jamesandrewgreen
Seedling
- Joined
- 13 Jan 2012
- Messages
- 12
We have just had to euthanize one of our Otocinclus and would appreciate if anyone could help with our diagnosis / post mortem.
We came home to find one of our Otos clinging to the back corner of the tank with its head partially out of the water. On closer inspection we found the Oto to have severe abdominal swelling as well as what appears to be a blistering of the skin around the anus, and a large red lump clearly visible inside the blister, between its anal fins . The fish appeared very stressed and in discomfort, trying to lever itself out of the water wherever it could and with very fast gill movement. After some frantic but inconclusive research we decided to euthanize the fish.
Has anyone seen this kind of thing before? The main worry is that the cause of this may remain in the tank and effect our other Otos. Any help would be greatly appreciated!
We have had a group of 9 Otos for 3 weeks in a partially new tank set-up (cycled tank/water/filter/equipment, just re-scaped). The fish were quarantined for 4-6 days after transportation and before entering the tank, which had been fully tested. About 1 week after introduction to the tank one Oto was found dead with no visible symptoms. At the time we put this down to stress of transportation and moving, given Otocinclus often delicate nature. About 5 days ago we added a second external filter to the set-up.
The attached images were taken just prior to euthanasia.
Our current water parameters are as follows:
PH: 7.4
Ammonia: 0 ppm
Nitrite: 0 ppm
Nitrate: 10 ppm
125L,
25 degrees C,
7x Otocinclus & 1x Nerite snail,
1x Ehiem Ecco Pro 2034,
1x APS EF1400
We came home to find one of our Otos clinging to the back corner of the tank with its head partially out of the water. On closer inspection we found the Oto to have severe abdominal swelling as well as what appears to be a blistering of the skin around the anus, and a large red lump clearly visible inside the blister, between its anal fins . The fish appeared very stressed and in discomfort, trying to lever itself out of the water wherever it could and with very fast gill movement. After some frantic but inconclusive research we decided to euthanize the fish.
Has anyone seen this kind of thing before? The main worry is that the cause of this may remain in the tank and effect our other Otos. Any help would be greatly appreciated!
We have had a group of 9 Otos for 3 weeks in a partially new tank set-up (cycled tank/water/filter/equipment, just re-scaped). The fish were quarantined for 4-6 days after transportation and before entering the tank, which had been fully tested. About 1 week after introduction to the tank one Oto was found dead with no visible symptoms. At the time we put this down to stress of transportation and moving, given Otocinclus often delicate nature. About 5 days ago we added a second external filter to the set-up.
The attached images were taken just prior to euthanasia.
Our current water parameters are as follows:
PH: 7.4
Ammonia: 0 ppm
Nitrite: 0 ppm
Nitrate: 10 ppm
125L,
25 degrees C,
7x Otocinclus & 1x Nerite snail,
1x Ehiem Ecco Pro 2034,
1x APS EF1400