A
Anonymous
Guest
I have a striped damsel living in a 10 gallon. Keeping him for my father in law until their move is done.
After some time of less than ideal nitrate levels (and by less than ideal I mean lethal levels :lol: ), I finally got the nitrates under control and stable under 20ppm. No ammonia, no trites, stable temp, pH 8.3.
Three days ago he suddenly gets this wound almost on the ridge of his back, just above and back of the gills. It sloughs off some whitish dead tissue and shows red under it. It is staying open and doesn't seem to want to heal.
I could put him in a sterile QT with some ant-biotics, but the stress of being moved and the anti-biotics messing up the bio filter might do more harm than good.
Currently I fed him some vitamin soaked food (he eats very well), increased his feeding to give him more strength, put polyaqua in the water to help his slime coat, and I'm just watching him.
Any input? Will sticking him in a bucket of medicated water do more harm than good?
Thanks,
After some time of less than ideal nitrate levels (and by less than ideal I mean lethal levels :lol: ), I finally got the nitrates under control and stable under 20ppm. No ammonia, no trites, stable temp, pH 8.3.
Three days ago he suddenly gets this wound almost on the ridge of his back, just above and back of the gills. It sloughs off some whitish dead tissue and shows red under it. It is staying open and doesn't seem to want to heal.
I could put him in a sterile QT with some ant-biotics, but the stress of being moved and the anti-biotics messing up the bio filter might do more harm than good.
Currently I fed him some vitamin soaked food (he eats very well), increased his feeding to give him more strength, put polyaqua in the water to help his slime coat, and I'm just watching him.
Any input? Will sticking him in a bucket of medicated water do more harm than good?
Thanks,



