"Patchy Disease in Hillstream Loaches"
Posted: Thu May 28, 2015 7:23 am
Do we know anything more about this from the locked post above?
I'm dealing with a nasty bout of it right now--came home last night to find what hours before had seemed like a perfectly healthy S. lineolata (the one from my sexing question post, in fact) dead, and another (my largest) with his colors washing out to a sickly looking light tan. My others do not seem to be affected, but then again, neither did the dead one, and the one I lost did not seem to have the general, body-wide discoloration being displayed now by the larger male. Just white patches running the length of the back that did not appear to be external growths.
There have been no new Sewellia additions to this tank since it was set up. It housed four new, small clown loaches from about mid month to Monday at which point they were moved to a more suitable habitat and have shown no signs of stress.
Ammonia did creep up to about .25 as I asked someone to feed for me during a work trip and they were a bit heavy handed--could this disease have been held at bay by immune systems until the ammonia crept up?
I'm treating now per Jim Powers' article. Just curious if anyone knows any more about this disease since it was previously posted.
Thanks
I'm dealing with a nasty bout of it right now--came home last night to find what hours before had seemed like a perfectly healthy S. lineolata (the one from my sexing question post, in fact) dead, and another (my largest) with his colors washing out to a sickly looking light tan. My others do not seem to be affected, but then again, neither did the dead one, and the one I lost did not seem to have the general, body-wide discoloration being displayed now by the larger male. Just white patches running the length of the back that did not appear to be external growths.
There have been no new Sewellia additions to this tank since it was set up. It housed four new, small clown loaches from about mid month to Monday at which point they were moved to a more suitable habitat and have shown no signs of stress.
Ammonia did creep up to about .25 as I asked someone to feed for me during a work trip and they were a bit heavy handed--could this disease have been held at bay by immune systems until the ammonia crept up?
I'm treating now per Jim Powers' article. Just curious if anyone knows any more about this disease since it was previously posted.
Thanks