Welcome to GuppyLog.com
New to Guppylog?
Immediate Help


Conversions and Calculator
Conversions and Tank volume calculator


Add yourself to our guppylog map
Guppylog Members


* Change as much water as often as you can! *
Inkmaker
Front Page · Everything · News · Ask Guppylog · Diaries
Display: Sort:
A guppy named, who-whatta? | 14 comments (14 topical, editorial, 0 hidden)
Both the red food and fact that the fish with (none / 0) (#13)
by unclescott on Tue Feb 10, 2004 at 03:58:58 PM PST

Camallanus were in a different tank are important points GS. It may well be that if there was no contact between the tank where that was and the tank with the other fish you are concerned about now, that Camallanus is not an issue.

On the other hand, were your fish from the same shop? If your fish were from different tanks in the shop, did they use the same net for several tanks?

At any time since you discovered that one tank with Camallanus, would you have used a net or siphon in that tank and then in another? (A seasonal trick - I toss used siphons, and nets out on the air conditioner shell to freeze in the weather. It was two weeks before I could get a net off it. ;) Buckets just go out on the sidewalk.)

Would you have poured water into another tank after having taken water out of the infected tank? Might you or somebody else have had a hand in the infected tank (perhaps to pick up a dead fish) and then put it in another tank or fed fish food without scrubbing down? (I've even scrubbed down with baking soda and dabbed hydrogen peroxide on a couple of items.)

If nothing has been used in that infected tank and then elsewhere and no gravel, plants or filters were moved from the Camallanus tank to the others, you are right, it is probably fine.

I don't mean to sound super righteous about cleanliness. One of the reasons I am touchy about that goes back to my dumb stunts like when I had a tank with 30 + great looking Nothobranchius guentheri in it. They got velvet. In the process of cleaning that tank (the water change prior to the adding of salt and acriflavin) I slopped a tiny bit of water into another tank with another 30+ terrific little guentheri. Two days later I had the privilege of treating that second tank for velvet. (The good news, most of them survived.)

Maggie is doing you a favor in asking that question about whether an illness in another tank would be effecting those fish. Those maladies are easy to carry from one tank to another. Even if you can unequivically answer her question with "no", it is a question which any skilled aquarist should be asking. :)

[ Parent ]



Re: Both the red food and fact that the fish with (none / 0) (#14)
by gupsup007 on Tue Feb 10, 2004 at 04:48:39 PM PST

Oh I hope I didn't sound rude with maggie, I honestly didn't mean to if I did.  

As far as I know I'm the only on that does anything with the fish and I did use the net in the infected tank and to catch the fry with, and it's the net that I'm using as a filter guard so the 3 adult guppies wont get sucked up into it.  but I had washed the net out with really hot (scalding) tap water. shouldn't the heat and chlorine have killed the demonic things?  the net has been the only thing that has been used in each tank.  but there is a problem with that.  I used the net to catch the fry but they don't have any problems nor are there any worms in their tank. their red areas are poo cause one was pooing and it was gone.  I did get these adults at the same shop and they were in the same tank as they always were.

[ Parent ]



A guppy named, who-whatta? | 14 comments (14 topical, 0 editorial, 0 hidden)
Display: Sort:

Menu

· create account

· F.A.Q. For Newbies!

· Immediate Help For Newbies!

· search


Web www.guppylog.com

· Scoop Info

· Our Tanks

Login
Make a new account
Username:
Password:

SourceForge Logo Powered by Scoop
Subscribe to our news feed
All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective companies. Comments are owned by the Poster. The Rest © 2002 and beyond The Management

create account | faq | search