Hello Everyone,
Thanks for the info so far. I apologize for being rude, I did not realise the hard/high problem was a language issue.
I think everyone who has suggested swimblatter as the root of the funny fish behavior is responding to my original post as opposed the the other person who had similar problems post, but if everyone could clearify who thier comments are meant to include that would be really helpful.
I checked this site's article files (both before and after making this thread) and didn't find anything on swimblatter ??? Is it a disease, or just a "problem"? I have heard people mention it before, and even suspected it could be going on here, but I know very little about it.
1. Is it bacterial, parasite, or viral in nature? or Is it just an accidental damage thing?
2. Any other info on treatments and background or a pointer to where such can be found would be great.
3. Again, I am not just asking "Please help, how do I save my guppy" (I would like my guppy to live, but) what I am really asking is how contagious and threating to my expensive fish that are arriving soon is it (wheather it is swimblatter issue or other problem)?
and should I risk harming or killing the exensive fish with enduring a cycle over exposing them to whatever this may be?
BTW I may *have* overfed them recently. I was acctually trying to get food in to the Cory (I ultimatly moved him out of there). THe guppies were so voraciuos that they wolfed down ALL the frozen brime (I am telling you, not one hit the bottom), plus some freeze dried bloodworms. So finnally, I droped a sinking waffer for the Cory and they went after it too, chasing the shyer cory away. I finally attmepted to distract them with a bit of freeze dried bloodworms until he could get a few bites of waffer.
Hah! I love my Corries.. they are Sooo cute and funny, but I am thinking that they are really just ornamental fish (ie they stop being part of the work crew and start just being part of the show-offs) when they live with guppies.
