Sourced from http://freshaquarium.about.com/cs/disease/p/velvet.htm.Velvet/Oödinium is a dinoflagellate, a creature classified by some as a protozoan and by others as algae because it contains Chlorophyll. Oödinium doesn't care how it's classified; it's an equal opportunity parasite that strikes fresh and saltwater fish.Not sure what velvet is. If I saw him I would assume he had really bad ick. Either way that would be a sketchy buy.
Thanx bro! I'm sorry for your loss too especially considering how much size your Rhom put on him before he died, must've been a impressive looking specimen. As for recouping some money it's gonna be a no go. Figures I can find every receipt from Petland except that one. I've got receipts from 3 months back but can't find the one from 2 days ago, just my luck. It really does hurt when you try your best to keep everything optimal for them. Still I did make a mistake I didn't quarantine him. I had a Hoogaboomorum come down with ick and he was being treated in my quarantine tank. I should've waited till he was better and then quarantined the Pleco. Who knows maybe I would've noticed it faster in quarantine.My black rhom passed away yesterday too, had him almost 2 months and he was. 5" when I got him and near 1.5" when he passed, he ate my sponge filter...... so i feel ur pain, I've been kicking my self the past 24 hours. I kept every element perfect (water food temp etc) so to lose a fish to something like that hurts.
But hey I already bought a new one from my dealer and he's only 2-3 weeks old so with good comes bad, hang in there and believe me it sucks more when u succesfully fatten them up for 2 months and then they randomly die!
Id think u could recop some $$ back?
#1 S. Vettel
It's true the salt doesn't do anything to kill the parasite, but I thought it still helps with gill function doesn't it?I just dealt with velvet not even a month ago, and I did a lot of research on the parasite, and that's one of the dangers or it, people think its Ick so they treat for it, high temps and salt. However neither of these has an effect on velvet, just commercial meds/copper. temp makes things worse and salt doesn't do anything.
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There are a lot of commercial products you can pick up from your LFS, just be careful over dosing with Copper can kill fish faster than the Velvet. Best way to tell if it's Velvet is to turn off the lights in your room and the tank and when you shine a flashlight on the fish if you get a golden reflection(concentrate on the gills) it's Velvet. If not then it's probably ick which is pretty easy to cure.My 8 inch bright eyed royal has the exact same white bumps on him, i though it was just how the skin was on them. How should i treat it, if it is a disease?
If you look closely on this one you can see the white spots, thats what mine looks like.
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Your not the only one bro! I can tell you this much I'm going to be a whole lot more careful next time and give everything in a LFS tank a good looking over before buying as well as quarantining the fish first.I've seen a number of royal pleco's and other ones in my LFS' and a few of them looked velvety. I had just assumed that was by design.
Thanx bro! I got to ask though are you saying those U.V. filters can eliminate the risk of Velvet cause if you are I'll run out and buy another one. I had one but thought it was predominately to stop algae. Then again as the article I read said Velvet is tentatively classified as algae by some.If you have it now this way is too late, but this is why on all my tanks I run a U.V on them. Been down that road years ago. If I remember right copper safe is a effective way of treating velvet. It will be rough on some of your fish and kill almost all inverts so read instructions carefully.
Thanx J! I appreciate it.I'm sorry for your loss.
Thanx bro, it does totally suck plus I hate treating my tank it seems like time crawls when your treating your tank.That sucks...sorry for your loss! I hated when I lose a fish...I'm sure so does everybody else!