Went to the local Petco on Sunday and saw a dead neon blue dwarf gourami in the tank. It's eyes were white; wouldn't that take a while to happen? The other blue gouramis in the tank weren't looking real chipper, but the flames all looked pretty good. Went in yesterday and saw another blue dwarf stuck to the filter and a red laying on its side on the bottom not quite dead yet. There was one blue one in the bottom corner panting and one hanging around the surface taking frequent air from the surface. The panting fish never once went to the surface during the whole time. Now the other flame gouramis aren't looking so hot.
I've done a bunch of reading about Dwarf Gourami Disease and the like, but these fish are dying at a pace that a virus doesn't make sense. It's my understanding that the iridovirus takes a long time (months) to kill the fish, not hours. I suspect either bacterial infections from tankmates feeding on the dead fish or toxic water since gouramis are prone to high nitrite or ammonia poisoning. Given that fish are allowed to rot in the tank, they could cause spikes in ammonia or nitrites.
I'm thinking about going over there and offering them $1 per surviving fish (assuming there are some today) to try and save them. I have a hospital tank ready to go, just needs patients. I was thinking about seeing if they miraculously start to recover just from new water and then starting them on "general cure" or some kind of sulfa drugs to see what happens.
Do you guys think I'd be wasting my time or taking too big a risk on introducing something horrid to my home? I hate to see these fish dying like that. It looks preventable since there are absolutely no visible signs of illness on the fish and they are obviously living in awful conditions since fish are being allowed to die on display. Color, skin, etc all look great, they are just dropping dead. I can't see there gills to determine color, but the fish seem to be hurting for oxygen. I also saw a fish flash a few times on the glass like he was rubbing his gills. Flukes couldn't kill fish this fast, could they?
I've done a bunch of reading about Dwarf Gourami Disease and the like, but these fish are dying at a pace that a virus doesn't make sense. It's my understanding that the iridovirus takes a long time (months) to kill the fish, not hours. I suspect either bacterial infections from tankmates feeding on the dead fish or toxic water since gouramis are prone to high nitrite or ammonia poisoning. Given that fish are allowed to rot in the tank, they could cause spikes in ammonia or nitrites.
I'm thinking about going over there and offering them $1 per surviving fish (assuming there are some today) to try and save them. I have a hospital tank ready to go, just needs patients. I was thinking about seeing if they miraculously start to recover just from new water and then starting them on "general cure" or some kind of sulfa drugs to see what happens.
Do you guys think I'd be wasting my time or taking too big a risk on introducing something horrid to my home? I hate to see these fish dying like that. It looks preventable since there are absolutely no visible signs of illness on the fish and they are obviously living in awful conditions since fish are being allowed to die on display. Color, skin, etc all look great, they are just dropping dead. I can't see there gills to determine color, but the fish seem to be hurting for oxygen. I also saw a fish flash a few times on the glass like he was rubbing his gills. Flukes couldn't kill fish this fast, could they?
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