Fins look a bit torn. Check water parameters. Could it be possible another fish ripped the mouth off. With some cichlids I know they can lip lock and damage their mouths but I don’t think tetras show this kind of behavior so I’m not sure.Hi everyone,
Just out of curiosity, I noticed one of my congo tetras is having such condition. His mouth seems to have disappeared.
Other fishes are fine.
I have since quarantined him in an isolation tank.
He seems to be doing fine.
Anyone has any idea what might have happened to his mouth?
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Fins look a bit torn. Check water parameters. Could it be possible another fish ripped the mouth off. With some cichlids I know they can lip lock and damage their mouths but I don’t think tetras show this kind of behavior so I’m not sure.
Is there any way to prevent it or to cure it?IMO, it's likely the pictured Congo Tetra survived a bout of Mouth Rot, a bacterial infection.
The bacteria destroys mouth tissue. It will not regenerate.
The Congo Tetra's ability to eat will be impaired, but he should be able to survive.
ThanksPrevention is always the best medicine. Selecting healthy fish, providing a healthy environment & quality nutrition goes a long way towards nullifying disease.
Even so, occasionally disease will occur.
Curing bacterial infections is difficult and in some cases nearly impossible. There are plenty of commercial antibiotics available, although some countries are banning them.
I doubt your situation is a contagious one. At this point the Congo Tetra does not need to be medicated.
Honestly, I have no idea why the temperature is very high. I have been trying to bring it down but it wouldn't work.Why your temperature is so high?
None of your fish needs 30 C.
The mollys are the only one who prefer it a bit warmer water around 26-28 C. All the other will do way better at lower temperatures. 23-24 C is enough for them and will increase their live spawn a lot.