
James asks…
A few difficult questions on Sole fish (freshwater flounder) and what i should do later?
i have a 55 gal with a wild caught freshwater sole fish ( freshwater flounder, i have confirmed it is a true freshwater variety) and i understand they can be difficult to get to eat but how do i get it to start eating, it hasnt eaten in about a week, i have been trying to feed it black worm, frozen brine shrimp, pellet food, sinking pellets, etc.
pt 2
i am going into the air force soon and i need to figure out what to do with my aquarium, do i get a new filter to aid my parents in cleaning it? Do i shut it down and sell off my fish? Do i try and get my fish that only eat live food to take pellet or do i just sell them off?
i have a very painstakingly stocked aquarium with very rare fish including rare strains of apistogramma, wild caught sole fish and wild caught african butterfly fish, not to mention my king tiger pleco lol
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Aquarium Lover answers:
1) Try some frozen (thawed) krill and silversides. Try dropping or placing it in front of the flounder, or in its regular swimming path. Sometimes you have to try to hand feed at first and make the flounder think it was alive. You just grip the tail of the silverside or krill and twitch it like a distressed fish would move. Do this as close to the flounder as you can. Eventually he will get used to the food and eat what you drop in. Garlic remedies sometimes work to entice the fish to eat. If he refuses to eat, worst case you might need to try some live foods like live feeder shrimp or feeder fish.
2) You can teach someone how to care for the fish, or hire a tank maintenance company. You will have to train someone how to feed the fish as most maintenance places will not stop by daily to feed. Selling or keeping the fish is your call, obviously, and depends on if you think your parents will kill off all the fish (in which case it is wiser to sell the fish and save the money to buy more when you get back). Explore your options, talk to your parents, check with owners of local fish stores. You may be surprised how many people appreciate what you do for the country and are willing to help! I actually take care of a customer’s 100 gallon saltwater reef tank for $30 a month (basically my cost for gas) while he is overseas because his wife was terrified of killing it all. Normally I would charge about $100-$150 for the same service.

Susan asks…
HELP! I have two Platies with FISH BLOAT! (dropsy)?
I have a ten gallon freshwater fish tank with:
2 male, 1 female Silver Mollies & fry (about 40-50 fry, two generations combined),
1 male 1 female Guppy,
2 Neon Tetras (others have died off),
1 Plecostumus (I can’t spell that) Algae Eater,
and
1 male 1 female SICK Platies.
Yes, I know it’s packed! I DO NOT have a sick/hospital tank.
Here’s my main Question: I need to know what you would recomend to treat my two sick Platies. They have Dropsy or Fish Bloat and look pitiful! They seem lifeless an scared. I started using a product called Prima Fix.
On the cover it says:
All Natural Prima Fix
Antifungal Remedy for Freshwater and Saltwater Aquarium fish.
Rapidly Treats fungal infections on body and fins
Also treats internal and external bacteria infections.
Should I keep using this product, or get something specificly for Dropsy? What would u use?
HELP!
P.S. Keep in mind that my only outlets are Walmart, Meijers,
and a small petstore. Don’t recomend rare items!
I have cured Dropsy before! I really want to save my fish this time!
If I were to purchase a hospital tank, how many gallons should I get?
Seriously, WHAT MEDICINE WOULD YOU RECOMEND?????????
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Aquarium Lover answers:
Hey Becky, hang in there. Although, dropsy is one of the worst things to discover in your tank, there have been cures. I actually dug up as many articles/cases where people have cured Dropsy and how – I will attach the links.
But for starters, please remove the infected fish, put them in a bowl ( I call them nurseries).
Http://www.marquette.edu/courses/phys/buxtoni/puregold/disease/dropsy.html
http://badmanstropicalfish.com/articles/article24.html
http://www.pets-warehouse.com/marinefishdisease.htm
Also a little about the disease -:
Dropsy is not very contagious; however, if a fish is diagnosed with dropsy, it is important to remove it from the aquarium as soon as possible. If there are multiple fish, treat the afflicted fish in a specially established “sick tank” (Quarantine). Dropsy can spread from the ill fish, possibly causing stress among the other fish in the tank community. This extra stress may make the others vulnerable to dropsy or other forms of disease.
Treatment may consist of antibiotics targeting the causative agent. They work best in the very early stages of dropsy. A more hands-on approach is to raise the aquarium’s temperature a few degrees- slightly higher than usual. Adding Epsom salts to the water at (a rate of 20 mg/L)helps to encourage the fish to expel unnecessary damaging fluids.
Prevention-:
Maintaining water quality is always extremely important. It should always be checked first, because it is often the cause of disease in aquarium fish. Frequent water changes can work to prevent the spread of disease by “watering down” the concentration of disease agents, and by reducing stress on the tank occupants.
All tanks need a 10-25% water change on a weekly basis. The best method of changing water is siphoning the water from the bottom, removing debris and fecal matter from the gravel.
Always feed fish from reliable sources and use high quality food. Varying diet is also important.
SO hang in there, and let us know how it goes..
Take care..

Sandra asks…
Large Freshwater Aquarium Help Please?
Alright, so I have a 125 US gallon tank. I bought sm/med gravel for it. I’m curious what other users would put in the tank, fish and plant wise.(as long as they work well together) I like some of the rarer, oddball fish. I know i have to cycle it and all, i’m just trying to plan ahead. Help me out with some ideas? I also have a few questions about fish i’ve already considered, and how i should go about filtering the aquarium.
The Black Ghost Knife is one of my favorite fish. Is it safe to put with other fish? What kinds of fish? How big of a “ghost tube” should i get, if i buy a ghost knife?(assuming it will grow quite larger)
What are your recommendations as far as filtration? Where can I get cheaper, but still good quality, filters, skimmers and UV sterilizers?
If anybody suggests groups of fish and plants that work well together, please specify how many of each i can buy without overcrowding.
Thanks for the info so far. Maybe ill get a smaller tank for the knife. I need some websites or something that sells filters cheap though. And i’m looking for rarer, more colorful fish to work with.
Would half moon betas be okay in a tank that large with other fish?
Ah, thanks Eric, thats the kind of information i’m looking for. I like angelfish aswell. I want more of an oddball type thing, but i like variety and color in it too.
My younger brother has a golden colored fish that looks like a dragon goby. He is willing to give it to me so i can put it in my larger, more accommodating tank. Would that work? It doesnt seem agressive, it just lays there most of the time. its about 3 1/2 or 4 inches long
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Aquarium Lover answers:
The general rule is 1 inch per gallon for the maximum length of each fish. You want to be very generous with this. The ghost knife can grow up to 10 inches, but you don’t want to stock the entire tank with this. For shelter, Just get cheap pvc pipe (it grows in length to 10 inches). You would want to hide the pipe among lots of rocks, plants, wood, and substrate.
I am not too familiar with equipment prices, so I’m not the person to ask. I do have some suggestions for plants and animals. I usually like to create biotope tanks, so since this is from the amazon, i would stock it with other fish and plants from the amazon. I recommend the amazon sword plant, microsword, red rubin, but any amazonian plant will do (i recommend CO2).
The Black Ghost Knife fish is very peaceful, and will be compatible with any non aggressive fish. Since i think your going for an oddball tank, i’m not gonna suggest angelfish or rams. A lot of these are just types of fish with a couple of examples, since there are dozens and i can’t possibly name them all
Clown Knife
Plecos (such as the leopard or bristlenose)
Catfish (such as the shovelnose)
Black Arowana
Silver Arowana
Pike/Needlefish
Silver Dollar (but they eat vegetation)
Pacu, also known as vegetarian Piranha
I recommend you check these fish out and check for other types of catfish and plecos. There are just so many, i was surprised they could be so large and colorful.
If i had to make a tank i would have a group of either pacus or silver dollars and knife fish, plecos, and catfish on the substrate.
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