozen freshwater
cuisine cubes daily, plus there's all sorts of natural greenery going on in the
tank for anyone that wants it.)
<Another possibility I see here. Beef heart, though widely used by discus
keepers, is a hotly debated topic - and I'm on the side that it should never,
ever be fed to fish. Mind you, though, there are plenty of folks much more
experienced than I that use it regularly. My reasoning comes from the fact that
(as I understand it) this stuff will, over time, cause fatty deposits on the
liver that will ultimately cause irreparable damage, and possibly kill the
fish. I am of the mind that fish that require meats in their diet should only
be fed meats that are aquatic in nature - shrimp, fish, scallops, squid, worms,
insects/larvae; plenty of good'uns out there. It's not every day ya see cow
hearts floating down the Amazon, to be nibbled by local discus....>
The other Gourami is fine....
<Then, hopefully, just a simple case of Gourami constipation.>
Judy Waytiuk
<Wishing you and your bloaty-bellied buddy well, -Sabrina>
Dropsical Gourami - II - 10/06/2004
Hi Sabrina, thanks for getting back to me...
<You bet.>
I tried the Epsom salts thing (and now have two quarts of Epsom salts to use in
my bath-- the pharmacist burst out laughing when I said I just needed a few
teaspoons for a sick fish.)
<Hah! Oh, my.... I'm sure that was an adventure! I wish you'd have seen the
look on my vet's face when I asked for a syringe so I could kill
Aiptasia.... He was sure *one* of us was off their rocker.>
Didn't work. A very wee bit of poop came out, but that was it. The little guy
gave up the ghost overnight (I think, starved to death, since he/it'd stopped
eating over a week ago).
<So sorry to hear of this.>
So I necropsied him. And strange it may be, but the huge bulge (about the size
of those BIG marbles! in a wee, small Gourami) was WATER!! No sign of parasites
or nothing'! Go figure-- may have been a birth defect of some sort. Have you
ever heard of that?
<Actually, likely this fluid was the result of an internal bacterial
infection.... Did you perhaps see off-white lumps/granulomas on the internal
organs? Anything else amiss? Any good pics/books to go off, so you might have
an idea what something "wrong" might look like, and have something to use for
identifying the problem? There are a few *great* books packed with info
available, and one that I like solely for the clear, concise photography (though
the info is somewhat outdated). Let me know if you'd like some
recommendations.>
BTW, your thoughts on beef heart are most interesting.
<Ala Levar Burton, "You don't have to take *my* word for it". From Bailey and
Burgess' "Tropical Fishlopaedia", page 69, "It is best to avoid feeding
mammal/bird meats to fish as this can lead to the accumulation of harmful fatty
deposits in the liver and other tissues. Despite such risks, the feeding of
beef heart or liver is still advocated by many aquarists, but if, used at all,
the golden rule is to feed such meats very sparingly. On the other hand, fresh
or frozen fish, shellfish, (e.g. mussels), and shrimps/prawns are excellent
foods for fish." Gratzek's "Aquariology" tome also cautions about the use of
beef heart. I'm sure others do, as well. For me, I would rather treat my fish
to some shrimp or scallop and not worry about it at all. And again, many discus
breeders recommend the use of the meat highly.... Why, I'm not sure, but they
do.>
I just may take that to heart,
<No pun intended?>
and feed them beef heart very, very seldom as a special treat, since they do go
ape over it.
<A good plan. Do please be cautious.>
Mind you, they go ape over all their food.
<Sounds like a fish to me! Wishing you well, -Sabrina>
Blue Dwarf Gourami with Swollen eye
Hi WWM,
I am fairly new to keeping tropical fish, so apologies if this is a dumb
question. This morning when I checked on my fish I noticed that one of the Dwarf
Gouramis (affectionately named Bleu) has a very swollen left eye (it's actually
like it's been mounted on a washer and stuck to the side of his head). He
definitely WASN'T like it yesterday.
< Probably a case of pop eye has started. Anaerobic bacteria has begun to grow
behind the eye ball and the pressure that the bacteria have generated has begun
to push the eye out of the socket. Treat with Metronidazole in a separate
hospital tank.>
He doesn't appear to be in any distress, although he is slightly isolating
himself from the other fish. He came out for food this morning and ate as
normal. He's quite shy anyway, and sometimes gets chased by one of the other
Gouramis (Altogether we have 1 Indian Gourami, 2 dwarf Gourami, 1 golden
Gourami, 2 leopard Plecos, 3 golden algae eaters, 10 assorted tetras and three
zebra Danios) but much less so than when they were all initially introduced to
the tank.
We have had a few problems with the tank since building it up. We did have two
angels (with 3 zebras, 1 Pleco, 1 Gourami and 5 neon tetras) both of which died
10 days after joining the tank (one of which was never found - assumed eaten).
More recently we bought a Betta that was very beautiful but incredibly shy.
After his first night in the tank I found him lying in the shadow of a rock.
Worried that he was trapped, I put my hand gently against the glass to see if he
would react, and he swam away. He spent a lot of time hiding behind the
thermometer stuck on the side of the tank. That evening I was looking for him
everywhere, and after a 40 minute search discovered him UNDER an ornament. There
was a small gap in the volcanic rock/gravel and I just assumed that he was ok.
The next morning I woke to find him in shreds. Half his scales were missing and
his tail was non-existent. I immediately isolated him (in a vase - after reading
an FAQ here) with new water. He died within an hour. My girlfriend decided that
perhaps he was unwell prior to joining the tank, and so we took the plunge and
bought another Betta. This one was entirely different, chasing the other fish
around and flaring at them. Two days later, he too became reclusive, hiding
behind the thermometer. This time I isolated him as soon as I saw the warning
signs. He had lost a few scales but nothing as severe as the first one. He died
within a couple of hours of isolation.
< Bettas don't to too well in many community tank situations. Other fish that
are faster continuously pick on the long flowing fins of the male Betta. Soon
they have him herded into a corner and he doesn't come out to eat any more and
the other fish become more bold and go after him.>
A few weeks ago we bought 3 dwarf Gouramis and an Indian Gourami. After what
appeared to be a fairly harmonious start to their life in the tank, overnight
one of the dwarf Gouramis developed a fairly serious case of fin rot and loss of
colour/scales. Not trusting my own ability to save him, I transported him
carefully back to the shop for treatment. He died later that day. I immediately
removed the carbon from the filter and put some anti-fungal treatment in the
water. 8 days on from this and now the other dwarf Gourami has this swollen eye.
I have changed 25% of the water every ten days for the last 5 weeks (due to the
water going brown after the introduction of a log to the tank - which has since
been removed). A couple of weeks ago I added some Filter Aid, after replanting
some foliage and clouding the water.
I have had the water tested every week by the shop, and all of the levels are
normal. The only other significant factor is that the first Pleco we introduced
(affectionately known as Limpet) has not only grown very quickly, but is leaving
long strings of waste everywhere. They dissolve fairly quickly, but we have now
introduced another Pleco and 3 Algae eaters, as we assumed that he has too much
food to eat. We used to drop a sinking tablet in once a day, but have stopped
using them altogether.
< Find out what "Fine" means and what they are testing for. They should be
testing for ammonia and nitrite (levels should be zero). And the nitrates should
be under 25 ppm. Thing about how often you change the filter and try vacuuming
the gravel next time you n\do a water change . You Pleco is probably one of the
larger species that will take awhile to grow. The long stringy fecal matter is
normal for and algae eating fish.>
Am I a complete muppet?
< NO just a beginner trying to figure out the art and science of keeping a
freshwater aquarium. You are the exact reason that WWM exists. We try to keep
new aquarists in the hobby one email at a time. Most of the crew has been in you
same situation at one time or another. The best thing you can do is keep a log
book on what you are doing and what fish you bought. Get a quarantine tank set
up and going so you won't be introducing any new diseases into your tank once it
is set and running right. You could get a book for quick references. The
Barron's book series are very good books for the money and are a good place to
start. Go to Marineland.com and look under Dr. Tim's library for info on
filtration and water chemistry. These little things will help you understand why
some things work and why some don't.-Chuck>
Regards,
Danny James
Gouramis as "the butler"
The angelfish are both babies, and SEEM extraordinarily peaceful. In regard
to the Gouramis, I had to return the gold Gourami to the store, as he was
terrorizing the powder blue one, but he would have been in the tank a full 24
hours before I added the powder and realized they couldn't co-exist. He only
seemed aggressive towards his own kind, but I suppose he could have done
it. Also, the Danios are about the same size as the tetras and they play chase
with each other quite a bit-although neither seems to dominate.
That said, however, the tetras ranged in size from babies to adults, and I think
the one that got killed was one of the smaller ones. Could one of the Danios
have done it?
<If the fish was weaken or damaged by another fish then the other fish start
looking at the wounded fish as food. At that point they are probably all
guilty.>
There's still 5 out of 6 in there, though, and I would think that if it were a
fish still in the tank that he would have taken out another one. I plan to clean
gravel and change water today, so I guess it's possible that I'll find his body
and find that he died of natural causes-although I still imagine he'd be viewed
as food and eaten already if that were the case. Is that correct?
< I think any dead fish soon becomes looked at as food by the others.-Chuck>
Cyndy Monarez/Thomas Nelson
Gourami Won't Eat!
Hello my name is Leah and I have just started fish keeping about a 1/2 a week
ago. I have a 10 gallon tank and I have a Male Neon Blue Gourami and a Male
Black Molly. It seems that whenever I feed my fish (TetraMin Tropical Flakes),
the Black Molly goes directly to the food at once and eats, but my Gourami just
ignores the food. Every once in a while, the Gourami will find the food to eat,
but it will put it in it's mouth and spit it back out. I don't know what is
wrong with the Gourami. The tank is normally at about 76-82 degrees Fahrenheit.
Please help me ASAP!
< Give him a few more days to get settled in. Try some live food like brine
shrimp or black worms to get him going. If he still doesn't eat then he might be
sick but I am sure he will eat something soon but they don't eat much. make
sure you keep the tank clean and siphon out any let over food so it doesn't
pollute the tank.-Chuck>
Re: Freshwater Tank question
Chuck:
In reference to this answer on the website, "watch out that ventral fin feelers
don't get picked off by the faster moving fish"...I've noticed that my blue
Gourami seems to have a section missing from his "plumage" Where is the ventral
fin, and are the Danios or blue tetras the likely culprit, as they are the
faster moving fish? Also, if I increase my Danio school (I only have 3 now), do
you think that stands a chance of decreasing the chances of this happening
again?
< These "feelers" that are characteristic of many Gourami species, are too
tempting for other species to leave alone. The Gouramis often use these to poke
and prod other things and they get picked off by the smaller faster fish like
the blue tetras in your case. Adding more fish won't prevent this from happening
again.-Chuck>
Cyndy Monarez/Thomas Nelson
Do you think the Gourami's fin difficulty warrants MelaFix?
< No not really unless you see it fungused or diseased.>
He's not hovering in the corner and appears to be okay, plus there doesn't seem
to be any further damage at this time. My only other tank houses a Betta, and
from what I've read, it certainly won't help me to put the Gourami with him,
right?
< The Betta will be very territorial and your Gourami will be worse off.>
I guess what I'm asking....could this be a problem that could eventually cause
bacterial problems within the whole tank?
< Not really unless the fish becomes weak and sick from an infection.>
Also, I hate treating the whole tank with MelaFix when he's the only one that
needs it.
Please weigh in if you will.....Thanks, Cyndy
< I would not treat the tank and concentrate on keeping the water clean.-Chuck>
Sick Gourami
Hello! I've been reading through your FAQs and articles and I have found
them very useful. They have made my job a lot easier, because I just started
fish keeping about a month and a half ago. Anyways, here is my question. I
have a 10 gallon quarantine tank with two dwarf Gouramis in them for three
weeks. The water quality is ammonia=0ppm, nitrites=0ppm, nitrates=10ppm,
pH=7.6. I did a 30% water change last night and the nitrates dropped to about
5ppm. Back to the question... About four days after putting the Gouramis into
the tank, I noticed brown splotches on their heads. That was the most obvious
feature. The splotches are not regular or in any particular pattern. The
splotches have been there ever since. Last night, everything changed because I
found one Gourami lying nearly on its side on the tank's bottom. Its gills and
mouth were flapping rapidly. Also, I noticed that their feces were awfully long
and light colored. On the other hand, this morning, the healthier Gourami had a
dark feces trail. The sicker Gourami looked even worse. What can I do about
this? Thanks a lot.
<<Hello. Dwarf Gouramis are specifically prone to bacterial infections. You can
try your LFS to see what meds they have in stock to combat external bacterial
infections. Salt may help in early cases, as will Melafix, but if the disease
has not been caught at the beginning, you may need something stronger. Good job
on the testing, keep it up! -Gwen>>
Nip and Tuck Gourami
Chuck,
Thanks for all of the info. We bought our fresh water fish "marine food" because
we are dummies. :) Since you wrote me back, we have tried to redeem ourselves by
buying them food designed for fresh water fish.
We also added 4 panda Corys and they are adorable.
You were right about the Gouramis. Sometimes now, they will even take a peaceful
swim together. They still have an occasional fight where they do this weird
swimming dance... they flip on their sides and swim around each other. But the
nipping/chasing has lessened considerably.
We also bought new cleaning supplies. An extra heater and two new pails so we
can let their water condition over night and change 50% the next day. Last time,
I didn't let it condition well enough and their ammonia level went up. I won't
do that again!
Anyway, our next project is to give them a cave or somewhere else to hide when
they need to. I'd prefer some natural rock. I know I'm limited on space. We have
a small silk plant too. It's about 8 inches long and probably an inch wide but I
could cut it or fold it into a corner. I have some very smooth rather flat rocks
I am thinking of using to build a cave. What do you think? Or do you know of a
site we could safely buy rocks or a cave from? There's not much here at the pet
stores.
< Gouramis really don't like caves. They prefer floating plants. If you do want
to build a cave out of rocks then make sure that the rocks are safe for the
aquarium. Some rocks leach salts that play havoc with the water chemistry. Place
the rocks on the bottom of the tank and not on the sand. Some fish undermine the
rocks and they end up caving in on them.-Chuck>
Thanks again for your help, Chuck. We greatly appreciate your insight and
information.
Susan
Moonlight Serenade
Hi Bob, thanks for looking. My fish shows a rather strange scarring across
the bottom part of the body, running along the top of the ventral fin. I've been
in this hobby for over 15 years and have never seen this. I was hoping you could
come up with some ideas. Water's good, so is the temperature; the pH may be a
bit acidic. Thanks, Mauricio.
P.S. the "infected" fish is a moonlight Gourami
<<Hi Mauricio, Gwen here instead of Bob. I am unsure of what I'm following up on
here. Do you have a pic of this scarring? Some background info, too, like tank
specs: how many gallons, what tankmates are in with him, how often you do water
changes, what are the ammonia, nitrite and nitrate readings, and what the fish
is behaving like. Is it eating? Hiding? Acting normal? All of this info will
help. Thanks, Gwen>>
Lumpy Gourami - 05/31/2004
Hi!
<Yo!>
One of our Gouramis has a small lump on the left side of his face, near his
mouth. It appears to be under the scales, as the scales seem to be pushed
up. Otherwise, he/she seems healthy, eating, generally enjoying life.
<Sounds possibly like the beginnings of Lymphocystis.... but also several other
possibilities.>
We have a 20 gallon freshwater tank with two Gouramis, three red/orange tetras,
a catfish, an algae eater and two guppies. The tank is about 5 months old and
apart from needing periodic treatment for high PH,
<Not good to have a tank on a pH roller-coaster.... how high is the pH of your
tap? Have you got any "saltwater" decorations in the tank (coral skeletons,
etc.)? Limestone? Crushed coral or aragonite substrate? Better to fix the
source of the problem than treat symptoms of it.>
tests normal in every other way.
<What readings do you have for ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate? I suspect, if
this is Lymphocystis, that there's a high nitrate reading involved? Otherwise I
might suspect another illness, perhaps bacterial or fungal in nature....>
All the other fish look and act normal. What, if anything, should I do?
<Test those levels mentioned - if you find that you do have a high nitrate
reading, work on improving husbandry - perhaps vacuum the gravel more often,
clean filters, larger and/or more frequent water changes.... Lymphocystis
can/should go away on its own as this happens.>
Peggy
<Wishing you and your lumpy Gourami well, -Sabrina>
Listless Gourami - 06/01/2004
I have had a pair of dwarf Gouramis for about 3 months and they have been
fine & healthy. However, for the last 4 days the male appears to be unwell. He
is either sitting on the bottom or hanging near the top looking totally
disinterested. At feeding times he initially attempts to take a flake but
usually ends up spitting it back out and therefore quickly loses
interest! There is no obvious signs of disease other than his colours seem a
little dull.
<Dull color, listlessness - anything else, at all, out of the norm? Even things
that might not seem that big a deal can be good evidence to try and diagnose an
illness.>
However today I noticed the swordtails & platys keep nudging him, he responds by
moving away.
<So he's still responsive, at least.>
I have tried treating the water with anti-bacterial solution.
<Uhm, do you know what, precisely, you used? Did you complete the treatment as
directed on the package, or stop after the initial dose?>
I have tested the water and all levels are okay.
<Mm, 'okay' is subjective. Can you please let us know the readings you have for
ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, and pH? Also, how large is the tank, what are the
other inhabitants, when was your last addition to the tank, how long ago did you
last clean, and what is your maintenance schedule like? Have you changed
anything lately? Food, dechlorinator, decor or plants, anything at all?>
Please can you give me any advice as to what to do next, as I think he may be
dying!
<Unfortunately, with so little to go off, I can't give a lot of advice. It
never hurts to do a rather sizeable water change; that ought to be the first
thing on your list; after that, I really don't have much to suggest. Please do
get back to us; I'd like to be able to help further.>
G. Smith
<Wishing your Gourami a swift recovery, -Sabrina>
Listless Gourami - II - 06/01/2004
Thanks for your reply, unfortunately the dwarf Gourami has since
died! Gill
<I'm so sorry to hear that, Gill. Please let us know if we can be of any
further assistance. Wishing you and your fishes well, -Sabrina>
Pearl Gourami
Hi my name is Sandy and I have recently acquired a 55 gallon freshwater
aquarium. I was over feeding my fish per the local fish store. Blood worms
shrimp brine and flake food. I have two pearls fairly large 3.5 to 4 inches
long. I purchased test strips a canister filter came home tested my water did a
1/3 water change hooked up the canister along with the aqua Clearwater filter
and the nitrate nitrite levels in control. The nitrite was up the first night
and I got it so the strip doesn't turn any color now and the nitrate still turns
pink but below 40.
< Ideally you would like to keep it at 25 ppm or below. 50 ppm would be somewhat
high to where I would start to think about doing a water change soon.>
My water is hard and the alkalinity is off a bit but Ph is fine. However I have
lost one blue neon dwarf Gourami he actually started bulging on one side I put
him in the freezer and helped him out of his slow death. I then lost a pink
kissing Gourami how seemed to stay at the top of the tank for a long time like a
week same spot would try and move around a bit would eat very little but seemed
to lose color and get very thin. Then she/he just went and lay down on a rock
behind a plant and died after a day or so. I now have one of my large beautiful
peaceful pearls doing the same thing saying in one spot staring off looking
small and thin.
She's running her mate off obviously upset I don't know what to do. So far I
have only lost Gourami' is there an illness that I can treat for them is this
something I need to treat the whole tank. I have a lot of fish and I am really
worried. Please help. I don't wan to sit and watch another hoping it will just
get better. Thanks if you can reply or help in any way. Tanks about 78 degrees
did a water change partial 9 days ago test strips look ok?
Sandy Kores
< If your tank is new then I would continually test for ammonia to make sure
that it does not read at all on the test kits (Zero Reading). Ammonia is the
biggest killer of fish. If the ammonia is under control then the next item to
check is nitrites( Also a zero reading). These are not as deadly as ammonia but
they do stress out fish to where they die from diseases that you are describing.
The third is the nitrates(25ppm, 50ppm max, in some fish 15ppm is too high!).
These are the least toxic of the three and still need to be kept in check. To
keep these levels in check I would service the filter every other week no matter
what it looks like. On the weeks that you do not service the filter I would
vacuum the gravel while doing your water change. When you do this you would be
amazed at all the junk in the gravel. Don't do this all at one time or you will
remove all the good bacteria that convert the wastes to nitrates. Watch the
feeding too. You should only give them enough food that they can eat it all in a
couple of minutes. You are feeding a very rich diet that can be too much of a
good thing. Make sure that the filter is moving at least 150 gallons an hour.
More is better. If after all these things are in check for a couple of weeks and
you are still losing fish, then we can talk about treating for diseases.-Chuck.
Fate of Gouramis hang in the balance
Hey,
I have read through most of the postings and found some very useful
information on what I thought was wrong with my fish. About three weeks ago one
of my dwarf Gourami's began laying around in the tank on its side, and then
about a week later another one became twisted up, almost in the shape of a
question mark and spends all of his time face down in the gravel. I
double-checked all of the water requirements as you have suggested and
everything is fine. I have a 20 gallon high, the ph is 6.8, the temperature is
82F, and there are no traces of ammonia or nitrates/nitrites. Is there anything
I can do to help my fish?
< The fact that one fish had a problem and then a second has come down with
something too makes me think that there may not be an environmental problem here
but a pathological one. Dwarf Gouramis as well as others seem to be prone to
attacks by weird pathogens that come in with them from the fish farms in the
orient. I would isolate that Gouramis into a five gallon tank and treat them
with a Nitrofurazone type drug as per the package directions. If the problem is
internal then there is not to much that can be done for them.>
It has been several weeks and every aquarium store I go to just tells me to
flush them.
< The medications will probably cost more than the fish. if the drugs don't work
then you will be out both the price of the fish as well as the cost of the
drug.-Chuck>
I just don't have the heart to do it, and since they still seem to get food they
could probably live on in this sorry state for a very long time. HELP!!! Your
site is a great resource and I appreciate the assistance. Thank you.
Mario.
Gourami Troubles
Hello - Hoping you can help. We have just recovered from a case of Ich in
our tank - 2 survivors only. 1 Pearl Danio and 1 Gold Gourami. After two
weeks, we added a Pleco, 2 more Danios and through the recommendation at the pet
store, 3 white balloon platys. Everyone seems happy except that the Gourami is
attacking the platys (one of them is pregnant). The pet store staff suggested
the Gourami would be fine on his own. It has only been 24 hours since the
platys went in the tank but they already seem stressed.
Should I rid of the Gourami? Should I get a partner for him? Is it too soon
and give them a few more days to adjust to the new attendees?
Thanks for your help.
Patty Despinic
<<Dear Patty; what size is the tank? Tank size does play an important role in
the aggression levels of fish. And gold Gouramis can be nasty. Adding another
simply means you are adding another potentially nasty fish. They each have their
own character, some are nasty, but some do fine in community tanks. As for the
balloon platies (are you sure they aren't balloon mollies?)
you need to make a judgment call...is the Gourami aggressing them to the point
where their fins are becoming shredded? If not, try leaving them in there for a
few more days, and see if the aggression lessens. If it doesn't lessen, you will
need to decide if you still want to keep them, or return either them or the
Gourami. -Gwen>>
Gourami Troubles II
Sorry-the tank is 30 gallons. I have left them together for a few days and
they are not really any better. The balloon (mollies) do not have any physical
damage but they are huddled together in the plant in the tank and won't swim the
tank. I have tested it by removing the Gourami for a short while and the
balloon molly's demeanor changes quickly and dramatically.
They are obviously much happier. If I decide to get rid of the Gourami - any
suggestions other than flushing him. He was purchased weeks ago - I'm not sure
they would take him back. Is it safe to give him to a friend who also has a
tank? Thanks for all your help. Patty Despinic
<<Hey Patty, you should phone your LFS and ask them. Tell them the problem, and
if they don't take back the Gourami, would they know of any other stores that
would? I don't see a problem, most Serious Pet stores will take a healthy fish
back. But yes, it is probably safe to give him away to your friend, too.
Good luck! -Gwen>>
Big Stomach Dwarf Gourami
Hi, I have a dwarf Gourami and it's stomach is expanded (looks abnormal),
suspect she has eaten too much or gastric problem. It always float at bottom and
doesn't show much activity since last 3 days, I have reduced the diet but still
not sure how will it recover? Can you help me to give him some exercise to
clean off his stomach. Please help, my another Gourami died last month with the
same symptoms.
<<Hello there. You can try to find a medicated food at your local fish store,
this might help. Also, make sure your water quality is good, do you do regular
partial water changes? If so, how often, and do you test your water? Test for
ammonia, nitrite, and nitrates. You may also feed some fibre, such as foods with
Spirulina, or frozen daphnia. Do the scales stick out like a pinecone? If so,
the infection is too far advanced to save the fish :( -Gwen>>
Lethargic Dwarf Gourami
I browsed through some of your FAQ and couldn't seem to find the specific
problem I'm having.
One of my dwarf Gouramis (which we've had for around 6 mo.s and has always
seemed quite healthy until recently) has begun to stay on the bottom of the tank
or will wedge itself in a plant and lay there. It also doesn't seem to be
eating. None of the other fish are showing symptoms of any illness. Its colour
seems a bit dulled; however, I don't see any film/parasites/fungus on the fish.
Any advice? It looks like it's dying and I don't know what to do.
<<Hello. You will need to test your water, and let me know the results of the
following: ammonia, nitrites, and nitrates. You can get your water tested at
most respectable tropical fish stores. Once we have established this, I can help
you further with troubleshooting your problem, 90% of fish related illnesses are
directly related to water quality issues. If you cannot get your water tested
immediately, at least do a partial water change to help the fish until you can
test it. In the meantime you may also add a bit of salt to the tank, aquarium
salt is also found at your local fish store, add one teaspoon per gallon,
gradually. Keep the salt in the tank for a few weeks. If you do water changes,
the salt can be re-added to the new water. i.e. if you remove 5 gallons of
water, replace it with 5 gallons of new water with 5 teaspoons of salt. Any
top-off water (due to evaporation) should be freshwater only. Please let me know
your test results as soon as you can. Thanks -Gwen>>
Bettas and Paradisefish - 02/18/2004
I have a question.
<Okay>
Tell me please can I put in my 20 l aquarium 1 Betta (male) and one Macropodus
(male)???
<This may be do-able, depending upon the temperaments of both fish. If both are
relatively laid-back, it should work out fine. I have seen particularly
aggressive Paradisefish (Macropodus sp.) terrorize fish more than three times
their size, but I've also seen a few that are quite tolerant of most any
tankmates. Same with Bettas, some are very peaceful, some are terrors. I would
say try it, and be prepared to remove one of the fish if you see any serious
aggression.>
Thanks!
<You bet! Wishing you and your Anabantoids well, -Sabrina>
Gourami Problem
About a week after Christmas(2003), I purchased two small Gold Gouramis a
little under two inches, One slightly larger than the other. They had been
gobbling down their share of Bloodworms and TetraMin flakes, the larger one had
grown to about three and a half inches while the smaller one still remained
small, but ate just as much as the other. About a week ago, the smaller one
stopped eating and just stared out the front of the tank. Four days after he
stopped eating, he/she just died, and I have No idea why. I checked the water
and ammonia and nitrate was 0 and Ph was 7.4- Is that ok? They are in a 29
gallon tank with three platys, four mollies, two Cory cats, and five tetras and
they all get along, especially the live bearers. We went to PetSmart to see if
the lone Gourami could survive by itself, and he said that they do MUCH better
in pairs, although not a schooling fish so he would be ok. So we bought another,
not knowing if it was a male or female. When we let it float in his little
plastic bag, we noticed that once again, the Gourami was smaller than big fish
of the tank. The new Gourami also had darker, more brown, markings and redder
eyes. When we let him out of the bag, the old Gourami began rubbing against it
and feeling of it with its little feeler thingy ma bobbers (don't have a clue as
to what they are!!) Is that a way of breeding?
I tried to find info on which ones are males and which ones are females and the
old Gourami had a longer dorsal fin and it was kinda pointy, and the new one has
a short fin. He did that until I fed them that night and the old Gourami chased
the new one away from the food and hasn't had anything to do with the new one
since except chasing it and I noticed a small tear on the new one's tail. Should
I take the new one back before It kills or gets killed? Who caused the tear?
Thanks for all your help. You site is on my favorites list! Rachel
>>Dear Rachel; You mention testing your water for ammonia and nitrate, did you
also test nitrites? Nitrite and nitrate are not the same thing, and I would
recommend always testing for all three. Ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate. You need
to know the results for ALL three tests. You pH sounds fine. How often are you
doing partial water changes? Please let me know all of this information :) Your
gold Gouramis have feelers, most Gouramis do, and they use these to inspect
other fish. It is quite normal, it's their way of communicating with each other.
The tear in her fins could be caused by aggression, either from the other
Gourami, or from one of your mollies. Just make sure you test your water, and
that your water tests indicate good water quality, otherwise your fish can
develop fin rot or fungus on the damaged fins. Good luck! -Gwen<<
Dwarf Gourami and Camallanus
Hi there,
<Hello! Sabrina, here.>
Thank you all for keeping such a wonderful and informative website.
<And thank you for the kind words!>
I have had two dwarf Gourami in a 5 gallon QT tank with an established sponge
filter for approx 2 months. I plan on moving them to a much
larger tank when I'm sure that they are disease/parasite free.
<Sounds like an excellent plan.>
About one month ago I noticed two tiny red threads (approx. 2mm long) poking out
from the anus of each Gourami.
<Yikes, that does indeed sound like Camallanus.>
I ordered some Pepsofood and fed it for three days and then once per week as
directed with no effect.
<Although Pepso food is very useful stuff, I do not believe it contains
medicines effective against Camallanus.>
The fish still have a hearty appetite and do not display any unusual behavior or
appearance.
<Always a good sign!>
Recently I was reading an article that suggested my fish were infected with the
Camallanus nematode.
<Sounds like it. Though, is it possible what you're seeing is just feces? Some
red-colored foods will give fish red poo, but the "threadlike" appearance you
describe is classic of Camallanus.>
Many different medications were suggested on many websites like disco worm,
<Perhaps this was "Discomed"? Discomed, manufactured by Aquatronics, contains
Levamisole, and should be effective against Camallanus.>
Trichlorfon, fluke tabs,
<Fluke tabs are/contain Trichlorfon. This substance should be avoided unless
absolutely *nothing* else works; although it might be effective, it could be
very toxic to the fish.>
Fenbendazole,
<Likely would be effective, but will be very hard to find, I imagine. Try
looking for the proprietary name "Panacur". However, this will be difficult to
dose, as it is usually found sold as a goat or horse worming medicine.>
and Levacide.
<Perhaps "Levamisole"?>
Levacide was touted as being the best cure for this problem.
<If you mean "Levamisole", as above, you can find that in Discomed, made by
Aquatronics.>
I did some research on the web and could not find out where to buy this
medication and whether or not it would harm the biological filter.
<Whether you use Piperazine or Levamisole (or even Fenbendazole), it should be
administered via food, so it should not impact the nitrifying
Ammonia is 0 nitrite 0 nitrate 10ppm temp 78F and 25% WC 2 times a week with
dechlorinated water I keep heated and aerated in a bucket.
<Sounds great.>
Has anyone had experience with this kind of infestation? Which medication would
be most effective and where can I get it?
<Either Levamisole or Piperazine should work for you. Most small, non-chain
fish stores do carry Discomed (Levamisole); however, you can also find it
available for sale at many online stores. You can also look for Aquatronics'
"Pipzine", which contains Piperazine, and should also be very effective against
Camallanus. If you have trouble locating either of these, you might try
contacting Aquatronics (
http://www.aquatronicsonline.com/
). I believe there is a store locater on their 'site, as well.>
Can snails be a secondary host?
<I don't *think* so; it is usually spread through feces, I believe. It would
certainly be a good idea to prevent moving any life from the sick tank to
another.>
Also, Camallanus I read is highly infectious.
<It can be easily spread if an infected fish dies and is left in the tank to be
nibbled on, or also again, through nibbling on feces (Mmmm, feces), so it'd be a
really good idea to siphon off any poo and gunk very regularly, even daily.>
If it has reached my other planted freshwater community tank (18 gal, 5 neon
tetra, 1 SAE, 2 Otto Cats), what medication could I use with the sensitive
catfish?
<Certainly *not* Trichlorfon, that's for sure. Piperazine or Levamisole should
be fine, though.>
Thank you in advance for your help. Michelle
<Sure thing. Wishing you and your Gourami well, Sabrina>
Dwarf Gourami - Male or Female? Pregnant?
Hello,
<Hi!>
I'm an extremely concerned parent of a beautiful cinnamon dwarf Gourami that I
do not know the gender of. The sign at the pet store said it was a male, and I
have also read that females will appear silver in color.
<Less red, at the least. Males are far easier to find in our hobby.>
Mine is fully cinnamon.
<Heh, that's my favorite word for the day, now!>
But yet it has a bloated belly. It has increased in size each day, which a
normal parent would think it was pregnant, correct?
<Actually, there can be other causes for this. First and foremost, overeating,
and also very likely, constipation.>
(Should I put it on birth control?) ;)
<He/she needs a stern talking to, at the least! :) >
I was hoping that it was female and pregnant because I wanted little
grandchildren of my own.
<Well, even if he is a she, and is full of eggs, he/she/it would still need a
male to help release, then fertilize, the eggs of this bubblenesting fish.>
Please help me. This is a serious issue.
<It is, indeed. Is he/she pooping? If not, you're probably looking at
constipation. I would recommend reducing the amount that you feed him/her; fast
him for a few days, and feed only foods high in roughage content, like thawed
frozen pea (squeeze it out of the shell), adult brine shrimp, or daphnia, and
when you do feed these, do so sparingly. It would also help to add Epsom salt
to the tank, at a rate of one tablespoon per ten gallons - this is usually the
first thing to do in constipation cases, as it can be very serious indeed, and
it will help relieve pressure on the fish, and help pass any blockage in the
gut. I would also recommend increasing the veggie matter in your little pal's
diet once this has passed. Blanched zucchini, cucumber, and spinach are just a
few goodies to pass along to him. Or her.>
I've included a picture of my little SPECIAL BOY (or girl)!. Please get back to
me on the gender please.
<A good picture, but is there any way you can get one of him with his fins very
spread? It does look like a male, to me, for the coloration and the point of
his dorsal fin. If he is a she, and he/she is with egg, you should see a white
"dot" in front of the anal fin indicating that she is full of eggs.>
Thanks, Amy and Belle Gourami :)
<You bet! Wishing you and Belle well, -Sabrina
Pink kisser diet and general tank stuff.
First things first, I don't have a digi. cam, so I'll describe Ivan's itchy
patch in the best way I've thought of. Basically it looks like a patch of eczema
on the outer 1/8 inch of his tail. Like this:
<Unfortunately, the little diagram will not reproduce well for the FAQs, but
with your new description and the diagram, I'm pretty sure you're dealing with
fin rot. Fortunately, this is easily treatable.>
He actually nibbles off little flakes of it. He sits under the filter intake a
lot and I've noticed little bits of it flake away and get sucked into the filter
or fall onto the bottom of the tank. Problem is, since he's a Pink Kisser, his
fins are very light colored; in most places they're very light whitefish, not
quite clear, and I can't tell if he has any spots or not. He could be completely
covered with them and they aren't visible Black construction paper behind the
tank didn't help much either (he was scared of it).
<LOL! Ivan the Terrible? Or Ivan the Terrified?>
I read the Ick page (thanks for the link) and I'm going to try getting a sample
of his tail slime to take to the pet store or a fish vet (if I can find one).
I'll take a water sample too, but the water here is different from the stuff I
use at school. (Would the bottled "Betta Water" I've seen in pet stores help
with changes any?) My biggest problem with diagnosis is, of all the Pink Kissers
in the world and the hundreds of them turn that turn homicidal, I have to get
the only one I've heard of yet that's a complete and utter coward. When I got
him from the pet store he was in a 10 gal with about 40 other fry. He
was one of the smallest in there and was getting chased around the tank (typical
behavior for the kind). I took him specifically because he was little and needed
out of there or he'd starve. Since then, he's been terrified of anything pinkish
(including my hands), anything that looks like another fish (He saw a picture of
a gold fish on a pet guide worksheet and hid until I moved it), and anything
that moves quickly or reflects light (camera lenses, mirrors, watches, etc).
<Ivan the Terrified, indeed!>
I got a picture once from across the room with a zoom lens and hung it on my
wall at school-- where its hanging now. I'll send a photo as soon as I can.
<If it's possible, that'd be great, but again, I'm pretty confidant with the
description you gave now. To treat the fin rot, I would use a good antibiotic,
like Kanamycin (Available from Aquatronics as "Kanacyn" in a gray box). Use as
directed, it should clear this up just fine.>
He only sits (?) still in the open when he's curious about something (running
water especially) or when he's hungry (which is any time he's not sleeping). The
minute I move near the tank he hides behind his plants.
<It might help to give him more hiding spaces. Perhaps a few rocks or a cave,
maybe some more plants like the Anacharis/elodea for him to nibble on. The idea
behind this is that the more opportunity they have to hide, the less they feel
the need to. In my experience, this is almost invariably true.>
Thanks for all your info and help. I appreciate it.
<Sure thing - glad to be able to help!>
Take care. Becky
<You too. Wishing you (and Ivan) well, -Sabrina>
Kissing Gourami and plants (III, I think)
We really must share a wave length or something because the day after I sent
the last email I went to the petstore and bought more plants as Ivan the
Terrified's Christmas present (Yes, I think the name is going to stick).
<LMAO!>
They're larger than the old ones and the tank now looks more like a jungle. He
loves it.
<Wonderful to hear.>
I also started throwing a new slice of peeled cucumber in the tank every day
<You can actually leave the peel on; it's probably the most nutritive part. It
would also be a good idea to "blanch" (drop into boiling water for 10 seconds or
so) this and other fresh veggies you give him. You can do a whole bunch ahead
of time, then freeze them on a cookie sheet and put it all in a bag in the
freezer, then you can just pull out a piece whenever you want.>
and tried some spinach. Unfortunately, he thinks that the spinach should come in
flake form; he won't eat it unless I chop it up for him.
<Perhaps try frozen spinach? It's usually already in pretty small
pieces. Might be easier.>
Let it never be said that I don't spoil my fish.
<I will not say that, I assure you!>
Interestingly enough, the stuff on his tail has gone away.
<With good water quality, mild cases of fin rot often clear up on their own.>
I did full water tests per your questions about levels. Current standings:
Nitrate: 20ppm; Nitrite: 0; Hardness: 300; Alkalinity: 180; Ph: 7.6. Temp is
78.6 F.
<Not bad. What about ammonia?>
We have a well heavy in iron, but I'm not sure how to soften the water without
messing with the alkalinity, which is also a little higher than I think he
needs.
<Really, this isn't of major concern for him. Yes, it's a bit on the side of
"liquid rock" (pretty hard), but that's not a huge issue for this tough
species. If you really, really want to lower it, you could do so with peat moss
in the filter; this will stain the water a yellow-brown color, but that's only
an aesthetic issue. It will also lower the pH, but really, I think this is
quite unnecessary.>
Whatever the water conditions, the tail hasn't bothered him for 2 days or so
now.
<Excellent.>
With different water at school, we'll see what happens with his condition later.
<Is it at all possible to bring a couple of 5 gallon jugs of water with you, so
you can make the change to school water a little more slowly? Just a thought.>
For the moment he's chasing bubbles around his tank and making kissy faces at
me, so I'm guessing he feels pretty good.
<Certainly sounds good!>
Pictures of my little monster are forthcoming as soon as the film is developed.
I will email them as soon as I can.
<Cool. Pics always make it easier to give a more accurate diagnosis, though I
am pretty certain now that it is/was fin rot.>
Until that time, thank you very much for all your help and happy holidays.
Becky
<And Happy Holidays to you and Ivan.... the Terrified.... I'm still
giggling. -Sabrina>
Pucker Up! (Kissing Gourami)
Hi. I'm a complete newbie to fishkeeping and I had a couple of questions.
<Welcome to the hobby.>
Here's my situation. My 2 year old Pink Kisser, Ivan the Terrible,
<Ooh, what a fitting name!>
is about 5" long. He lives by himself in a heated (80*F/ 27*C) 10 gal. tank with
fluorescent light and external filtration system set up in my dorm room. He's an
only child and will probably remain that way.
<A good plan with this fish, which can potentially become a foot long
terror. Until he's into a much large tank, he's best on his own.>
I've got 5 or 6 plastic plants that he likes to hide behind and nibble on and a
layer of natural gravel on the bottom so he can eat algae.
<And eat algae he will - that's what those thick lips were designed for (among
other things).>
My first concern is diet. I feed Wardley brand tropical flake food as his main
diet (a pinch 2-3 times a day),
<Not my personal favorite, to be honest... and really, this fish should be fed
much more in the way of greens than 'community' type flake foods. Frozen algae
preparations, sushinori, romaine lettuce, blanched zucchini/cucumber, shelled
peas.... Spirulina flakes, if necessary.>
supplemented with 2-3 Wardley Betta pellets a day for color (pet store
recommendation, but he doesn't seem to like it)
<I think this is probably unnecessary, to be honest. Betta food is usually a
high protein food to mimic the live goodies they would eat in the wild, whereas
kissing Gourami feed primarily on algal matter and plants (and the occasional
aquatic invertebrate). If you want him to "color up" a bit, perhaps a
"color/red enhancing" cichlid food could be fed very sparingly. Again,
unnecessary, IMO.>
and the occasional fresh cucumber slice or spinach leaf.
<Ahh, good. I would make this a lot more than occasional - these and the other
greens above should be his staple. Be sure to blanch fresh veggies (drop into
boiling water for 10 seconds or so), or he may possibly develop some internal
disorders.>
My main concerns are the balance between his flake food and what he needs
nutritionally. The flakes are 46% protein, 5% fat, and 4% fiber; main
ingredients are fish meal, wheat flour and soy protein. He's growing like a
weed, so I don't think he's severely deficient in anything, but I'd like an
expert opinion.
<I really feel like he could do better with more greens in his diet, and less
high protein foods. Better to match as closely as possible what these fish were
designed to eat in nature.>
Secondly, a health/disease issue. About 2.5 weeks ago, Ivan developed a white
flaky condition on his tail and only on his tail, which led me to rule out fin
rot.
<Can you describe this in further detail? I'm having trouble picturing a white,
flaky tail....>
He also started rubbing on the filter intake nozzle in the tank. The rubbing I
attributed to a breeding behavior since I turned up the heater when the weather
got cold. (They cuddle with their mates when they're... um... *happy* and a
swift change in temp. will cause that, or so I'm told.)
<Though I don't know much about the breeding habits of this species, I would
definitely be concerned with this scratching.>
He didn't have the white spots associated with Ick, but I opted for Ick
treatment and it went away after about 3 days.
<Through most of its lifecycle, ich is not visible. It could very well be that
he had the very beginnings of an ich infestation. More on ich here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwich.htm
.>
I did a 1/3 water change and put in a new filter cartridge on Wednesday, then
left him for 4 days with a vacation feeder while I went home for Thanksgiving.
<Personally, I don't much like the slow-release feeders. They may alter the pH
some, in some cases, and IMO, aren't terribly nutritious. Might want to invest
in an automatic feeder, that you put flake/pellet food in, which will release
the food you choose as often as you set it for.>
When I came back Sunday, the white flaky stuff was back just as bad as it was
before. I stopped filtration again,
<You can leave the filter running (for circulation/physical filtration), just
remove any carbon or cartridges containing carbon.>
treated for Ick and it went completely away. Two weeks later, I'm home for
Christmas and he came with me. I did a 50% water change, put in a new filter
cartridge, vacuumed his gravel and wiped his plants to keep the algae from
getting too thick. He's doing all his regular fishy things, but there's a tiny
white flaky patch on his tail again.
<I don't think we're quite on the same wavelength, here.... I really can't
envision this flaky patch. Is it small? Large? How small/large? In
spots? Opaque? Fuzzy? Flaky as in peeling, like a sunburn? Look kinda like
cauliflower? Feel free to get very descriptive.>
I think I've established that its not Ick or it wouldn't keep coming back after
a full treatment and he'd have white spots elsewhere, which he doesn't.
<Please do check out that link on ich; the full life cycle of ich is about two
weeks (though this is dependant upon temperature), and for most of its life, is
not treatable.>
What the heck is this and how do I fix it?
<Please do write back, and describe the heck out of this, if you can. I'm very
sorry I'm not clearly picturing this. Ah, in fact, if you can email us a photo
of the fish/flaky patch with your description, that'd be even better.>
Would you suggest any changes in setup other than tank size, which I can't do
anything about until I get a bigger living space?
<Woah.... I said we're not on the same wavelength, but you read my mind! Okay,
I won't say anything about tank size here, just that he'll end up topping out
around twelve inches ;) You might want to think about giving him a constant
supply of Anacharis/elodea to nibble on - in fact, that'd make a *perfect*
weekend feeder for him when you're gone! More greens, as above. I also wonder
at your water conditions (ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, pH), as the only thing at
all that I can think of as "flaky" is Lymphocystis, which is a viral condition,
brought on by poor water quality (often prolonged exposure to high nitrates) and
can be recurring.>
Any feedback would be appreciated.
<Here's something that you might enjoy: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/anabantoids.htm
.>
Thanks! Becky
<Wishing you well, -Sabrina>
Colisa lalia
Hello Bob,
<Bonjour Claude>
It has been a long time since the last...
I have received a inquiry from a visitor of the French section.
He asks me of we (you, of course) have anything about specific "Colisa sp.". He
is specializing in mutations of Colisa lalia. He was very admiring over the
"Anabantoids" but he found it not specific enough.
Read you and best regards to your and your entire crew (MK)
Claude
<Merci mon ami. I do wish I could take the time to study and write up the human
history of the delightful "dwarf Gourami" and its many sports. Does this writer
have specific questions re this species of Colisa? Robare Fenner>
Re: Colisa lalia, WWM en Francais
Thanks Bob,
I'll ask him about specific questions.
By the way, I have received many compliments about the site.
Let's not talk about the site himself but about the articles. All the visitors
but one (not happy about American cichlids, he says it is dirt...(sic)) find
those are very worthy. And yet my opinion is that your knowledge is a standard
for the hobby. It is for me a great pleasure to popularize it to the French
talking hobbyists .
Greetings and thanks
Claude
<Outstanding. Am very glad you are able, willing to aid in the dissemination,
help of offering the content en Francais. Au revoir my friend. Bob Fenner>
Another (different) Gourami question
Hi all,
<Hello! Sabrina here, today>
My wife has a 3 inch sub adult male pearl Gourami. He is currently in her 10
gal. community tank. He is very nippy and aggressive to his tank companions.
<Wow. That's a touch unusual for this, the most peaceful of the large-ish
Gourami.>
She is planning on moving him into a planted 20 gal long tank with Cory cats.
She would like to know what other fish would make good tank mates? She has read
of the pearl being kept with paradise fish or angel fish, would one or both be
ok?
<In a 20gL, angels will really be pushing it; not a good choice for a small tank
at all. But paradise fish would be an excellent choice! If you end up getting
a male paradise fish, do keep an eye out for any aggression between him and the
pearl. Another neat option would be to get a couple of female pearls, instead;
that could be a lot of fun. Enjoy! -Sabrina>
thanks, Dave & Kathy
Gourami trouble
Please Help,
<Sabrina here tonight, I'll certainly try>
Today I changed 1/4th of my 35 gal tanks water and every one was fine, tonight
on the side of my Gouramis he/she? has red raised bump on the side of the body
with a small white spot in the center, and two littler red spots by her face.
Please help! I have searched the web and asked around, what is it and what
should I do?
<Well, first off, this sounds like some sort of bacterial infection. As to what
it is specifically, it could be early stages of septicemia, perhaps a wound that
has been infected, possibly mycobacteriosis (fish TB), perhaps something
else. Start by isolating the sick fish in a separate tank, prevent the illness
from spreading. I would treat with Kanamycin sulfate, available as "Kanacyn" by
Aquatronics, or perhaps "Spectrogram", which is a combination of Kanamycin and
Nitrofurazone. Do be certain to monitor your water parameters closely (pH,
ammonia, nitrite, nitrate) and keep things stable to help the fish recover
during treatment. Hope all goes well, -Sabrina>
Thanks for your time, Mary
Trichogaster trichopterus
Hi,
<Hello, Sabrina here>
I was unable to find any good documentation about my Gourami. I have 2 female
three spotted Gourami and they have been living together for about 6 months.
<Trichogaster trichopterus is the Latin name - a Google search will yield great
results, and here's the WWM article: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/anabantoids.htm
.>
Living with them, I have a small school of tiger barbs. The other day I bought
a pink kissing Gourami. Now one of my three spotted Gourami has turned very
dark and his spots have faded out so that it appears as if it has no spots. I
suspect that it may be stress because the color change occurred within about 3
hours. A bacteria wouldn't act this fast without harming any of the other fish
right?
<It's certainly possible, but you're right on about stress, too. Now you've
just got to determine why the fish is stressed - illness, perhaps; or maybe
being bullied by that new kisser.>
Anyway, that fish now hangs out in the plants. How should I go about diagnosing
what is wrong?
<A good starting point: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwfshparasites.htm Other
than that, observe the fish very closely, and separate to a quarantine tank if
at all possible, for better observation and to protect the fish, also to prevent
any possibility of spreading any illness to other fish.>
Thanks, Keeter
<Wishing you well, -Sabrina>
Crowded aquarium?
Good morning,
<Good afternoon, Sabrina here>
I am writing about my six gallon Eclipse aquarium I have had up and running for
6 months. I initially cycled the tank with a flame dwarf Gourami, and after the
appropriate time added another blue dwarf Gourami and two very small albino Cory
cats. At the beginning, I noticed the flame dwarf ( which was slightly larger
than the blue) seemed to be the tank bully, which I chalked up his being the
first in the tank. Recently I have noticed the roles have reversed and the blue
is now larger, the flame having lost weight. At the same time, I have observed
the sizable growth of the two Cory cats, who are now probably at least 1.5
inches each. So my questions are these: first, it is necessary, as I suspect
based on the typical rules for fish keeping, to remove one or more of the fish
because of the size of the tank?
<I do not feel that two Gourami and two Corydoras is too much for your system.>
second, should it be one of the dwarf Gouramis because they seem to have such an
antagonistic relationship?
<I do believe that you should remove one of the Gourami, but not due to crowding
issues - this aggression will continue, probably worsen significantly, over
time. Chances are that you have two males, and tensions will always be rather
nasty between them. It could conceivably get bad enough that one is
continuously injured, or worse. Wishing you well, -Sabrina>
Thanks, Matt
War or peace in the tank? (10/11/03)
Hi everyone,
<Hi! Ananda here tonight...>
My wife just picked up a male Betta and was wondering if she could put him in
her 5 gal tank with her male ram & dwarf Gourami without any problems.
<Um, not likely at all. The Betta and Gourami are both Anabantoids, and are very
likely to go to pick on each other. Also, the tank is fully stocked with just
the ram and Gourami -- in fact, I'd rather see those two fish in their own,
bigger tank, at *least* 10 gallons. The 5 gallon tank would be great for the
Betta, either by himself or with a few ghost shrimp or algae shrimp (the latter
also called "Amano" shrimp) to help clean up the place. Besides, shrimp are
cool. :-) >
THANKS in advance - DS
<You're welcome. --Ananda>
Gourami shredding goldfishes
I have a 20 gallon long with 3, 4 inch goldfish in it. And 1 blue Gourami. I
have had the tank for 2 years with no major problems. About 2 months ago, I
bought a shubunkin fish. It swam with the pack almost immediately. This morning
when I woke up I noticed that my blue Gourami was chasing around one of my 2
year old goldfish whom he's lived with all along. His fins are almost shredded
and he is floating sideways. I love my fish dearly and am very confused at why
this is happening.
<Blue/two-spot/Opaline/gold Gourami (all color morphs of Trichogaster
trichopterus) tend to be rather aggressive. Chances are, with the addition of
the new fish, the Gourami felt crowded, and decided to, 'uncrowd' the tank - his
way.>
I put my Gourami in another tank for now.
<Good. Keep him separate from the goldfish, or this'll probably happen again.>
Can I save my Fish in time?
<Hopefully! Keep your water quality as good as possible, keep up with water
changes, and stay on top of ammonia and nitrite. It might be a good idea to
medicate with an antibacterial like Kanamycin sulfate (Aquatronics sells this as
"Kanacyn") or Nitrofurazone (Aquatronics sells this as "Furacyn"). Watch him
closely for bacterial infection if you don't medicate; wounds are an open door
for illnesses to set in.>
All the other fish are fine. And my pH and ammonia levels are normal. Katana
<Wishing you and your goldfishes well, -Sabrina>
Spotted Fish
Hi,
I have a golden Gourami in my tank and I have just noticed her having 2 black
spots on her body, one by the tail, another in the middle of her body. Those
spots are on both sides and exactly in the same place. I wonder whether
they should be there ( I haven't noticed them before) or it is a disease. Other
than that she seems fine. I will be waiting for your answer
<Lina, this is normal. The golden Gourami, or Trichogaster trichopterus is
almost always seen with black spots at the middle of the side and at the
caudal-fin base. It sounds to me that you have a perfectly healthy specimen.>
Thank you, Lina
Gourami Problems
Hi. Two days ago I got four male neon blue dwarf Gouramis and put them in a
10g. tank by themselves and I have a few concerns. first of all, they are all
males, will that pose a problem? <they may fight... if it becomes a problem you
will need to separate them> second, 2-3 of them seem to not be eating, <maybe
they are stressed? did you check the water quality... were they eating when you
purchased them?> and the one that does eat doesn't seem to eat very much, <some
is better than nothing at all> I feed them TetraMin flakes, but they just sit
there hiding or on the bottom, should I just change the food or what? <check the
water quality> and also, one of them seems mentally challenged. I've noticed him
shaking, darting around the tank and running into things and that sort of
behavior. what is the problem and how can I cure it?<you can't they just have to
adapt to their new living conditions> I've been having a little trouble with my
water heater so the temp has changed some, could this be a problem?<possibly>
please hurry back to me I am very concerned.<just keep a close eye on the fish
and check the water quality... and read more on WWM about these particular
species of fish and acceptable ranges of water quality, good luck, IanB>
thank you, Drew
Eat, Don't Kiss!
Hello to all at WWM,
<Hello! Ryan here>
I bought 2 pink kissing Gourami's 4 days ago and have them in QT by themselves
but they are not eating. I've tried reading over all the faq and am still at a
loss. They are in an established tank and all my water parameters check out
okay. I haven't noticed any white spots or any other obvious signs of illness
only that they hang out on the bottom of the back of the tank. I've tried
offering frozen blood worms and brine shrimp. Also I got some zooplankton all
to no avail. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
<Amy, are there adequate hiding places for them to feel safe? I like to keep a
piece of PVC or some fake plants in my QT to reduce stress. Was the brine you
offered live? If not, try that. Brine shrimp are a poor substitute for real
food, but seem to get almost any fish eating. Small live worms may do the trick
as well. These fish are generally very hardy with an appetite to match-could
you contact the LFS which sold you the fish and find out what they were eating
previously? Good luck!>
Thank You,
Amy
Unhealthy Gourami? (06/29/03)
<Hi! Ananda here tonight...>
Hi! I was just wondering if it is unhealthy that my blue dwarf Gourami's poop is
long and stringy (by long I mean about 4 times his length sometimes)? Weird
question, I know.
<Not at all a weird question -- a sign that you're paying attention to your
fish! It could indeed be a symptom of a problem. It might be some sort of
intestinal parasite, especially if the feces are a whitish color (they should
always be darkish).>
Also, if it IS unhealthy, what can I do about it?
<I tend to use Metronidazole for this purpose. You might also try Pepso food.
I've heard Disco-med also works for this.>
I feed him flakes and he seems to be healthy otherwise.
<Do give him a bit of variety in his diet -- at least use a couple of different
types of flake. An occasional treat of frozen food or freeze-dried "treats"
won't hurt, either.>
Thanks for your help!
Kelly
<You're quite welcome. --Ananda>
Dark blue Gourami
I have a 55 gallon tank, 2 blue Gouramis, 2 kissing Gouramis, 1 cichlid, 2
silver dollars and 4 Bala sharks. I noticed that one of the Gouramis is turning
black on one side. He doesn't appear to have any other signs of disease on
him. He isn't as active as he usually is. The other fish have appeared to be
more active then they were. Can you possibly tell me what is wrong with them.
<It’s hard to say for sure what wrong with them without having a lot more info
but take a look at
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwfshparasites.htm You might find
some ideas there. Ronni>
Dwarf Gouramis, Small Fish, Big Attitude II
Thanks for the reply Gage--I double checked this morning and it definitely
is not Ich, since there are no salt like particles on the his fins or flanks.
<Rad>
It looks more like some scales or color is missing on one side, half the size of
a pencil eraser. After some research yesterday I thought it might be some form
of fungus, but there does not appear to be any sort of cottony substance on him
so that doesn't appear to the case.
<This is a wait and see situation if you ask me, could be a wound from the
aggression that will heal on its own, or it could get infected. Lets hope for
the first situation.>
The addition of the plants seem to have halted the most aggressive fin-nipping
going on, so I am going to hold off and see how things progress.
<Good Plan>
I would really like to upgrade my tank to a larger one, but really don't have
any room for it in my apartment.
<Get rid of the TV? Maybe the Couch? Do you really need that bed? HA HA HA.
-Gage>
Thanks
Matt
Blue Gourami Question
Hello. Recently bought a 55 gallon tank, and got a variety of fish.
<Greetings>
4 silver dollars
4 glass tetras
4 high finned tetras
and 2 blue Gouramis
I also have a Plecostomus
<OK>
Everything was working fine, until I noticed ich on some of the fish (silver
dollar and tetra). I treated the water following the instructions, and still
notice a white spot on one of the glass tetras. I hope this resolves itself, but
I worry about one of my Gouramis. He lives around the plants, which is near the
filter. He has been fine there, but now he seems to be caught up in the current.
He tries to swim, but just lurches forward and back. The other Gourami chases
him sometimes, and then he can move just fine... I'm worried if that is a
problem with the ich, or something else.
<You may need to re-medicate for the ich again. I really don’t think the Gourami
has a problem, most likely he just likes that spot and the feel of the current
there.>
Ph is set at 7 and I've been pretty regular on changing the water, although I
haven't tested the ammonia. Any advice you have for a new fish hobbyist. Adam
Sutherland
<You probably should test the ammonia and nitrites but other than that, keep up
the good work! Ronni>
Gourami whiskers
I have 4 Gouramis in a 30 gal planted tank with 15-20 freshwater plants and
2 big rocks with hiding holes and a loach cave for my 2 clown loaches. Also 2
Danios, 2 tetras, a Pleco to control algae and 2 rosy barbs. all are getting
along great and life is good except that I noticed that 2 of the Gouramis 1
dwarf blue, and one honey, have had one of there whiskers nipped. Not
completely off, but just shortened a little bit... like maybe a quarter of an
inch from a 2 inch whisker. Has been several weeks and it doesn’t show any
signs of infection as far as I can tell. My question is should this concern me
as I haven’t seen any signs of other aggression or infection, and will these
whiskers grow back and if so how long will it take to return to the size of the
other whiskers. Thank you, Don Otey
<It’s hard to say what the culprit is here. It could easily be one of your other
fish (my first guess would be the Danios or one of the other Gouramis). Unless
it continues to get worse I wouldn’t worry about it too much, just watch them to
make sure they aren’t getting picked on. The whiskers should grow back in time
but it’s hard to say how long. Ronni>
Sick kissing Gourami
>Hi Bob,
>>A minion by the name of Marina here.
>I have a 3-4 inch kissing Gourami that is several years old. Last week he had a
circular area on his side that was whitish in color. I changed 20% of the water
and kept an eye on it.
>>Do a larger water change. You've mentioned nothing about using carbon,
filtration, or water parameters, so I'll assume that you know to remove carbon
when medicating, and that you also know that some meds can "knock out" a good
portion of your benthic bacterial colonies. This is another good reason to do
larger water changes (50% identical, fresh water will help greatly).
>This week it seems to have spread to the back 1/2 of his body on one side. He
also has 1-2 raised bumps on his other side, about 2mm x4mm in size. He is
eating and still "kissing" the other Gourami. He seems sluggish though and
generally not too good. Two days ago I started a treatment of Maracyn II. So far
this does not seem to be helping.
>>We're really shooting in the dark, especially because I'm going by your
description with no photos, and my book of fish diseases is in storage
(curses!). Do both a Google and Dogpile search, as you'll be in a better
position to determine what best matches your fish's symptoms. I would also,
after doing that large water change, switch to Melafix, another broad spectrum
antibiotic. If you do NOT have live plants in the tank, I would add 1 teaspoon
of salt (Kosher or marine salt mix) per gallon of tank water. This will boost
the effects of the antibiotic, as well as relieve a bit of the pressure on the
fish's system (osmotic differences between fishy flesh and water). Also, please
delve into our library here-->
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwinfectdisfaqs.htm
>This fish has had previous bacterial infections that responded quickly to
Maracyn II. What do you think? Jeff Hulett Hawkeye
>>I would try the other broad spectrum antibiotic along with the salt. This is
assuming that it's not a fungal infection (the Methylene blue would help address
that), though I'm really not sure that's a possibility by your
description. Keep up the water changes, if he takes any fresh foods do try to
stimulate feeding this way (bloodworms, daphnia, mosquito larvae, et al). At
this point it may be far too stressful for him to undergo a saltwater dip, so I
don't recommend it. Let's keep our fingers crossed! Marina
Re: sick kissing Gourami
>Thanks Marina,
I will do a larger water change and try to send you a photo. I do have live
plants in the tank. I did do a search, but didn't turn up anything.
>>Then you won't be able to use the salt. I did more searching, and the best I
can find online is that it must be an infection, but at this point I can't even
narrow down whether it's bacterial, fungal, or viral. If you can set up a
hospital tank for this fish, I would advise it. This way you can help him with
salt. If you believe that it would cause really undue stress on the fish, then
don't move him. Other than that, my only other suggestions are to try different
broad spectrums. Here's a link to fish meds, uses, dosing, etc. -->
http://www.petswarehouse.com/Fishmed3.htm
and here-->
http://www.petswarehouse.com/Fishmed2.htm
>>Good luck, and keep us posted. Marina
Re: sick kissing Gourami
>Thank you Marina,
>>You're welcome.
>I spent some time looking at the fish with a magnifying glass and I noticed
some white tuft stuff on one of the site. It was very small. After seeing that,
I treated the tank with Rid Ich+, which is mostly Malachite Green. I also
removed a smaller kissing Gourami from the tank to reduce stress on the sick
one. I did this because, even though he was sick, he still "kissed" the other
one, and frequently chased it around the tank. I also added a tablespoon or so
of salt. I did this last Thursday or Friday. Since then I've kept up the
treatments once per day for both the Maracyn II and the Malachite Green.
The fish improved dramatically with this treatment.
>>FANTASTIC! Boy, that is great news.
>After one day the 2x4mm spot had shrunk 50% and the tufts were gone. His motion
seems better and he seems to be getting better every day. Since he really didn't
respond to the Maracyn II, I can only guess that this must have been fungal.
>>Me too. Again, let the happiness ensue! You've found the trouble, and are
treating with good success. I have achieved my (the whole crew's, actually)
goal.
>I plan to discontinue you Maracyn II today and keep up the M. Green until he
seems healed.
>>Sounds like a good plan.
>By the looks of his progress, this should only take a few more days.
>>Could it get any better?
>After that I'll reinsert the carbon in the filter. I've included photos of the
fish in its original sick state. You can see the
discoloration on the back half of his body. This spread from the original
circular site which was about 8 mm wide. Thank you very much for your help with
this.
>>This is great, except that I can't seem to view the
.jpg. Bob? Jason? Zo? Someone with more puter knowledge than me? Well, the
point is that the fish is on his way back to good health. I'm very pleased with
the news. Marina
Cowardly Gourami
I have two questions: 1) Tiny black flying insects have shown up in the
house and around the fish tank. How do I eliminate them?
<It’s hard to say without knowing exactly what they are.>
2) A Golden Gourami in a 15 gallon tank with 5 small Corys and 3 Otos has
started hiding a lot in the past 2 weeks. He seems easily startled now as
well. He comes out to eat. I test for ammonia and nitrite and its at zero ppm.
I do weekly to bi-weekly water changes because its a small tank. Our water here
is alkaline testing at 7.6 -7.8. I add a small amount of aquarium salt (1tbs
per 5 gal). I have coconut shells driftwood and a big fake Bacopa for shelter.
what do you think he is scared of?
<Have there been any changes in or around the tank recently? A change in
lighting (in or out of the tank), tank position, tank decorations, new fish,
etc? Even something as simple as moving where the filtered water flows back into
the tank can cause this. I think that if the problem is due to a recent change
he should be back to normal once he adjusts a bit. Ronni>
Re: Cowardly Gourami
Hi Ronni!
Of Course I don't know what the insects are. I was hoping you might have
experienced this and have some idea.
<Unfortunately, I have never had this problem so don’t know for sure. One thing
to check might be your food. The possibility of this being the cause is pretty
slim but it is something to consider. If you are feeding a live larval type food
there is the possibility of the food actually maturing or just the scent of the
food attracting the insects. I remember once when I was a kid I left an apple
core in my bedroom. Within a few days I had a huge amount of tiny black insects
flying around all over the place.>
About the Gourami: I didn't think to mention that a few weeks back I put a
second power filter on the tank because I read that the Penguin bio wheel mini I
had on it was a little weak. When I did the last water change I switched the
position of the filters around because the tank is slightly tilted. This is
exactly when he started hiding! The outlet of the filters reach the top of the
water better now but it occurs to me that I possibly now have created too much
current for the Gourami. Could this be a problem too?
<It is possible that there’s too much current but more likely is that he just
plain doesn’t like it. By adding to and moving the current you disrupted his
territory and probably ticked him off. For the fish you have, a total turnover
of 2-3 times the tank volume every hour should be sufficient. A little higher is
better but probably not more than about 5 times per hour max. Ronni>
Re: Cowardly Gourami
Hi! Thank you for the advice, it seems logical. I took the extra filter off
of the tank and added a floating plant. It’s been almost a month and the Gourami
is more skittish than ever. In fact, all the fish in the tank have started to go
nuts every time I move near or walk by the tank! They are all still eating.
<Hmm… something is definitely bothering them but I’m at a loss as to what it
could be.>
I think the Gourami hurt himself; I noticed a white spot on his head that I hope
is just a scrape.
<Do keep an eye on that spot and make sure it doesn’t grow or begin to look
cottony. It may be a fungus if it does.>
Could it be that the tank is too close to the door? It's funny, I have a larger
tank with some of the same fish in the living room were there’s constant traffic
and the fish are not scared at all.
<The door shouldn’t be a problem unless it’s causing the tank temperature to
fluctuate. Are you absolutely positive that none of the fish in the tank are
harassing the others and causing this? Occasionally a fish will all of a sudden
start picking on others in the tank. Do you have a Pleco in the tank?>
I read something about using dither fish. A fish that is real friendly like
barbs. I don't have room for a school of barbs in a 15 gallon tank.
<Dither fish sometimes work but you definitely don’t have room to add a school
of any that would work.>
I am running out of ideas, could you please help?
<Unfortunately, so am I! Keep a close watch on your water quality, make sure
that spot isn’t a fungus, and make sure that he’s not getting picked on by
anyone else, especially when the lights are off. Ronni>
Re: Cowardly Gourami
Ronni, Thanks. The spot on his head is gone thanks to Melafix. No Pleco just
1 Gourami, 3 Otos and 5 Corys.
<Has he started acting any better since you got the spot cleared up? If not, I'm
really at a loss on what could be causing this! Ronni>
Ulcers on dwarf Gourami
I have a 29 gallon tank that has been up and running for 4 years. I have 3
black widow tetras, 3 Serpae tetras, 2 hatchet fish, 2 red tailed Rasboras, 4
lemon tetras, 1 swordtail, 3 Corys, 1 Pleco, 3 neon tetras, 1 dwarf Gourami. I
recently had 2 dwarf Gourami's but one just died. The water temp is 78, the
ammonia is 0, the nitrite is 0, the ph is 7. Last week one of the Gouramis had
like a lump by it's mouth just under it's eye. He was acting normally. About 2
days later the lump turned into an ulcer. I treated the tank with penicillin.
The ulcer got worse and small red blotches appeared near his tail more towards
hi underside. He also developed a lump on his back just in front of hi fin. He
just looked so bad last night that I put him out of his misery. Now one of my
Serpae tetras has like a whit spot on his body and a white film towards his
tail. I got some Quinsulfex Quinine Capsules Formula M13 and starting treating
the tank last night. Could you tell me what was and is wrong with my fish and am
I treating it correctly. I do not want to lose the whole tank. Also, do you
think I have overloaded my tank with too many fish? Thank you. Patty
<It sounds like a parasite. Please check out
http://www/wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwfshparasites.htm
for info on the different ones and their recommended treatments. You do have a
few too many fish in this tank. Not counting the Pleco you have between 35 & 40
inches and you should have a max of 25-29 inches. Ronni>
Long worm, tree-climbing fish
I have two questions. The first one is What kind of worm can stretch up to
90 feet and where can I find a picture of one?
<Likely you're referring to a Ribbon Worm (Nemertean) like Lineus longissimus,
which can be more than 30 meters long>
My other question is What kind of fish can climb trees and where can I find a
picture of it?
<Likely this is the Climbing Perch, Anabas testudineus>
If you can e-mail me by Sunday or by 6:00 am Monday morning it will be
appreciated for my assignment.
<Use your Internet search engines to find images of these animals... using their
common and scientific names. Bob Fenner>
from,
Steph
Neon Blue Dwarf Gourami
I will setting up a 15 gal tank and plan on having neon blue dwarf Gouramis
in it and was wondering how many I should have. I know that the Gouramis are
very territorial in nature and should I plan to put only 5 or 6 in them. I will
have a lot of hiding places and will solve the problem of them beginning
territorial.
<These are called "Dwarf Gouramis" but they can still get 2-3 inches long so
even 5 or 6 is probably too many. The blues do tend to be one of the least
aggressive but in a 15 gallon tank, no more than 3 or 4 is recommended. Ronni>
Disease of my Dwarf Gourami
Hi,
I was wondering if you would be able to help me diagnose what my dwarf Gourami
died of half an hour ago. I have a 10 gallon tank with:
5 - Neon Tetra
5 - Fancy Guppies
1 - Male Dwarf Gourami
Two days ago I noticed a small whitey patch, irregular in shape on the side of
my Gourami's head. The patch wasn't smooth, more like cotton wool in water;
waving in the current. I decided to put him in a breeding cage that you can put
in the aquarium, just so that he wouldn't come in contact with my other fish.
Yesterday (a day later) he looked worse. The white patch had increased in size
slightly and there was a tiny bit of it on the top of one fin. I quarantined
him in another tank that day.
<<It sounds like fungus. I’m sorry to hear that he died. For future reference,
one of the Mardel products (Maracyn, Maroxy, Maracide, etc) treats this but I
can’t remember which one exactly. Fungus Guard by Jungle will also treat this.
I’ve had the best luck with the one by Jungle.>>
This morning the white patch was larger and looked like a scab: I could see a
little red patch in the middle of it. The white stuff was about 0.5 cm in
diameter. The fin that previously had the white patch on it was completely
opaque and shredded. His other fin was perfectly functional and clear. Over
part of his body was a mucusy white, not quite as white as the initial patch.
He no longer made that crest on his back stand up and it was coated thinly will
mucus. His colour was duller and he mostly stayed sunken on the bottom of the
tank, apart from making quick dashes to the surface now and then. In the end he
lay horizontally on the bottom. The white patch protruded from
his scale approx 1/3 of a centimeter and was a cloudy white.
<<Definitely sounds like fungus.>>
Well, that's everything. I know that I sound very concerned, it's just that I
would like to know what I did wrong and hopefully save my other fish, so it
won't happen again.
<<Watch your other fish very closely and if they show any symptoms, immediately
quarantine them and treat with a medication for fungus. Sometimes they will get
it, other times they won’t so it’s hard to say.>>
Thanks Jess
<<You’re welcome. Ronni>>
Yikes! ICK!!!
Help! I stocked my tank with 5 Gouramis, 1 male Betta, 2 Kuhli loaches and
3 clown loaches.
<<Just a note from experience here, watch your Betta with the Gouramis. The
Betta may at some point eat the "whiskers" of your Gouramis or the Gouramis may
decide that the Bettas fins look like a tasty treat. :o)>>
At some point, ick was introduced. I've been treating with a commercial product
for the last 3 days, using their directions (the ick was minimal at beginning of
treatment - 4 or 5 white spots total on clown loaches mainly). What are my
chances of getting rid of this nasty organism? I'd appreciate any info or advise
you have to offer.
<<Your chances of getting rid of it are actually quite good. Time/success will
depend on what kind of commercial medication you are using. My personal
favorites are Ick Guard or Maroxy but I've talked to many people about Ich and
everyone has their own favorite. Just follow the manufacturers instructions
exactly and you should see an improvement. I'm not positive here but your
loaches may be a small scale or scaleless fish, if they are then the medicating
rules are different for them. Many ich medications can be poison to scaleless
fish. Do a search for clown loach using the Google search box at
www.wetwebmedia.com to find out for sure. Take care! Ronni>>
Thank you! Bev
A Disease In The Moonlight?
Hello, I don't know if I'm posting to the right place.
<If it's about something that swims, you're in the right place! Scott F. with
you!>
I would like to know what to do about my sick male moonlight Gourami. I have a
male and female in a 60 liter tank, no other fish. A couple months ago my male
started getting sick-his feelers became "floppy" and noodly, and now are about
half their original size, then his skin became brownish, now he's very very
lethargic. Meanwhile the female is growing by leaps and bounds, she's very
healthy and beautiful and aggressive to the poor guy. At feeding time, she
pushes him away! I sink some food in his quiet little hiding place behind the
filter, and he barely eats. The tank condition is fine, Ph good, I change the
water once a week, temp. is about 26-27 C. Sorry for all the metrics, I live in
France.
<No problem>
Any idea what's going on? I hope some one can help, thank you very much, Kitk
<Well, Kitk- it sounds like the Gourami is suffering from some kind of bacterial
infection. This may have been brought about as a result of stress (possibly from
the female's constant aggression..). Also, you may want to review your water
conditions to make sure that ammonia or nitrite are not present, and that
regular maintenance is carried out on this aquarium. You may want to separate
this fish into a smaller aquarium for observation, careful feeding, and possible
treatment. If the separation and good food/water alone don't do the trick, I'd
start with a basic antibacterial substance, such as Methylene blue, in his
water. See if that brings about some positive results after a few days or so. If
this method does not seem to be working, you may need to look into a
broad-spectrum antibiotic. Before using any medication, I'd look in the
Freshwater section on the WetWebMedia.com site under "diseases", and try to
verify what condition that you may be dealing with. Good luck!>
Mixing Gouramis
<Ananda here today answering freshwater fish questions...>
I hope this isn't a stupid question, but I've surfed all over and still am
uncertain if mixing different breeds of Gourami is ok.
<I've seen a 29 gallon tank with three different species of Gouramis. One was
sufficiently nasty that he had to be put in the "penalty box" tank, but
otherwise they were okay together.>
I have a new pair of Sunset Fire Gouramis in a 28 gallon with a baby clown loach
(2 inches).
<Please get your clown loach a pair of buddies -- these are schooling/shoaling
fish and much happier in groups of three or more. And it's very cute to watch
them all pile up on top of each other to sleep at night.>
The tank is established (the prior tenants are now at home in a 60 gallon). I
know I have room for other fish, but want to make sure is don't upset these cool
fish. The store where I got these also has Power Blue and Gold
Gourami's. Would introducing another pair or two create havoc?
<Well, perhaps temporarily, as the existing fish look at the new fish and say
"Hey, what are you doing here?" From there, it depends somewhat on the
individual fish. But I think you could add another pair or two of Gouramis. More
on Gouramis and there relatives at
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/anabantoids.htm
and the associated FAQs.>
Thanks!
Beverly Vance
<You're quite welcome. --Ananda>
Gouramis In A Group
Dear Anthony (just a wild guess here),
<Oops- Anthony's cheerful(?) colleague- Scott F. here>
My 30 gallon freshwater tank finished cycling almost 3 weeks ago. It now houses
3 platys, 1 balloon molly, and one female Betta. pH is 7.8, temp is 79 F,
ammonia, nitrite, and nitrate are 0. By choice I have only artificial
plants. I would like to add two male dwarf Gouramis - are the Gouramis a good
choice?
<Dwarf Gouramis are among the most peaceful of all fishes-great choice for a
mellow community aquarium.>
Will two males live together peacefully (I want two males because they are
prettier than the females and I'm not interested in having the Gouramis
reproduce)?
<Well, in my experience, it's better to keep these fishes in small groups, like
2 females and 1 male, or 3 females and two males. Keeping two males together
seems to result in one harassing the other into submission, in my experience.
There also might be some occasional aggression between the Betta and your
Gouramis.>
I've read they like plants floating on the surface - I'd rather not have this
(even artificial ones). Will they be miserable without that?
<No- they should be fine. In nature (and in the aquarium), they often rely on
floating plants to provide an area for building their nests and depositing eggs.
They appreciate the cover, but it is certainly not necessary to have floating
plants for these fishes.>
Should I add some aquarium salt to the water? How much? What brand?
<Personally, I'd skip the salt>
I thought I'd also get 2 or 3 Corydoras sterbai as scavengers - are they
suitable tankmates for this group?
<sure- these are great fish in their own right!>
I would not plan to get the new additions all at once.
<Good plan-build up your population slowly>
Thought I'd start with the Gouramis if you give me the go ahead. Any thoughts
would be appreciated.
<With the above caveats, I'd say that they would make great additions to your
tank! Good luck! Regards, Scott F>
Judy
Dwarf Gourami
Hi,
My girlfriend has a pair of Dwarf Gouramis. She is concerned that one may be
ill. They symptoms include a darkening of the color to a darker shade of
turquoise as well as much lower activity and labored breathing. The fish lies on
its side on the bottom a lot and the movement of the gills is faster and deeper.
There does not appear to be any fungus or worms or slime or anything like that
on the fish. She did not mention weight loss or eating habits (I have not yet
observed the fish). Any insight that you may be able to provide would be much
appreciated. IT sounds odd to me that the color would deepen. Usually I would
expect a sick fish to lose color. Maybe it is pregnant and about to release a
bunch of eggs or something :) She has not had the fish long, maybe 6 months, but
who knows how long the store had it. It was full grown when purchased. Thanks
again, Josh Moninger
<Hi Josh, if there are no other outward signs of disease I would start by
looking at the water quality. Pick up some test kits (ammonia, nitrate, nitrite,
ph, etc) or have your LFS test the water for you. Also, what size tank are we
dealing with, what type of filtration, and who are the other tank mates. Check
out the link below for info on freshwater disease ID
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/FWSubWebIndex/fwfshparasites.htm
Best of luck, Gage>
I took advice on Gourami/Tiger Barb II
Steven Pro,
About putting two Gouramis in a 29 gallon tank, will two males fight?
<Yes>
Will I be over loading the tank when they get larger?
<No>
Thank you for the thumbs up on my setting up the extra tank though. It is indeed
hard to wait through a good long quarantine.
<But you will be rewarded in the long run. -Steven Pro>
FW Ich, African Cichlid Compatible Cats
Hey Bob,
<Hey Gage>
Gage here, just drinkin, dreamin, and answerin emails.
<Sounds familiar>
I was wondering if I could enlist your help in a couple of matters, and was
hoping that this would not get posted on the daily's. I've got a couple of
emails in my box that I am not sure about.
<Okay.>
First off is regarding Gourami Fry with Ich. Will a regular dose of meds kill
the youngans? I was thinking maybe a half dose, and some aquarium salt?
<Better to use/suggest elevated temperature (about 85 F.) alone... sans med.s.
The higher average kinetic energy will do the trick.>
The next question is about catfish to include in an African tank.
"r these guys related; Pseudodoras niger and Megaladoras irwini?? "
<Insert both names in Fishbase.org and you will see.>
I was thinking no because their names are completely different, but I don't
know.
<You will. What sort of reference system, materials do you have? The "net" is
better every day, but... I still have to "go to the library".>
>here is the rest of his message:
"I am looking for a catfish that I can put in with my African cichlids.. at the
moment I have a few Synodontis multipunctatus in there and they are all doing
fine.... I was wondering could a Pseudodoras niger or jaguar catfish work in
that kind of a tank.. I saw the Pseudodoras at my LFS and the guy told me that
they can live in a tank with a ph of up to 7.8 and GH of 25... mine are ph 7.8,
KH 12, GH 16.. its 280 gallons.. 96 x 24 x 31 dimensions.. currently I have 8
fish in there.. a Kigoma frontosa (about 3"), Malawi blue dolphin (3" also), a
gold Lepidiolamprologus profundicola (4"), 2 Neolamprologus sexfasciatus (2"), 3
Synodontis multipunctatus (4").. I plan to get more fish later on, but this is
what I have at the moment.. I also plan to get 3 more Mpulungu Malawi blue
dolphin.. 4 Mwele orange Altolamprologus compressiceps, 4 Mutondwe gold head
Altolamprologus compressiceps, 5 Synodontis angelicus, 3 Synodontis
multipunctatus and also 1 Lepidiolamprologus kendalli.. that's all I have looked
into at the moment.. is this a good idea?? if not can u recommend any other
catfish that would work.. I really like how the Pseudodoras looks... its really
cool and plus I have the big tank that it requires.. I just got my 280 gallon..
its cycling at the moment.. pls help!!! "
>As far as I know Frontosas are Tanganyikan prefer not to associate with
Malawians. I have also heard that mixing Synodontis is not the best idea.
<Some mix quite well>
Please feel free to kick some knowledge, that's young an for please help me out.
<A pleasure. Please do "send" messages that you don't feel you have time to
delve into onto me, others.>
Best Regards, Gage
<Be chatting. Bob Fenner>
Plant cover for Gourami in quarantine
Hi! I was just wondering if it might be ok to float a leaf of romaine lettuce in
a quarantine tank with a single Golden Gourami just to give it some cover. I
don't have a plant to put in at the moment. Thank you, Steve
<Hi Steve. This may be more trouble than it is worth. The leaf would have to
be rinsed really well to make sure there were no pesticides on it. It would not
take it long to start decaying so it would have to be replaced frequently. I
would probably just pick up some plastic plants next time I was at the fish
store. -Gage>
Gourami Fry with White Spot
Hi, I really hope u can help, I have 60 dwarf Gourami fry 10 days old. They have
been infected with white spot disease from my other tank which is being treated
successfully but what about my poor fry, some are dying. Is normal treatment to
harsh and will aquarium salt help?
thank you for any response
Sophia
<Morning Sophia. I checked with Bob on this one, regular Ich meds would be too
harsh for these little guys. Try slowly raising the temperature up to around
85. The elevated temperature alone should do the trick. Best of luck, Gage>
Gage here, just drinkin, dreamin, and answerin emails.
<Sounds familiar>
I was wondering if I could enlist your help in a couple of matters, and was
hoping that this would not get posted on the daily's. I've got a couple of
emails in my box that I am not sure about.
<Okay.>
First off is regarding Gourami Fry with Ich. Will a regular dose of meds kill
the youngans? I was thinking maybe a half dose, and some aquarium salt?
<Better to use/suggest elevated temperature (about 85 F.) alone... sans med.s.
The higher average kinetic energy will do the trick.>
Sick Gourami
I have a 10 gallon tank, with 3 Red Dwarf Gouramis and 2 Neon Rosy Barbs (also 1
Pleco). This is my first tank and I've had the same healthy fish in it for about
11 months. One of my Gouramis recently became sick. His mouth started to swell
and now he can hardly close it. He seems to be staying close to the top and is
breathing heavily, but is still trying to eat. My local pet store suggested
drops that fight "internal infections and diseases" so I have started with the
treatment.
<does not sound like an internal problem.>
I've never had a sick fish, so I'm not quite sure what to do. I've been doing
research for a few days and haven't found much helpful information. Could you
please let me know if there's anything else that I could try. Any info would be
greatly appreciated.
<This sounds like it could be a fungal infection. If you are not already doing
so I would be add salt to the water add about a tablespoon of aquarium salt per
gallon. Make sure your temperature is in the upper seventies without any major
swings. Also medicate with a medication that has both Nitrofurazone and
Furazolidone in it. 3-5 days consecutively with small water changes daily just
before the new dose. Best of luck, and please check out the article below.
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/AqBizSubWebIndex/fishdisho.htm
-Gage>
Osphronemus Gourami
Hi Fenner,
I'm currently located in Houston and have been looking for some Osphronemus
Gourami, but I couldn't find any. I'm not sure if you stock these fish at all,
if not would direct me to stores or farms where I can get some.
<Hmm, the true Gourami... shouldn't be that hard to source locally... even
"albino" ones... Have you checked with your local fish stores? Look up a larger
specialty one in your area and ask them if they'd "special order" one/these for
you... almost all shops have a mechanism (order book) for placing such requests.
This is what I would do... if there are troubles, delays in delivery... they
will be able to rectify it. If no luck this route, please re-contact me. Bob
Fenner>
Thank you so much, Lap
Neon Dwarf Gourami Help
My male Neon Dwarf Gourami seems sick. I have had him for maybe five weeks
now he did fine and was really hardy ( I cycled my tank with him, my two female
Gouramis, and a red tailed shark) but now he is just hanging out in the corner
by my heater (the temp is fine its at 79 degrees) and doesn't get excited like
he used to at feeding time (used to take Tubifex worms from my hand... also feed
flake). Now he looks really skinny but his colors aren't fading or anything so
I'm assuming he's not totally given up eating. What could be the matter with my
fish? any ideas? Could it be my other fish I have 2 2.5' female Gourami's, 2'
red tail shark, a 4.5' Black Ghost Knife, 2 1.5' clown loaches (which I'm
treating for ich... but none of the other fish have the white spots that would
suggest ich), and a 6' zig zag eel.
<Ah ha! Either the medication (they're toxic to a degree to fishes) and/or a
latent infestation of ich (the white spots are visible only in advanced cases...
a reaction, mucus to irritation by the ich organism) is likely the root cause/s
here. Please consult with the fine folks on our Chatforum as to how you might
proceed: http://wetwebfotos.com/talk/
For me, I'd go with elevating the temperature of your system and leave off with
any "medication" to treat your system. Bob Fenner>
Thanks for your help,
Kevin
Sick Dwarf Gourami
Hello,
I have a 5 gallon fresh water tank in addition to my 72 gallon brackish. This
week one of two dwarf Gouramis in the freshwater tank has become sick with
Popeye. I have been treating the tank with Epson salts (as I read in the WWM
Faq's for Popeye) and antibiotics.
<Good treatment protocol. One note, it is better to use an antibiotic food
versus medicating the entire tank.>
The Popeye has effected one side terribly. The swelling has yet to go down. I've
also been doing daily saltwater baths to try to draw out some of the fluid
behind the eye.
<This would not be my course of action. Popeye is not a terrible disease. Rather
minor affliction that I would not treat so aggressively.>
I've seen no improvement, it's only gotten worse. This morning I got up and he
is leaning against the side of the tank, breathing with some difficulty. When I
fed them however, he did make an effort to swim up to have a bite. I'm at a
loss, I do not want him to be in any discomfort, but I have had other fish pull
through with other conditions before, so I am not hugely sure about euthanasia.
I am not sure what to do. Should I keep treating him or should I euthanize the
poor soul.
<I would not give up the fight just yet. Epson salt, medicated food, and a good
water change/cleaning to ensure peak water quality would be what I would do.>
Any help would be great. Thank you so much for your help.
Take good care, Amy
<You too. -Steven Pro>
Breeding Gouramis
Hi dear Anthony
How are you ,
I'm fine ,I am Nader Afshar from Iran,
<yes, my friend... I remember you. It is good to hear that you are well>
Thank you for your help my mollies babies are very good and send best regards to
you,
<thank you kindly>
I have 4 yellow Gouramis 2f/2m,
The female are pregnant ,how can I reproduce them?
<not difficult but little bit tedious to do successfully>
What is the situation for laying ?
<they build a bubble nest at the surface of the water... some floating plants
will help them build this nest>
what eat babies in first 10 days?
<that is partly what is difficult... they need very tiny live food: infusoria>
please write me anything need for reproduce them,
<the following is one of the many articles on the Internet for breeding these
fishes: http://www.aquarticles.com/articles/breeding/Wilkinson_Labyrinth1.html>
Thank you very much, your friend
Nader Afshar
<best regards, Anthony>
Furunculosis (likely Columnaris, as in Chondrococcus bacteria)
I have one remaining dwarf Gourami that has Furunculosis. I've had 3 die
from it. Thanks to your website, I've finally determined what the problem was
and have been treating him with fabulous results. My question is, how long can I
treat him with the medicine? As of this date, he's had 4 doses, can I continue
until he's completely healed?
<yes...and you should until the fish is clearly cured and then some. As with
people, you will treat the condition with antibiotics for slightly longer than
the malady is evidenced. Extra water changes just before each application of
medicine will also be quite helpful>
Please respond soon, Thankfully, Heather
<with kind regards, Anthony>
heather
Ctenopoma
Hello Mr. Fenner
I want to breed spotted climbing perch. I need information, how to breed them I
need specific information the way to breed them please email me if you have book
how to breed spotted climbing perch I wanna buy from you
thanks
<Please take a look through fishbase.org for information on the genus
Ctenopoma... and read through how to do information searches:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/litsrchart.htm and the links beyond.
Bob Fenner>
Ctenophora... Ctenopoma...
hello Mr. Fenner
thank for you information but I can find your information about fish base genus
Ctenophora
can you give me information about breed spotted climbing perch in my email??
thanks
<Please see the previous note... and seek the references listed on fishbase.org
for the species, genus, family. Bob Fenner>
Please help fast!!!!!!!! (overly aggressive Honey Dwarf Gourami?) <Might
be in reference to Colisa chuna>
hi I have a honey dwarf Gourami that I have had for about a year and a half.
I just moved it a couple days ago to a ten gallon tank a much larger one than
before. I put some tetras in the tank with him and he did nothing. he began
attacking the glass and I noticed that he could see himself. I went to the pet
store and they said I needed another Gourami in the tank.
<Whoa... what was the reason given for "needing another Gourami"?>
I put another Gourami even a little larger and now all it does is attack the
larger Gourami. I also have a Bala shark in there he is small however and my
Gourami attacks that one to. I don't know what to do. I want it to not be lonely
and stop attacking the walls but I cant put any other fish with it.
<Really... a Honey Dwarf Gourami, Trichogaster chuna? Please see here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/anabantoids.htm
I was also wondering if you could tell me how to tell the males from the
females. maybe I have two males.
<Perhaps... but if two or one they shouldn't cause much damage if this
species...>
I really need help please write me back as soon as you can so I can fix this
problem and all my fish can be happy.
thank you
my e-mail address is XXX
<I see it above in the address tray>
thanks
<Don't worry if the species is what you mention... the agonistic behavior
should/will settle down soon. Perhaps consider adding something in the way of
"dither-fish"... like small Danios, Rasboras, the easier going barb like cherry,
checkerboard, gold... see the WetWebMedia.com site re these choices.
Bob Fenner>
Urgent!!!!
Can you help me my male dwarf Gourami is sitting on the bottom of the tank
and his breathing is heavy do you know what is wrong with it and how to cure it.
Could you please reply quickly as I am quite worried about it. Thank you
<Not a good sign... hopefully your fish is "just resting"... this species
(Colisa lalia) can be hard to keep... Often imported with disease problems. You
might want to look into feeding all your fishes in this tank/system an
antibiotic-laced food for infectious disease (bacteria...). These are made by
Tetra, HBH and others or you can "make your own"... as detailed here on our
site: http://WetWebMedia.com/holedispnd.htm
Bob Fenner>
Dwarf Gourami concerns
I just bought a pair of dwarf Gouramis and the female seems to stay in the
corner a lot what is the possible cause of this? Also are they easy to breed?
thanks
<Not a good sign that the female is in the corner... but maybe doing so from
shipping stress. Please read: http://WetWebMedia.com/anabantoids.htm
And get back to me if you have specific questions.
Bob Fenner>
Paradise Gourami
I have a male and female paradise Gourami, I believe they have mated he has
made a bubble nest and they have did the mating thing, I have seen what seems to
be eggs come from the female after a very interesting mating courtship the male
wraps himself around the female and flips her upside down then after a few
seconds she floats away and he is curled up like a leaf at the top of the tank,
after those kinds of interactions is when I have notice the small white eggs
floating in the water. The male scoops them up and spits them into the bubble
nest area.
<Yes... good description.>
My question is how long before I should see babies.
<About four days near 80 F. To wiggling stage... need to cover the tank to avoid
cold air drafts...>
And is something wrong with my tank. I am afraid I have a fungus now growing in
that tank brown clumps of some sort are starting to accumulate in the bottom and
float to the top. I have read that it is hard to get the young to mature because
of disease , is this a fungus or algae. Any help would be greatly appreciated.
<Maybe an algae of some sort, perhaps an algae and other life forms... maybe
just detritus... I would place a sponge type filter, or an open-top (leave the
lid off) air-driven corner filter... to prevent the babies from being sucked
in... And start studying... books, the Net re raising Gourami fry... have you
looked into growing their food? I would... and start now... infusoria... Bob
Fenner>
Marty
By the Moonlight of my Gourami
Thanks Bob,
My remaining moonlight Gourami has developed a swollen protuberance above one of
his eyes, a crescent 7mm long, 2m wide and sticking out 2mm from the body. He is
swimming and eating normally. I've placed him in an isolated 20 Gal tank and
begun treatment with Maracyn (sp?)<Maracyn, erythromycin> yesterday. Do you
think I should be using Maracyn II? (Tetracycline)<Actually another antibiotic,
but yes, I would use this instead... mixing some in with the fishes foods. This
won't hurt the other fishes if they ingest it... nor will this complaint likely
infect your other livestock. Bob Fenner>
Your fish buddy,
Jeff
P.S. If he doesn't make it we can always have another party....
<Life to you my friend.>
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