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View Full Version : Weird thing on my fish



mokmu
04-25-2003, 5:48 AM
I was checking my fish this evening and saw this small blood clot-like, "amoeba-looking" thing stuck to my L260's pl*co pectoral fin. I lifted the fish to check and found a smaller one on its belly, also near the first one. I tried touching it and it felt slime-y. Never seen one before. I figure it to be a parasite.

Has anyone seen one of these? I pryed both off my 260's body and both of them came loose after some time. I immediately set off to burn the suckers using matches. Funny the way these things popped (much like burning ticks). What is it? Can others show up and infect or infest the other fish? What should I do?

Parameters (0 ammonia, 0 nitrites, 0-10 ppm nitrates) are fine except that it has been pretty hot lately. Sometimes the tanks hit 33-34 degrees in the afternoons and early evenings. Gravel cleanings and water changes of 30-50% are done every other day and media are cleaned once a week. I transferred new fish from quarantine recently but both did not exhibit these weird stuff. Think it was the new fish? (SARS?! heh3x. I don't think so). Thanks for the replies.

OrionGirl
04-25-2003, 8:29 AM
Sounds like a parasite of some kind--and I wouldn't bet that you've removed them completely. I would look into a medicated food for parasites, soak your food in garlic, and really watch your fish. Sorry I can't provide anything specific for identification!

mokmu
04-27-2003, 7:36 AM
Someone said that the weird thing may have been fish mites. Has anyone ever heard of these?

Cearbhaill
04-27-2003, 8:08 AM
If you find another, don't destroy it. At the very least try and get a good photo- better yet preserve it for positive ID.

wetmanNY
04-27-2003, 10:56 AM
Fishlice, maybe? Argulus. Google it.

beviking
04-27-2003, 11:20 AM
Leech? Trematode? Let me throw another dart at the board and see what else I hit:rolleyes: . Use external parasites of fish as key words for your search. Let us know what you find out...that is what you determine your parasite to be.