Jump to content

Angel fish in trouble


Goldie

Recommended Posts

Several months ago I lost my marbled female angel to unknown causes, the golden male is fine. She could not swim overnight and spun. Eventually over a long period of time died.

Early this June I bought a small angel and she was doing fine until three days ago and I noticed that she was spinning at times, other times she swam normally and was seemingly healthy, doing what angels do. She will still feed if she can swim to food. My young angel is now in obvious trouble - lying for short periods at the bottom of the tank. She is red around the inside of her gills. All other fish in the tank seem fine. Any suggestions.

Ph is 7.0 (normal for that tank) Nitrate, Nitrite both fine. Ammonia 0

Link to comment
Share on other sites

HI Goldie,

Inflamation of the gills is usually associated with ammonia levels.

Fish pass a percentage of waste via the gills. Pehaps the level was high but has since been corrected.

Regular water changes should keep the levels acceptable.

How many fish in the tank,... What Size tank,... How often do you do water changes and by how much,... What are you feeding,.. eg, single type or variety/live/frozen etc, plus any other info you have ????

Bill. (Pegasus)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

You might try adding some salt to the tank. Salt is kind of a treatment for having no idea what's wrong, but it won't hurt. Might help a bit if it's due to some kind of bacteria or fungus. The usual is 1 tablespoon per 40 liters to 1 per/20 liters. This is salt for aquariums, don't use table salt.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:cry: she died. thanks for the help though.

Fish in tank - one angel (adult) 6 neon tetra; 2 corydoras bronze(adult); 1 peppered catfish; 1 Siamese flying fox; 2 clown loaches (juniors)

Tank size 29cm x 74cm x 34cm = 73 litres = 16 gallon

UGF in place working well.

I feed flake food alternated with blood worms (half a frozen cube) every other day. Just changed to community bites (pellets) today.

Water changes 1/3 of tank a week.

This is the tank I have the algae problem in - thus the flying fox.

I now hesitate to get another angel until I can track down the cause. The deceased had been in the tank for 8 - 10 weeks and was growing well and settled in with the resident angel peacefully.

All the other fish are fine.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I feed mine twice a day, about noon or when I get home from work and then just before bed. I need to cut back on their food a bit though, I started doing water changes twice weekly and thought, "I can feed them a bit more now." So I started feeding them a LOT more. Too much, I think.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi,

Goldie said,

I feed flake food alternated with blood worms (half a frozen cube) every other day

Goldie is saying that she alternates between types of food each day, which IMO is good.

Hi Goldie,

Hard to isolate your problem, but doesn't seem to be poor food related, but there is a post somewhere referring to fish gulping their food which has not time to be digested and causes swimming probs, which you mentioned yours had.

Just looked up the article. It's in "Freshwater... Newbie with a query"

Might help.

Bill (Pegasus)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Bill you could be so right for the little angel sure had an appetite and always gulped food even taking air in, for it was trying to get the food before it hit the water virtually.

Feeding more often just caused pollution in the tank even with weekly water changes. An older fish keeper recommended once a week however I just could not do that. His fish were so healthy though I wondered if overfeeding can cause more problems for a beginner tankwise etc.

Back again - just checked out re bloat. Could have been answer to spiralling however would she have died on the bottom from that??

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I had an older angel that died a while ago- it was spiralling and looked bloated- I was a bit concearned over the cause of death so I had the fish sent away for autopsy. The results came back as kidney failiure as a likely result of old age.

Old age probably wasn't a factor in your fish, but alot of internal disorders like tumors etc can cause strange behaviour and bloating.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

How much does it cost to get an autopsy on a fish? Be interesting to know what killed the fish sometimes if it isn't something obvious. Just had one of my Serpaes die last night for no apparent reason. But I wouldn't bother for just a tetra.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...