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FAQs on Scats, Family Scatophagidae, Disease
Related Articles: Scats, Scats
and monos;
Old favourites and new species for the
brackish water aquarium by
Neale Monks,
Related FAQs: Scats 1,
Scats 2, Scat Identification,
Scat Behavior, Scat
Compatibility, Scat Selection,
Scat Systems, Scat Feeding,
Scat Reproduction,
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Scat problems...please
help!!! 3/20/08
Hi,
<Hi Michelle, Pufferpunk here>
I have two scats in a 14 gallon brackish water tank.
<Quite small for 2 scats. I hope they are tiny. Eventually they grow as large a
a dinner plate & require 50g each.>
My pH is in the mid 7s and my hydrometer reads 1.008.
<Brackish tanks require a pH of around 8. Are you using marine salt?>
I have used "Cycle" and "stress coat water conditioner",
<Cycle is only dead bacteria & does nothing to cycle a tank—only adds more waste
to the water. The stuff is complete bunk & a waste of $$$. Please post your
water parameters whenever asking a question about your fish’s health: ammonia,
nitrite, nitrate.>
I have crushed coral and plenty of plants, although I only have one artificial
stump with a hole in it for hiding. One of my fish is having spasms and won't
eat, when I bought them "he" (that's what I decided it was) was the dominant
fish with the darker color and larger than the paler and more docile "female"
fish, now the paler fish is now darker in color and has gotten very big.
<Need water parameters.>
My sick fish stays in the stump, and the other one "visits" him.....what do you
think could be causing these spasms?
<Possibly poor water conditions.>
All he does is stay in the hole and jerk around all day! Thanks
<Please write back with the proper info, so I can help your fish. ~PP>
Michelle in Charlotte
Ruby Scats
Dear Crew,
I'm sorry to bother you, but I've posted in a couple of forums and haven't been
able to get an answer.
<No bother at all, this is why we’re here. :o)>
Do ruby scats change color when they're sick/stressed? I saw a pair
I'd like to get, but they're very dark and not showing the colors I've seen on
the net.
<Nearly all fish will change color when sick or stressed but don’t rule out
normal color variations that occur within every species too. Do read and view
the pictures at http://www.wetwebmedia.com/Scatart.htm
for more info, especially notice the color variations between the “greens”
and the “rubies” and the notations beside the pictures.>
I was worried about disease and whether it would be worth bringing them home (no
physical signs for fungus/bacteria/external parasites).
<With a proper QT period you should be fine. Do ask about how long they’ve
been at your LFS. If it’s only been a few days or a week, ask them if you can
put a deposit to have them hold the fish until you’re sure they are well.>
I've read up on their tank parameters and feeding requirements, which wouldn't
be a problem.
<Very good>
Thanks in advance!
<You’re welcome! Ronni>
Silver Scats
<Hi! Ryan today!>
I just have to say this is a terrific site. I'm so happy I found it. <I
remember the feeling>I'm
always looking for information. I have a 55 gallon brackish tank containing nine
mixed African Cichlids and three Silver Scats. A couple of months ago two of my
Scats developed something on their mouths looking almost like a pimple. I've
been going crazy trying to find out what this is. I was told at first that
it's a form of cancer and there's nothing that can be done about it, but was not
satisfied with that. <Good> Recently one of the pimples disappeared but
now it looks
like the whole upper mouth is raw with a lot of missing skin & there's a
lump
now on the inside of his mouth. It doesn't seem to bother them but I have to
know if there's anything I can do. The only information I've found was
regarding Lymphocystis but my fish only seem to be affected in the mouth region.
Please help me. I'm afraid of this getting much worse. I would be really upset
if
I lost them. They really are beautiful fish. Thanks, Danielle
<Hard to say without more info. What were the results of your last
water test? What kind of equipment are you using? What is
the temp of the tank? A picture would speak a thousand words. Keep
us posted>
Silver Scats #2
<Hi-Ryan Again>
Thank you so much for getting back to me. <Ahh, the pimpled scats, right?>
I do a 25% water change every 2
weeks. <Nice regimen> For filtration I use a Fluval 304. I test the water
weekly and there is
rarely even the slightest variation. Right now I have a PH of 7.8 , 0ppm
Nitrite & 0ppm Ammonia. The only variation I might get is a fluctuation in
PH between 7.8 & 8.0. <Normal fluctuation> I keep the temp at 78. I
haven't tested the hardness recently but that is usually the same also KH=8
& GH=6. This problem has existed for about
six months. I've spoken w/numerous pet stores & spent countless hrs. on line
& reading books, but haven't seen anything like this. It started as a pimple
on the top lip (for lack of a better description) and now looks like top part
of the jaw is just wasting away. I will try to get a picture to send
you.<That would make this easier!> I
have one other question pertaining to my cichlids. I have what I believed was a
Johanni & now think is a Maingano. <A picture could clear this up too>
I believe she is holding eggs since 6/12/03. I do not have another tank &
tried the net breeder but could not catch her. <tough, but keep at it. You've
either got to remove her or all the males...which sounds easier now? 2
nets makes should help. The recommended time to move the female is
14-16 days after she develops the brood. You're right on time.>
So I opted for a divider. <Fry may be able to swim to their own deaths
through the circulation holes> I'm worried because she hasn't eaten in all
this time. <If your mouth was full of babies, you wouldn't dare eat either! Totally
normal, she'll eat like a pig once this is over.> I've read about stripping
but would rather go the natural route. <Either way works, I like natural
too> I've read that the incubation period is anywhere from 10-21 days.
<Yes, about right. Catch this fish without stressing her too
badly. Go get yourself a 10 gallon quarantine from Petco or
Wal-Mart-best 10 bucks you'll spend in this hobby. This fish is in a
vulnerable time right now, and will need time to recover without being harassed. The
fry will need a space to grow! This doesn't have to be fancy, and a
sponge filter is your best bet with small fry. You can even seed the
filter by setting it inside your display for a few days, then transferring it to
your QT. Hope this helps! Ryan>
This was all rather unexpected so any info would be helpful. Nevertheless it is
exciting. Thank you
again <anytime-Ryan>
Silver Scat Problem
>Hi,
>>Hello. Marina today.
>I have a question, I searched through your boards and haven't seen anything
related (not exactly anyway). First let me tell you the setup. I
have a 50 Gallon Aquarium with a Fluval 404 and a Magnum HOT with a BioWheel. I
use the standard Fluval Media + 2 large bags of Chemi-pure. I usually
do about a 10% water change every 3 weeks or so.
>>Please elaborate "standard Fluval Media", do you mean the
sponge, the ceramic noodles, one of the filter bags filled with any particular
media? I might suggest making the w/c a bit larger, on the order of
30% or so, but would be cautious, and increase the volume changed by about 10%
each change (next change 20%, after that 30%, so on and so forth). However,
knowing the art aspect just as well, also know that if it ain't broke, don't fix
it.
>I have had the tank setup for over 6 years with minimal fish loss and am
pretty experienced with maintenance and water chemistry do's and don'ts. I
currently have 2 silver dollars, 3 skunk loaches, 2 yoyo loaches, 2 silver
loaches, 2 silver dollars, 4 scissor tails, 6 very small white clouds, 1 red
tail shark, and a 1 Kuhli loach. It may sound a bit
overcrowded, but the fish are happy and healthy and seem to enjoy each other's
company. The only exception are my skunk Botias. The stay
in their little cave almost all day and only come out to explore and eat at
night.
They don't bother with the other fish unless one tries to go
in their cave, they are promptly warned and chased away.
>>To be expected, they keep hours to their preference, and I've found many
loaches that prefer to be in the open at night.
>All of my fish have learned to leave them alone, with the exception of the
red tail shark who sometimes 'sleeps' in the cave with them.
>>Please know that Red-tailed sharks can easily be kept with the more
aggressive South and Central American cichlids; they are that pugnacious. If
you begin to experience mysterious disappearances (those tasty little White
Clouds, for instance) you might look to the shark.
>No one picks at the others and healthy fins all around. In fact,
I have yet to see a red tail shark as perfect and vibrant as mine. He
is JET black and his tail is extremely bright, almost like a candle flame, but a
little more red than orange. I have very good water quality. Nothing
but de-ionized water (from Aquarium Pharm's tap water purifier) has ever been
used because the tap water quality here is horrible (500+ general hardness and
8ppm chloramine). I use Electro-right and Aquarium salt on all the
water I replace during changes.
>Now to the problem - I added 2 silver scats 3 days ago. They are
VERY small (about 1" in diameter). All of the info I have read
says they are fine in fresh water for a awhile when small, then require brackish
or marine later. The store I purchased them from had about 20 in
freshwater tank, all the same size. They have had them for 3 weeks,
and all are healthy and happy (I had been checking before I purchased to be sure
of their health). They have pretty much identical water stats to
mine, I brought my kit and they allowed me to test the tank before purchasing.
>>WOW! Cool.
>PH 7.0, KH about 100, GH about 145, 0 of the bad stuff (ammonia/nitrite) and
about a 50ppm nitrate. My nitrates are a
bit lower (40ppm), but I have a much bigger tank than the 20 gallon they came
from.
>>Ok, these readings are from *your* tank, or the shop's tank? In
any event, you mention nitrates twice, I will assume that you meant that you
have 50ppm of nitrites (not nitrates), in which case you have an issue with
this; persistent high levels will soon make less hardy fish ill. You
then mention the nitrates, which I will assume are, indeed, nitrates, and that
they read at 40ppm. I believe that larger water changes would be in
order here, and test the freshwater for nitrates and nitrites. If I
recollect correctly, relatively high levels are acceptable for potable water
(I've seen some reports with nitrates as high as 40ppm, for instance).
>The salinity is about the same, as they use he same general dosage of
Aquarium salt as I do. I acclimated them VERY slowly (about 1 hour)
before putting them in the tank and they immediately began swimming and
exploring and eating a bit of algae
within seconds. I leave a small rock covered in algae for my loaches
to eat, but I do not have a algae problem and the water is as clear as glass.
>>No worries there, but a question as to the ingredients of the aquarium
salt. I don't recollect many loaches that appreciate salt, but being
almost exclusively farm-raised, most, though not all, f/w fishes can tolerate
very hard water and relatively high pH. Anyway, about the salt, the
scats would want something similar to sea water, so check out using that
instead. Ananda would know far better than I, so I'm forwarding this
to her as well.
>Last night, one of the scats began acting strange. When they eat
off the bottom (constantly picking at the gravel and algae) they point straight
down head first much like my silver dollars. One of them never came
back to normal position. I have seen sick fish before and know the
signs of pH shock, parasites, bacterial infections, sever stress, etc. This
fish shows NO signs of anything, and in fact is still putting his dorsal fin up
and down and looks COMPLETELY healthy with the exception of one thing - he
doesn't seem to be able to straighten back up. He has been swimming
while pointed head-down for over 12 hours now in a small corner of the tank. It's
a little funny, because he really does not look sick at all, and is still trying
to eat during feeding.
>>Oh my, I feel terrible! I've only JUST gotten this email
today, 5.13.03. Please let me know how the fish are doing ten days
later!
>I have seen swim-bladder problems before, and usually the fish looks bloated
and is unable to regulate the air in their bladders and float around the
surface.
>>Indeed.
>Not the case with this guy, he stays towards the bottom and his profile is
fine, he's not 'bent' and his body doesn't look deformed like most ailments that
affect their ability to swim
would look.
>>Can we rule out parasite? Or...jeez.. swim bladder trouble
would have been my next guess here. Well, if he was in fresh before,
try reacclimating him to fresh and see if there's an improvement.
>Any possible idea what this could be, or if/what I should try to do to help
him? I KNOW they will require 'real' brackish water within a year or
so and I plan on converting this 50 gallon to brackish and moving all the other
occupants to a bigger 75 or 90 gallon within a few months.
>>Oooh! Stop, reverse that, make the BIGGER tank the
salt/brackish! :D (That's my vote, anyway)
>The other scat is perfectly fine, and actually tries to mimic the strange
swimming pattern of the other little guy as is he is trying to school with him. LOL.
>>GET OUT! Nuh uh! LOL!!! Such silly
fishies.
>It's really not funny, but it is at the same time.
>>I am relating with you at this moment, 1:30pm on this day. And
chuckling.
>Any ideas? What's the best possible realistic thing I can do to
try and save him?
>>Oh my, first let's find out what's happened with him in the meantime,
eh? Again, I'm so sorry about how late this message is, I do hope
he's still with us at least. Marina
Re: Silver Scat Problem
>Hi Marina,
>>Good morning, Victor.
>Sorry if I confused you with all this info, but I was trying to give you an
accurate idea of the tank setup.
>>No worries, my friend, I *much* prefer a bit too much to too little, and
I would wager the rest of my crewmates would agree.
>To answer your questions, the Fluval has the ceramic "macaroni" as
I like to call it, as well as the sponges AND I add two bags of Chem-pure that I
change about every 3 months (supposedly they last 6). I have had this
setup from day one for about 6 years with VERY low illness and or mortality
problems.
>>Yes, from your description you've had a fabulously stable setup.
>My Red-Tail shark is extremely friendly, and never actually 'hurt' any of
the other fish (unless you count psychologically, from chasing them to all
hell...LOL).
>>Well, yes, I do. This is how they kill lots of livestock by
badgering constantly.
>If he does get to 'bitchy' I just re-arrange the tank a bit and his
'territory' is no longer an issue. I've only had to do
this once in 6 years. I've always heard the same thing you say about
red-tails, and I tried keeping one with my first tank (all Cichlids) and they
killed him in about 1 hour.
>>Indeed, when small, red-tails are quite peaceable, though I've only run
across a few that didn't hold their own with cichlids. In any event..
>They were Firemouths, Convicts, and a Jack Dempsey all microscopic in size. I
gave up on Cichlids years ago, I couldn't put anything in their tank but other
Cichlids and my 2 convicts started multiplying like rabbits. :)
>>Oh my goodness YES! And soon you end up with so many fry you
can NOT give them away.
>I was referring to everything correctly. I have ZERO ammonia and
nitrites (for 6 years straight now), and around 40ppm nitrates.
>>I wonder which measurement you meant when you spoke of the 50ppm. No
matter, if it's been going strong for 6 years, I see little need to change
anything.
>I do about a 20% water change every 2 or 3 weeks, so my nitrates usually
hover between 20-40 ppm's. Those readings were from the shop's tank,
and they pretty much matched mine, except I had lower nitrates. I
only mentioned them as a reference for you. Get it now? :P
>>I *think* so... ;)
>As far as the salt, I use Aquarium Pharm's Aquarium Salt (for
freshwater fish). I've used a half-dose of it for over 6 years now,
and all my fish are very active and healthy so I guess it either helps or at
least doesn't hurt.
>>Big proponent of salt for certain freshies here. The only
time I recommend *against* it is in the case of planted tanks. Then I
recommend the fish be moved. Did you know that salt actually boosts
effects of many antibiotics?
>My water is between 40-100 General Hardness which is the safe range for all
my fish as far as I know.
>>Relatively soft water, actually. Where I am my GH is more in
the range of 400-500 (just add some sand, mix, and you've got concrete!). But
yes, your water is quite safe in that range.
>All my water goes through Aquarium Pharm's Tap Water Purifier (de-ionizer)
which is expensive but worth the money.
>>Indeed. And if you've been using it from the get go, I'd have
to go under the assumption that it's money well-spent.
>To give you an example of how horrible my tap water is, I only get about 20
gallons out of each de-ionizer cartridge. If your familiar with this
product, you'll realize how bad my water is.
>>Not so familiar with the product as I am with municipal water
parameters.
>I use the Electro-Rite designed and sold with the kit to replenish the
'correct' amount of hardness according to them during water CHANGES. I
don't top off much, as my tank doesn't really evaporate much in 2-3 weeks
between changes (it has a full glass top).
>>Sounds all very good to me.
And yes, I was serious about the healthy scat copying his swimming
patterns. I've never seen anything like it! LOL
>>Now THAT is a completely new one to me. What a hoot it must
have been (even if he was mimicking a goner).
>I wish I had thought of it at the time, I could have dug out my mini-DV
camcorder and made a video of it, it was quite funny.
>>Heh, me too!
>Don't feel bad about answering late, there's nothing you could have done. A
few days after I wrote the email to you, he finally died (still swimming and
eating up to the end).
>>Sorry to hear that.
>When I removed him from the tank after he died, he seemed a bit heavy when
carrying the body to the trash. I examined it, and felt something
VERY hard in his stomach area. This part is gross, but I got my
utility knife out and 'dissected' him wondering what would cause his stomach to
'harden' so much.
>>Indeed!
Quite simple really, he swallowed a piece of gravel !!!!! Don't ask
me how he fit it into his tiny little mouth, but he did and it was my gravel,
the color matched exactly. Strange indeed.
>>WOW! I am shocked, familiar with this in HORSES, but *never*,
ever, in all my days a fish. Well...I'll be..
>Anyway, the other scat was still very healthy, but he was so
lonely he started schooling with my Silver Dollars !!!!! They were
not happy about this, and were constantly trying to get away from him. It
got to the point were he got aggressive and started picking at the Silver
Dollars. Also kinda funny, since the Silver Dollars are almost fully
grown (at 5 1/2 inches) and he was maybe an inch, if that. Gutsy
little guy. Anyway, this was not a good situation, so I returned him
to the shop and took to baby Silver Dollars instead. Now I have 4,
and the original 2 are MUCH happier for the Scat leaving and even more so
gaining 2 more of their own kind. I decided to wait till I actually
HAVE a more suitable 'real' brackish tank, then I will get some scats then. They
are very fun to watch, and seem more 'aware' then normal
community fish. Much like Cichlids, but less nasty.
>>Agreed, and they can be housed with other beautiful brackish fish
(including the black mollies and Monodactylus).
>Thanks again for trying, but honestly, what can you do for a tiny fish that
swallows a piece of gravel, other than hope it passes it? LOL.
>>Holy cow, yeah.
>Surgery is not on my list of hobbies, so he was doomed anyway. And
by the way, cutting open a dead pet fish is not only disturbing, but very gross
!!!!!! At least I know it wasn't bacteria or a virus though, I HATE
medicating fish that aren't sick.
>>LOL! I agree, we shouldn't medicate if it's not indicated. Glad
to hear that everything's worked out for the best (excepting himself, of
course).
>The rest of the tank is healthy and happy, so I guess it's a
'semi-happy' ending? LOL
>>Very much so. Glad that all has settled down on the watery
home front, and best of luck to you, Victor. Marina
Scat With Acne - 06/03/2004
I was reading a question posted regarding a silver scat that developed a pimple on his upper lip. Then it developed into the entire upper lip getting infected.
<Mm, could be a number of things.... Lymphocystis comes to mind first, also perhaps
Columnaris, or HLLE/hole-in-the-head, even perhaps mycobacteriosis....>
The same exact thing happened to my scat. He developed the "pimple" then died about 3 weeks later.
<Do you happen to have recorded your water parameters? Ammonia, nitrite, nitrate, pH, salinity? Any other fish present in the tank? How large a tank? How large/old was the scat? Any other tankmates exhibiting symptoms?>
I asked my fish dealer about it, and he said that sometimes the fish will bang into something that will cause the infection. Is this possible?
<Well, yes, but not terribly likely.... the 'pimple' you describe, was it a pit, or a raised bump? Color? Texture - fuzzy? cauliflower-like? I would not be convinced that an infected injury/wound caused this, but possible that it was bacterial in nature. Without some in-depth details, it will be tough to pinpoint what, exactly, caused the fish's death.>
It seems too simple for something like swimming into something will cause the fish to die.
<If the fish gets wounded badly enough, and is in poor condition to begin with (or in improper water quality), it is quite possible for the wound to become infected, ultimately killing the fish. But the 'pimple' as you describe doesn't sound like an injury site, to me. Please do respond with more details, if you'd like us to help get to the bottom of this with you. I'd be delighted to be of further assistance.>
- Frank
<Wishing you well, -Sabrina>
Scat With Acne - II - 06/14/2004
Thanks for getting back to me. The "pimple" looked like a pinkish raised
bump on the side of his mouth, that spread across his entire upper lip.
<This does sound classically like Lymphocystis, to which scats are quite prone.>
He was the lone scat in the tank. About a year and a half old, and about 5
inches long.
<Still kinda small, eh? ;D>
I never noticed any health problems with him in the past. In fact, he always
looked extremely healthy. No other tank mates had the same symptoms. My water
quality has always been good.
<'Good' is subjective.... it seems to me that, in nearly all Lymphocystis cases
I've seen, there has almost invariably been quite a nitrate issue. I,
personally, like to keep my nitrates *very* low - I urge others to try to
maintain them at less than 20ppm.>
My Ph tends to get high sometimes, but not much, and I try to keep it constant
as much as possible.
<pH should not have affected Lymphocystis, so no worries there.>
I did, however, kept him in a 30 gallon, freshwater tank.
<Yeah, that's a bit of an issue.>
I always thought that this size tank might become a problem, plus not having him
in brackish water.
<Look at a good sized dinner plate - that's about the right size of an adult
scat. Moreover, scats tend to be social - and really deserve fully marine
conditions as healthy adults. I would guess that, yes, the small tank was
likely an issue, as well as not giving him brackish water, increasing in
salinity with age.>
Most people I've talked to say that keeping scats in fresh water shouldn't be a
problem.
<My best assumption is that the folks you've talked to haven't had them past
juveniles.... These are very large, long-lived fish in the wild and, if kept
properly, in captivity as well.>
He was doing so well, so I figured everything was OK. Anyway, I've recently
bought 4 new baby scats and all are adjusting well to my tank. I'm looking into
purchasing a larger tank soon. What size is
recommended for Silver Scats?
<As large as you think you can manage.... Scats are hefty waste producers as
adults, which can lead to health complications if you're not careful - as they
age, you will need to observe your water parameters, and plan on hefty water
changes, if you don't go with something quite large.>
The other fish in the tank are:
2 Bala Sharks (about 6 inches each)
1 Banded Leporinus (about 7 inches)
1 Angelica Catfish (about 4-5 inches)
1 Leopard Pleco (about 3-4 inches)
1 Red Tail Shark (about 3-4 inches)
All the fish seem to get along with one another, and don't seem to overcrowd
each other.
<.... and this is in a 30 gallon tank, along with four juvenile scats? I
daresay, unless you're doing some big water very frequently, I would be
surprised if you don't have nitrate issues. This is a very hefty
bioload. Also, the worst long-term issue, provided the fish all do tolerate the
water conditions (or you do very large, very frequent water changes), is that
none of the above list is truly compatible with the scats' continuing
needs. We're really talking about a marine animal that is born in fresh water,
and none of the above list will tolerate the increasingly saline conditions that
the scats may die without. Please do take a look at Bob's very informative
article regarding these neat fish: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/Scatart.htm
. Wishing you well, -Sabrina>
Convulsing Scat 10/7/04
Hey there. <Hi, Pufferpunk here>
I just read through your article on scats at
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/Scatart.htm, and I wanted to contact you
about a pair of Scats I've kept for about a year now. The most
peculiar thing happened to the one I have now (the first one died
unexpectedly) that I'm at a loss as what to do. I observed him one
night having what I can best describe as a convulsion. He darted
about the 26 Gallon brackish tank for a while, perhaps 45-60 seconds
and then began to float upside down, unable to correct himself. He
would then twitch violently and sink to the bottom to lay there stiff. He laid
there a while, while I prepared to put him into a hospital tank, until it seemed
he was dead. I removed him immediately and put him into a small transport tank
to take him across my place to the office. But he did not move, so I
kept him in
the little plastic tank. After a good 30 minutes or so,
his gills began pumping and he started moving around, but still flat
on the bottom. I put him in the hospital tank and observed him at the bottom,
sometime violently twitching and convulsing. I decided to euthanize him, and as
I prepared to do something, He steadied himself and began swimming upright. Intermittently
he swam well and convulsed a little bit, but after a day, he was normal
again. Fearing for wasting disease, I medicated the tank with Paragon 2 for a
few days. I kept him in the hospital for about a week or so, without a single
incident. I returned him to the main tank (2 silver dollars, 2 silver shark
catfish, 2 tiger barbs, 1 albino tiger barb, 2 Corys, and a small frog) and he
was fine for about 2 weeks, than another episode. I've had him in the hospital
tank for just over a month now and have not seen him have another episode. I
know they are brackish high PH fish, but my hospital is about 7.4
and the main tank 7.8. I'm not sure what happened, but it occurs to
me that the first fish, whom I found on the bottom of the tank when I came home,
assuming him to be dead, may have had the same condition. Any ideas or
directions would be appreciated. I got to figure out a way to get him out of
that small tank...
<The 1st thing that comes to mind is that if the fish improved in a separate
tank, the water conditions in your main tank must not be suitable for your
fish. That tank is way overstocked & none of the other fish in there are BW
fish (except the silver shark catfish). Scats & silver sharks actually require
a high-end BW environment (made with marine salt) & a SW environment towards
reaching adulthood. Just those 3 BW fish will eventually require at least a 75g
tank. I think you need to decide if you want BW or FW, 1 tank or 2 & rethink
your stock of fish--fast! In the meantime, large water changes & consistent
testing for ammonia, nitrItes, & nitrAtes will be necessary. ~PP> --
Dariush
Miserable scat
I am new to this stuff. Had a scat, that had obtained ich. did
a salt dip for him yesterday. Seems that he is really stressed out. Now
he is lethargic and appears to have difficulty swimming. Is eating
but not as voraciously as before.
<The reason this fish is not doing well is that Scatophagus argus is a
Brackish/Marine fish and needs to be in a brackish environment. When
given proper water conditions these big boys eat like there is no tomorrow. You
will need more info on these fish and how to properly care for them. WetWebMedia
has a good article dealing with this fish here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/Scatart.htm
There also is a FAQ section to help with your questions.>
He is in a freshwater tank with a couple tetras, Chinese algae eater, Cory
catfish, coolie loach, and a peacock eel. All other fish are doing
well. No signs of ich on scat since salt dip. Now
he is at surface of tank almost on his side. Appears to be gasping
for air, rapid gill movement. Any recommendations.
< My suggestion is to immediately set up a Quarantine tank, if you don't
already have one set up already. This fish really should be in
brackish environment, and I don't think that this fish will get any better
without it. Once the tank is set up with the appropriate heated
brackish water then you can think about adding medicines. I found
that many of the Mardel Laboratories medicines work quite well on these fish. For
example Maracyn-Two cured my scat of bacterial infections. Hope that
helps, and I do hope the scat gets better. -Magnus>
Mottled Coloration in Scat 8/22/05
Hi WWM Crew,
<Hi, Pufferpunk here>
I need your expertise. Does this look like Velvet to you?
See how about 3/4 of my Scats body is dark brown? Is this normal
coloration based on mood in Scats? I can't tell if they were like this
when I bought them and I'm getting paranoid or if they are sick.
The facts... I have a 55g BW tank, about 1.007 specific gravity with 2
Colombian sharks, 3 mollies, 3 platies (starter fish, moving to a new
home when I have the money for the tank), a milk spotted puffer, a Betta
(neighbor didn't want him anymore, had to adopt), 3 green scats and 4
glass catfish. Before you lecture me about being overcrowded, they are
all juvenile and will be split up into separate tanks as I can afford to
set them up.
<Just to let you know (so you can start saving), the scats will eventually
need around 50g/fish & require SW as adults. The puffer will also require
salt water. The Columbian sharks are schooling fish that grow quite huge
(up to 18") & need marine conditions as adults. Please put the
Betta in a
2g bowl (or larger). It will be killed with the aggressive fish you have &
will not appreciate the salt.>
Ammonia 0, nitrite 0, nitrate about 20 PPM and PH is about
7.6 to 7.8.
<BW fish are best kept at a steady pH of around 8, generally by using
aragonite as substrate.>
The water is clear and everyone seems happy and healthy, with the
exception of the scats. One of them appeared to be very sick
yesterday. He was hanging out behind the power head and would not eat.
The other two scats were beating up on him real bad and he was doing
nothing to defend himself. I looked all over the net for info about what
might be wrong before finally deciding that he was probably just getting
picked on too much. I cut the top off a 2 liter coke bottle, cleaned it
up real good and poked holes in for water flow. I caught him in it and
dug it down into the gravel. This protected him from the other two
Scats. I checked him this morning and he seemed much better. I let him
out and fed everyone and he ate and was his normal racing around the
tank self. Now he's doing it again, and I've been watching him close all
day, there hasn't been any excessive aggression by the alpha. This
coloration issue may be new or it may not be, I'm not entirely sure.
I've never seen velvet before, can someone help? Oh, and I did a 50%
water change today.
<I would say this is stress coloration, due to his being picked on. You
could try moving the decor around a bit to alter territories. Make sure
there is plenty of decor to break up lines of sight & ample room for
everyone to have their own territories. I'm afraid, even though you are aware
of the fact that these fish need larger tanks, it will be sooner than you
think. Scats grow quickly, are messy eaters & high waste producers. ~PP>
Thanks,
Erik in Oceanside
P.S. Two of the three Scats have this coloration, the third is all green
except the spots. The alpha, one of the discolored ones, has shown no
signs of stress, neither has the third that has no discoloration.
Green Scat Question 9/28/05
Hi,
<Hello, Justin with you here.>
I've had a brackish tank for over six months now with a large green
scat, a green spotted puffer, a mono, and a white cheeked moray.
<Mm interesting choice of tankmates, hope it works for you and also hope its a
big tank with good filtration. Those particular fish are waste heavy other than
the scat.> A little
over a month ago, both the moray and the scat developed a half inch long
white mark on their sides, and the scats gills are completely white inside.
<Sounds like either a fungus or Lymphocystis. Either way do several water
changes and treat with an antibiotic mix of nitro and fuzo based meds if the
area is cottony looking. Most are premixed together for you to better use them.
Jungle products makes one called fungus eliminator.>
I'm not sure if they were like that before the mark got there or not. I
didn't think it was Ich, since I had a pretty high salinity level at the
time. <No parameters of your tank to work with here so a simple high salinity
doesn't help me. WE really need ammonia, nitrite, nitrate ph, and salt, as well
as anything and everything about your tank to really help narrow it down.>
After a week or two, the moray's mark disappeared but its been weeks
now and the scats mark is still there, and he is showing a slight decrease
in activity. I treated him for ich with no result. Any suggestions?
<Hmm well with so little information its hard to be sure but I think you should
try these things. First do major water changes, clean out your filters and
vacuum the gravel. The best way to keep fish healthy is to maintain the highest
water quality possible. In that regard feed your meat eats less too. if the
scats on their food that's fine but once every 2 hours for now is a lot better
for the tanks health. Next get your salinity slowly to 1.012. The reasoning
for this is that ich both freshwater and marine seem to have an incredibly hard
time maintaining virulent levels in that salt amount. Too low for marine too
high for fresh. As for the lines id try the antibiotics listed above on the scat
in its own tank set up as a q/t. Also keep an eye on the puffer if the lines
are curved the puffer may be nipping on them. The last thing it could be based
on your information is maybe a nutritional deficiency. What are you feeding
your fish? Is it the same foods all the time? If so please consider getting a
vitamin supplement to add to the water and try other foods to vary the kinds of
foods given. That should help as well.>
<Justin (Jager)>
Sick green scat - 4/11/2006
Hi. Almost a month ago now I bought two green scats from a pet store. I
gave one to my mother and kept one for myself. I didn't notice until
a day or two after I bought them, but they both had small white flecks on
their tails. The flecks later grew into a fluffy white fungus. The
fungus spread to all the fish in my mothers tank before she noticed the scat
was sick. She successfully treated all her fish with MelaFix and
PimaFix, but her scat didn't get better.
<Is this a brackish system?>
She put it in a hospital tank, increased the salinity (I don't know by how
much) and used a stronger antibiotic instead of the MelaFix with the
PimaFix.
<These are not antibiotics... just tea/extract homeopathics>
The scat seemed to get better at first, but it still died. My scat has
been in a hospital tank since I bought it. I've tried treating it with
MelaFix, chemafix, PimaFix, MarOxy and Maracyn (not all at the same time)
and nothing has worked. I'm not sure what to try next.
<I am>
In addition, my dojo loach was bitten on the tail, and so I put in in my
brother's empty hospital tank to treat it. It's fine, but when he
gave it back to me he used the water from his aquarium tank to bag it
with. A day later one of his fishes died from ick. Now two figure 8
puffers, and a clown loach have 2 or 3 tiny crystals on them. The crystals
don't look like the ones on his fish, and they are very small.
I took the puffers, and clown loach out and started treating them for ick,
but I wanted to know if you think it is ick, and if so should I
treat my whole tank for ick, not just the puffers and the clown loach.
Sorry the letter is so long, and thank you so much for your help.
Jenna D.
<Jenna, quarantine new livestock to avoid such problems... Please read here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/scatfaqs.htm
Sorry for the late reply. Bob Fenner>
Scat with Mouth Problems 3/2/06
Hi,
<Hi Ellen, Pufferpunk here>
Despite no change in care for the past 5+ years, my scat suddenly
appeared to become the victim of what looks like lock jaw. More
specifically, his mouth is open all the time to the point where you can see his
tongue moving up and down. At times, his lips and tongue have turned bright red
but always return to their natural color. He appears to want to but is incapable
of eating. He also makes jerky movements on occasion but can still negotiate the
tank fairly well. Can anyone help me save this fish?
<It would help to know a few things: tank size, water parameters (ammonia,
nitrIte, nitrAte, pH & SG), water change schedule & tank mates. ~PP>
Thanks, Ellen Kortum
Re: Scat with possible lock jaw, Posting Water Parameters - 03/05/06
<Hi Ellen, Pufferpunk again>
It's a 30 gallon high tank, all levels are optimum. FYI...I have a
puffer fish, bought at the same time, in the same tank, who is healthy and
happy.
<A 30g is way too small for a scat. At 5 years old, it should be the size of
your outstretched hand. What kind of puffer? Any other tank mates? When
someone asks you for your water parameters & then lists them all, that means we
want to know exactly what they are--not just "optimum". I also asked for your
water change schedule--important to know, especially with the size tank you are
keeping 2 very messy fish in. When a fish is in a tank that is too small, it
will get stunted. That means the body stays small enough to fit the tank but
the organs continue to grow. Not good for any fish. This will compromise it's
immune system & shorten it's lifespan. ~PP>
Thanks!
Sick Silver Scat –
10/24/07
I have a pretty big Silver Scat in my 120 gal Brackish tank that has Pop eye
disease. He is about the size of a large grapefruit. I have taken him out and
put him in a qt. tank. I talked to the fish store that I frequent and they
recommended Melafix. They said it was a mild supplement that won't harm the fish
since it is a scaleless fish. I have been adding a teaspoon to the 10 gal
quarantine tank since Thursday just like the bottle says. He seems to be pretty
healthy looking besides his eyes. One seemed to clear up, but since I moved him,
his other eye got pretty swollen. It doesn't seem to be getting any better. He
also hasn't eaten anything in about two weeks. He is still swimming strong
though?? Is there a lot more to this, or is he on his way out. I've had him for
about two and a half years, he was the biggest fish in my tank, and the most
aggressive eater of all my fish. Is there something else I can do, or should I
just give up and get a new fish? I would love to save him, but don't want to
spend an arm and a leg on several expensive medications. My water quality is
good, I have two emperor 400's and a Magnum 350. I change the water about every
three weeks, all the rest of my fish are fine???
Please help!!! Thank you
Shawn
<Hello Shawn. Silver Scats (and indeed other Scats) do seem to be prone to
Pop-eye disease. Broadly speaking, Pop-eye is caused by something, and doesn't
come out of nowhere. Water conditions are often to blame, though often in
conjunction with mechanical damage, such as rough handling or accidental
scratches against sharp objects in the aquarium. While its true brackish water
fish are exceedingly tough, just like any other fish they depend on good water
conditions for good health. So the thing you need to do to prevent Pop-eye
and/or favour healing is check the water conditions regularly. Scats want very
hard and alkaline conditions. I'd suggest a pH not less than 8.0 and hardness
upwards of 10 degrees KH. Marine salt mix should be used to provide a salinity
of not less than 25% normal seawater (i.e., SG 1.005) and ideally around 50%
seawater (SG 1.012). A protein skimmer is extremely useful in tanks with Scats
and Monos. At SG 1.010 upwards, a skimmer will effectively remove organic wastes
directly, improving water quality and making it easier to manage the nitrogen
cycle in your aquarium. Water changes of 50% per week are essential for adult
Scats. If the cost of salt is a factor in your maintenance of this species,
here's my take: water quality trumps salinity. If maintaining the fish at SG
1.008 would allow you to do substantially bigger, more regular water changes
than if you kept it at SG 1.012, then keep the fish at the lower salinity. But
for optimal health, keeping these fish at or below 1.005 is not a good idea.
Most Perciform fish seem to be sensitive to nitrates to some degree, and Scats
are no exception. Aim for a nitrate concentration of less than 50 mg/l, and
ideally a lot less. This can be difficult with Scats because they are such heavy
and messy feeders. Part of the art to keeping Scats is not overfeeding them; the
other major part of the art is leaning towards plant rather than animal based
foods. At least half their diet should be "greens" of some sort: unwanted
aquarium plants, Sushi Nori, tinned peas, spinach, algae, etc. Really, the sort
of diet you'd give Tropheus or Tangs. Because green foods are low in protein,
you can let your fish graze more or less constantly without having to worry
about water quality so much. Now, as for direct treatment. Scats ARE NOT
"scaleless fishes". Any medication safe on marine fish or cichlids will be fine
when used with Scats. Treating Pop-eye is difficult, and that's one reason
prevention is more important than cure. Pop-eye sometimes goes away by itself if
the fish is kept in perfectly clean conditions. But much better is to use an
antibiotic such as Maracyn-Two formulated specifically for this sort of
infection. Regardless, the infection will take quite a while to settle down. In
extreme cases, the eye might not heal at all, in which case you will need to
consult a vet. Good luck, Neale.>
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