Jardini barbels.

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo

Rare_Cichlids

Feeder Fish
MFK Member
Mar 16, 2007
922
0
0
.
i got a jardini a week ago, and when i got him he had great and long barbels, but now they are gone!!!!! the only tankmate he has is a cobalt blue zebra male cichlid and a pleco which do not bother him. will they grow back??? the barbels look like they have been scrubbed off!! maybe it happened by rubbing on the acrylic or on the sylica sand, or on the driftwood????

thanks
 
Rare_Cichlids;1126896; said:
i got a jardini a week ago, and when i got him he had great and long barbels, but now they are gone!!!!! the only tankmate he has is a cobalt blue zebra male cichlid and a pleco which do not bother him. will they grow back??? the barbels look like they have been scrubbed off!! maybe it happened by rubbing on the acrylic or on the sylica sand, or on the driftwood????

thanks


just removed the cobalt blue zebra so he is alno now in the tank w/ the pleco. any ideas if the barbels will grow back???
 
here are some articles i found from arofanatics hope this one helps!!!


Arowanas are by nature great leapers and often sustain injuries. Common injuries include:

1) Scraped skin (gill plates, head)
2) Dropped scales
3) Torn/broken finnages & tail
4) Broken barbels

Healing times vary greatly according to age, seriousness of injury and also the health of the fish. Here are some of the complete recover times I noticed. Feel free to comment as these are observations and it may vary.


1) Scrapped skin - usually seen on the gill plates due to decorations within the tank like driftwood or powerheads. Very often a thin layer of skin is srapped off exposing a white undersurface.

Healing time: aprx. 1 weeks - 1 month for various ages.
(If the fish is of substaintial age and has coloration on it's gills, to retain it's coloration may take a lot longer, e.g. 2 months or more)


2) Dropped scales - caused by heavy impact knocks of its body against a surface, usually when the fish is in a state of panic. The fish may be reacting strongly to sudden changes of water parameters or surroundings and swims rapidly knocking on decorations or in more serious cases, it leaps out of the water surface and knocks itself on to the tank hood. This is usually accompanied by aftershock restlessness of the fish at the bottom of the tank.

Healing times:
Young fish (6-10 inches): aprx. 1.5 to 2 months.
Mid-size (11-16 inches): aprx. 2-3 months.
Mid to Adult (> 16 inches): aprx. 3-6 months.
(These figures include regaining of coloration. For adult fishes, sometimes they never really get back the original density of color. In some cases, it may take more than a year)


3.1) Frayed finnages/tail - May be disease-induced (fin rot) or due to biting by tank mates. When the problem is tackled, the healing can be quite fast.

Healing times: (If the fin rays are intact and only the thin membrane between the rays are torn. If the fin rays had eroded or are broken, refer to broken finnages below)

Young fish: 3 days to 1 week
Medium: 1 week-2 weeks
Adult: 1 week to 3 weeks


3.2) Broken finnages/tail - Usually caused by more serious injuries like heavy knocks or bad fights. In extreme cases, the fish leaps out of the tank and lands on the floor and breaks its finnages while struggling. More common problem in asian golden varieties like crossback. Eroded fin rays may be caused by severe cases of fin rot.

Healing times:
Young fish: 0.5-2 months
Mid-size fish: 1-3 months
Adult fish: 1-6 months
(depending on how much of the tail is broken/eroded off. the time range above represents the extremes, 10% to 90% of the tail lost)

*For pectorial finnages (esp adults), if broken, the full recovery times are on the extreme end. Sometimes, they never grow back fully leaving one pectorial fin crooked and slightly shorter.


4) Broken barbels - Causes are quite similiar to both broken finnages and broken scales - caused by physical impact. It can be induced at the tip, mid or extreme cases, at the root/mouth tip. When it occurs at the root/mouth, it can sometimes lead to permanent loss of barbel(s).

Healing times:
Young fish: 1-3 months
Mid-size fish: 1.5-2 months
Adult fish: 2-3 months

*Barbels may not grow perfectly straight and may cross over to the next barbel. It is recommended by some to make the tank significantly darker so that the arowana relies more heavily on it's barbels as sensors and thus possibly a straighter growth.


i) Improving healing rates:
The most important thing is preventing infection of the problem area or wound in bad cases. Although it is not very common for such to occur, keeping the water clean is important. High amounts of salt is not necessary. Use it moderately at the right dosages, e.g. 0.5%.

I have heard this many times, but have yet to prove it. Some owners reported singnificantly improved healing speeds when the temperature of the water in the tank is increased (30 DegC). It may be due to an increased metabolism that the body of the fish repairs itself more quickly and also tends to eat more.
 
thanks. i will concider adding salt and getting a black backround and switching the sand form white to black. will that help a bit?? also by switching the sand from white to black and getting a black backround will it make him darker in color???



thanks
 
it happend to my aro before but it grew back after sometime so don't worry after sometime you'll see it growing back.
 
It can take a long time of the barbels are gone from the base. My RTg had lost its barbels completely and now after a couple of months, yesterday i finally saw a mini barbel come out on one side. I have good hope they will both grow back in time but i think it will take months and months.
 
well i do see the barbels but they are small!!! before they snapped off they were about 1.5cm, but now i see some 2mm long barbels coming out.

thanks guys i guess they will grow back slowly. :)
 
MonsterFishKeepers.com