I have had 12 fish die over this summer. I have an 800 gallon pond. I do a 25% water change every two weeks. All nitrate, chlorine, ph, nitrite, phosphorus, ammonia, salinity levels good. Salinity at 4-5 parts per thousand.
Fish, all sizes (large, medium, and small) will fie randaomly. One per week, then none for 2 weeks, then another one the next week. No signs of any fatigue or lesions on fish. They look perfectly fine from the outside.
Today we did our own "necropsy" on the dead fish today and found a brownish goo with white/yellow beads in it. It was ALL over the fish and there was a lot of it. I have attached pictures.
Any ideas on what this could be???
Fish keep dying...
Started by marin27, Sep 26 2009 02:21 AM
8 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 26 September 2009 - 02:21 AM
#2
Posted 26 September 2009 - 03:39 AM
oof!! I've never seen anything like that! It does look like eggs!
#3
Posted 26 September 2009 - 08:37 PM
looks like eggs? do you have a pond full of female fish and no males to help them eject the eggs? or possibly you live somewhere with a low temp and your fish have become egg bound?
#4
Posted 26 September 2009 - 10:39 PM
Those are definetly eggs. Males usually outnumber the females, it would be strange not to have one. As for the male participation, I have video of mine spawning and the males just paralleled the females without butting or ramming them.
Edited by DrDave, 26 September 2009 - 11:24 PM.
DrDave
“Wisdom is not a product of schooling but of the lifelong attempt to acquire it”. Albert Einstein
http://drdaveskoi.tripod.com
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“Wisdom is not a product of schooling but of the lifelong attempt to acquire it”. Albert Einstein
http://drdaveskoi.tripod.com
http://plansbyjorde.tripod.com
#5
Posted 26 September 2009 - 11:22 PM
egg bound!? That's the only thing I can think of that would potentially cause a death like that. Perhaps no male in the pond to help her rid herself of them...that's a shame.
#6
Posted 28 September 2009 - 03:27 PM
Thanks for all the helpful insight.... I guess we will try to get some males in the pond to see if that helps!!
Thanks again, Marin
Thanks again, Marin
#7
Posted 28 September 2009 - 04:16 PM
i find it hard to beleive that unless you did it intentionally that you had a pond full of females. those chances would have to be real minute. then to have 12 fish all become egg bound.... and isnt now alittle late in the season for eggs?. do an autopsy on any others that die, if you have any left. the one fish may have been eggbound, but all...? seems more realistic to say something else is killing the fish and this one happened to be with egg.
theres definately something fishy about this forum!
#8
Posted 28 September 2009 - 08:11 PM
i think koiguy makes sense. This one looks egg bound but were the others the same? DId they look big and swollen like this one?
#9
Posted 28 September 2009 - 11:59 PM
Florida may be warm enough for a fall spawn, but I agree that a whole pond would not likely be female or dying eggbound. Too much coincidence for me.
DrDave
“Wisdom is not a product of schooling but of the lifelong attempt to acquire it”. Albert Einstein
http://drdaveskoi.tripod.com
http://plansbyjorde.tripod.com
“Wisdom is not a product of schooling but of the lifelong attempt to acquire it”. Albert Einstein
http://drdaveskoi.tripod.com
http://plansbyjorde.tripod.com

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