Sunday, March 31, 2013

Re: [tropical fish club] a little OT - goldfish death

 

Larry, sorry to hear of your losses.  I'm with Ray about checking pH with your liquid test kits at the store as well as in your tank.  Can you tell us what procedure you used for acclimation of the fish and for how long?  Were there any symptoms at all before the fish died?  (loss of color, swimming funny- please describe if you saw anything that fits this, red veining in the fins, red blotches or sores on the body, small white "lumps" on the fins or fin rays, change in activity level... anything you may have noticed that changed before their death or that didn't look normal to you would help)
Can you also tell us what size the fish were/are?  Did anything look off in the store tanks?  Even 1 sickly looking fish in their tank?  Did you ask the store if they lost any goldfish from that same shipment?  Did you ask the store if they were eating there and if so, what food?  Have you tried a pellet food?  (Omega one makes a great goldfish pellet food)

Sorry for so many questions but the more info you can offer the faster we can help you figure this out. 

Just a last note for you... since I don't know what size the fish were/are I can't comment on that, but I can tell you that if you resolve the problem and continue with goldfish, 29 gallons is not big enough for even a single fancy goldfish long term.  They get really big and are waste machines, and when they are healthy they grow very fast.  Comets (feeders) can go from 1 inch to 6 inches in about 8 months, and fancy goldfish can go from 1 inch to about 5 inches in 6 - 8 months easily.  Healthy comets typically reach full grown 14 inches by 2 - 2 1/2 yrs, and fancy goldfish typically full grown 8 - 9 inches by the 3rd year.  Hopefully this time frame will help you to plan ahead, or maybe will help you decide for sure if you really want goldfish or not... but thought you should be aware. 

Dawn

Dawn Moneyhan
Aquatics Specialist/Nutritionist
To learn more about me go to
http://www.helium.com/users/449334


--- On Fri, 3/29/13, Larry Blanchard <labl02@aol.com> wrote:

From: Larry Blanchard <labl02@aol.com>
Subject: [tropical fish club] a little OT - goldfish death
To: tropicalfishclub@yahoogroups.com
Date: Friday, March 29, 2013, 5:21 PM

 

I know this is a tropical group, but I hope you'll forgive one excursion

into the goldfish realm.

After our move, I had a 29 gallon tank that was empty. Since I hadn't

kept goldfish since I was a kid, I thought why not. Just for a change.

I got 2 small fantails at PetsMart. One died in 2 days, the other a day

later. I tested the water and it was fine. Yes I used the liquid API

tests, not the paper strips. Not to mention that the same water,

treated the same way, goes in my tropical tank and I've got happy fish

in there. Ammonia and nitrites were zero, nitrates were in the 10-15ppm

range.

So I went back and bought a couple of feeders to use as a test. Same

thing except it was 1 and 2 days this time. Now I'm really worried. I

did a 90% water change, added a teaspoon of ammonia, and waited 24 hours

to retest. Biological filter was still working, no ammonia, no nitrites.

OK, back to the store. This time I took a water sample, not so much for

absolute values since the store uses the paper strips, but to see if my

water tested the same as the water in the store tanks. It did. The

manager of the store didn't think it was my problem, he just thought

thestore was getting bad fish. So based on that I got two calico

ryukins. This time I went up a size on the theory that older fish were

stronger.

Same thing. One of the two is still alive, but I wouldn't take bets on

how long.

Additional info. The tank temperature is 68-70 with no heater. I've

got a HOB filter and a bubbler to ensure oxygen. The only rocks and

plants(artificial) in the tank are ones that came out of other tanks

where they caused no problems. The gravel is aquarium gravel and is too

large for the small fish to ingest, although Iplan on getting rid of it

unless I give up on goldfish. Our water comes from an aquifer with no

added chemicals, but I use AquaSafe+ just to be sure. Supposedly that

eliminates any heavy metal problem although I've never heard of one in

this area.

I'm stumped. I have trouble believing it's all bad fish, but I don't

know what else to tryother than putting in a heater and trying some

platys, tetras, or the like. Anyone here have any suggestions?

Larry B

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