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  1. #1
    Just an Egg
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    Jan 2008
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    Western Sydney NSW
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    96

    Metro + Apisto's???

    Due to a freak accident with my heater & sudden severe temp drop

    one of my Male blue rams has developed "pop eye"

    I have been reccomended to use Metro as a friend of mine cured their discus problems with it.

    I have 4 Apisto's in the tank where the ram is affected, Will I have to treat seperately? or is it better to treat all of the fish?

    I have not used Metro before, and really only had friends use it on Discus, so would my Dwarf's be ok with this?

    in the tank I have 3x Juvi Apisto's one adult male & a pair of german bred Blue rams along with a common BN.

    If the metro affects the Apisto's I will just have to leave it I think, or try to treat seperately as my quarantine tank has turned into an apisto tank :P
    although my ram is one of my fave's I don't want to risk my Juvi's

    also will I be able to move the affected fish as I am moving house in 13 days, and if it's going to stress him further, I might have to arrnage a babysitter until he is better.

    I have had pop eye on a wild german Blue ram female before, unfortunately with some bad advice I treated her with Malachite green and she didn't make it.

    I am very open to suggestions so please don't hold back!
    "We have to remember that we either live in nature or not at all. Through building and maintaining beautiful natural aquaria, people relearn the intricate connections between forms of life: plants, fish, microorganisms and humans. Riches and beauty come from harmony, from balance. Aquaria are great teachers of this truth." - Takashi Amano

  2. #2
    Just an Egg
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Western Sydney NSW
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    anyone???
    "We have to remember that we either live in nature or not at all. Through building and maintaining beautiful natural aquaria, people relearn the intricate connections between forms of life: plants, fish, microorganisms and humans. Riches and beauty come from harmony, from balance. Aquaria are great teachers of this truth." - Takashi Amano

  3. #3
    Medium Discus
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    london
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    736
    right big mouth small brain... is my first disclaimer

    pop eye is it unilateral or bilateral, i personally think the response to metro your friend had was good luck rather than correct treatment

    cooling of the fish yes that may have allowed some infection to overcome a reduced immune system, how cold is it in aus right now? i would guess the water didn't get to cold

    exopthalmus is a difficult condition to treat because we often dont know the cause, local inflammation exacerbates the whole problem

    in unilateral case's i ahve had some luck by applying topical ointments

    if the condition is bilateral yes you can use metronidazol, try and give it orally (dapnia are a useful carrier) how effective it will be though is another matter

  4. #4
    Just an Egg
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    Jan 2008
    Location
    Western Sydney NSW
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    96
    thanks for your help,
    the tank actually dropped from 30*c to 10*c, I live in the Blue mountains (hence why so cold) so it was pretty severe in my eyes.

    my fish actually died last night, the eye that was affected actually sunked in, there was a grey scar above it, but when he died it turned blood red & the fish turned white


    I'm not sure if your first disclaimer was directed at me, but I have had this problem before, Listened to a guy at my LFS who gave me the wrong advice, hence why I had so many questions & I didn't want to make another big mistake like the Melachite green.
    "We have to remember that we either live in nature or not at all. Through building and maintaining beautiful natural aquaria, people relearn the intricate connections between forms of life: plants, fish, microorganisms and humans. Riches and beauty come from harmony, from balance. Aquaria are great teachers of this truth." - Takashi Amano

  5. #5
    Just an Egg
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Western Sydney NSW
    Posts
    96
    double post
    "We have to remember that we either live in nature or not at all. Through building and maintaining beautiful natural aquaria, people relearn the intricate connections between forms of life: plants, fish, microorganisms and humans. Riches and beauty come from harmony, from balance. Aquaria are great teachers of this truth." - Takashi Amano

  6. #6
    Medium Discus
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Sydney, Australia
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    856
    Hi boost,

    Sorry to hear of your losses.
    As Andrew has stated, there can be many factors which may result with pop-eye. I've had my fair share of such myself, and each occasion could be something totally different.

    But going from 30 to 10 and back up again, that would give them a rather huge shock.

    How big is your tank (sorry if I've already asked before), it's quite severe to have such large drop by a dead heater (unless it went unnoticed over a day or two). Going as low as 10 degree, you're lucky not to loose the rest.

    Your LFS is not totally wrong - Melachite green may help depending on the type of infection that resulted with pop-eye.

    Hope there's no other ill-effect with the rest of the fish.

  7. #7
    Just an Egg
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Western Sydney NSW
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    the last time I treated with melachite green, the fish died from the treatment... perhaps it might be because she was a wild imported ram & more sensitive than a tank bred though...

    my tank is 80L it's my quarantine tank that i was using for the Rams as they were spawning less than two weeks ago.
    what happened is i was using an old power board as this set-up is no where near as good as my other 4, big mistake! and it surged, although it was "switched on" that lead wasn't receiving any power! I has left it less than 12 hours, because I had done a waterchange that morning & the water was quite warm, i brushed up against the glass that night & felt it really cold so that's when I realised what happened.

    I then spent the next two hours, slowly building the temperature back-up because i didn't want my Apisto's to go into shock, they are still very small & I didn't want them to get sick!

    do you think i should continue treating the entire tank??? I would estimate the Juvi's would only be 2cms long, 2.5 at the very most & theres three of them.

    and the worst part is, I am moving from Glenbrook to Gladesville in 8 days & i wanted the apisto's to come with me straight away.

    my next question is: will the temperature drop affect the Bacteria in my canister filter?

    I'm concerned about an ammonia spike, I think that's the last thing my fish need after what they went through!

    thanks for your help th0mas, I knew either you or Mike would reply!
    "We have to remember that we either live in nature or not at all. Through building and maintaining beautiful natural aquaria, people relearn the intricate connections between forms of life: plants, fish, microorganisms and humans. Riches and beauty come from harmony, from balance. Aquaria are great teachers of this truth." - Takashi Amano

  8. #8
    Medium Discus
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Sydney, Australia
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    856
    In my opinion, if the fish is already having it's eye popping, then it's likely to be dead within a week (that's from my experience). I've tried all sort of medications in the past, but usually the fish is in a non-salvageable state when it's developed condition such as dropsy or pop-eye.

    For the remainder of the tank, I would leave them alone and don't treat them. I believe in not medicating unless there's confirmed illness (otherwise healthy fish can get knocked about).

    2-2.5 cm juveniles are quite advanced already (depending on species, but most are), and should be able to handle the relocation without any issue.

    I think the temperature drop shouldn't impact your filter significantly. If there's an ammonia spike due to this, it's already passed (given it's already days away) and the problem should no longer present.

    Good luck with the move.

    PS: Don't forget to thank Andrew as well

  9. #9
    Just an Egg
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Western Sydney NSW
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    If Andrew is fishgeek,
    Then i have already thanked him (see original response)

    although i'm not quite sure if his disclaimer was attentioned to me.

    I have checked the parameters, no ammonia as yet, hopefully it has passed like you said (fingers crossed)
    I'm planning on a 50% water change tonight anyway as i have new driftwood which is leeching still, and my wter is a bit brown tinged.

    the fish are A' Baenshi (sorry for the spelling) and I have my steel blue in there with it, as well as my female Blue ram.

    the male died a few days ago 9on Saturday) which was probably in his best interest because he wasn't looking happy & it was breaking my heart to see him like that!

    thanks for the advice Th0mas, it's people like you and a few others to why i stay on this forum!
    "We have to remember that we either live in nature or not at all. Through building and maintaining beautiful natural aquaria, people relearn the intricate connections between forms of life: plants, fish, microorganisms and humans. Riches and beauty come from harmony, from balance. Aquaria are great teachers of this truth." - Takashi Amano

  10. #10
    Medium Discus
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Sydney, Australia
    Posts
    856
    Brown water shouldn't be any issue with most apistos/rams. Why do you insist with the 50% w/c?

    We do have a very small community in Australia, it is unfortunate that the majority of interest are in African cichlids and it is damn hard to find many experienced keepers that are still dedicated to the dwarf club.

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