LUNGFISH ILL-Museum of Natural History- please help, experts!

Museum Fish Aquarium

Feeder Fish
Nov 9, 2017
4
0
1
30
NYC
Hello.. I am a research assistant in the ichthyology dept at the American Museum of Natural History in NYC. We have an aquarium behind the scenes, and we have 2 african lungfish, each in identical tanks. We have had them for years and there have been no problems until now. One lungfish is perfectly normal. The other got a slightly cloudy tank two weeks ago and at the same time began to hide behind a long rock structure in the tank. We changed the filter to a more heavy duty one which helped the water clarity, but upon inspecting the fish there seems to be nothing outwardly wrong. It may have a tiny white stripe near its cheek, and we thought it may be fungus. We have been dosing it with Melafix. This is the second (and final) week of dosage. The fish seems to be scared and hides deeper into its crevice when I approach the tank (behavior never observed before two weeks ago) and does not move at all besides this. I have been putting food near it 2x a week and it does eat the food, as the next day it is always gone. The lungfish tank had been slightly cold, so we also put in a new heater.

Last night, I went in to the aquarium late, so the lights had automatically shut off for the day. The fish was swimming around the tank! But as soon as I approached and had my phone light in my hands, it hid again and did not come out save to stick its head near a small squirt of bloodworms i had given it. This is the most I have seen it move in two weeks.

We are concerned about the fish and are hoping the Melafix is working, but I'm not sure if it has been moving every night which would mean no significant change. It seems to be light sensitive, and hid completely when I turned lights on.

My boss does not know about this behavior in lungfishes and I am a research assistant doing my best to maintain the aquarium. We are desperate to help it, or at least to know why it may be acting like this. As stated before, no wounds, no color changes, nothing outwardly different about this lungfish.

If anyone can help in ANY way we would seriously appreciate it. We have tried to find experts to no avail and this post is my best attempt at finding help. I don't want it to be miserable, and I don't want it to be euthanized eventually if this behavior is something other than sickness.

Thank you all so much and I hope to hear back soon.

PS. the lungfish is about 2 feet long.
 

Cowturtle

Peacock Bass
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May 2, 2016
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But upon inspecting the fish there seems to be nothing outwardly wrong. It may have a tiny white stripe near its cheek, and we thought it may be fungus.
Sounds like it might be lateral line erosion. What are you feeding? Lungfish need algae or vegetables in their diet or the erosion will develop. Big water changes will help as well.
 
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dogofwar

Potamotrygon
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Jan 3, 2006
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They're pretty tough fish. Sounds like you might have had an ammonia spike and cool water that stressed him out. Best thing to do is just keep the water extra clean and warm for awhile. I'd do 30-40% water changes a couple of times per week for a couple of weeks. Keep the lights off until he gets back to normal...
 
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TheLastKon

Plecostomus
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Sep 18, 2015
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If you don’t mind me asking what kind of African lungfish do you have? Any pictures or videos of what’s concerning?

From my experience during medication periods the fish tend to be more scared and jumpy. Then after the meds have been cleared out they’ll go back to normal behavior.
 

Museum Fish Aquarium

Feeder Fish
Nov 9, 2017
4
0
1
30
NYC
Sounds like it might be lateral line erosion. What are you feeding? Lungfish need algae or vegetables in their diet or the erosion will develop. Big water changes will help as well.
thank you so much! we have started giving algae wafers and are bringing in veggies. there seems to be tiny holes that look like pores on our other as well, could this be lateral line erosion? having trouble finding any examples on lungfish.


HOWEVER thank you to all the replies! this morning our fish started swimming around freely in the light for the first time! it has much more energy and seems to be its old self. thank you so much for the feedback. we also did a large water change and i think the combo has helped.
 

Cowturtle

Peacock Bass
MFK Member
May 2, 2016
320
698
115
Cincinnati
thank you so much! we have started giving algae wafers and are bringing in veggies. there seems to be tiny holes that look like pores on our other as well, could this be lateral line erosion? having trouble finding any examples on lungfish.
Small pores are completely normal all lungfish have them. The pores are called ampullae of lorenzini sharks and rays also have them to sense electrical currents in their prey.
 
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