Re:Bacteria

#2565
Pete Giwojna
Guest

Dear Nigel:

I’m sorry to hear that your female that got caught up in the siphon tube didn’t make it. All my condolences on your loss, sir!

Before you add any more seahorses to your aquarium, you’ll want to wait long enough to make sure that the male Hippocampus reidi is completely healthy. Yesterday you were concerned about the way he was dragging his tail, so you should watch him carefully for a while for any signs of tenderness or loss of prehensility in his tail that could indicate the initial stages of tail rot or white tail disease.

Whenever you suspect a bacterial infection may be involved, it’s important to make sure that your aquarium isn’t harboring any pathogens or parasites before you acquire new seahorses. A water change is a step in the right direction in that regard. Because diseases are so often directly related to water quality, or due to stress resulting from a decline in water quality, when trouble arises the first thing you should do is to break out your test kits and check your water chemistry. Very often that will provide a clue to the problem. Make sure the aquarium temperature is within the acceptable range and check for ammonia and/or nitrite spikes first. See if your nitrate levels have risen to harmful levels and look for a drop in pH. Since the trouble began while you were away for several days, it’s quite possible that your water chemistry may have gotten a little out of whack in your absence, Nigel.

Be sure to check your dissolved oxygen (O2) level too. A significant drop in O2 levels (6 – 7 ppm is optimal) is very stressful yet easily corrected by increasing surface agitation and circulation to promote better oxygenation and gas exchange. At the other extreme, oxygen supersaturation is a red flag indicating a potentially deadly problem with gas embolisms (Gas Bubble Syndrome).

If any of your water quality parameters are off significantly, that may well be the cause of the problem or at least the source of the stress that weakened your seahorses and made them susceptible to disease. And correcting your water chemistry may well nip the problem in the bud, particularly if it is environmental, without the need for any further treatment.

Clean Up & Perform a Water Change

After a quick check of the water chemistry to assess the situation, it’s time to change water and clean up. In most cases, the surest way to improve your water quality and correct the water chemistry is to combine a 25%-50% water change with a thorough aquarium clean up. Siphon around the base of your rockwork and decorations, vacuum the top 1/2 inch of the sand or gravel, rinse or replace your prefilter, and administer a general system cleaning. The idea is to remove any accumulated excess organic material in the sand/gravel bed, top of the filter, or tank that could degrade your water quality, serve as a breeding ground for bacteria or a reservoir for disease, or otherwise be stressing your seahorses. [Note: when cleaning the filter, your goal is to remove excess organic wastes WITHOUT disturbing the balance of the nitrifying bacteria. Do not dismantle the entire filter, overhaul your entire filter system in one fell swoop, or clean your primary filtration system too zealously or you may impair your biological filtration.]

At first glance your aquarium parameters may look great, but there are some water quality issues that are difficult to detect with standard tests, such as a decrease in dissolved 02, transitory ammonia/nitrite spikes following a heavy feeding, pH drift, or the gradual accumulation of detritus. A water change and cleanup is a simple preventative measure that can help defuse those kinds of hidden factors before they become a problem and stress out your seahorses. These simple measures may restore your water quality and correct the source of the stress before your seahorse becomes seriously ill and requires treatment.

So I would wait at least a few weeks to make sure your seahorse tank has stabilized and the water quality is back up to snuff now that you’re back home, and that your male H. reidi is thriving before you introduce any new seahorses to the aquarium. In the meantime, you can take steps to seahorse-proof your reef tank as we have been discussing so there won’t be any more accidents with siphon tubes or filter intakes.

Respectfully,
Pete Giwojna


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