Rescued discus

Edj05

The Kraken
Nov 29, 2008
98
0
6
New Jersey
Yeah, I'm not big on rescues of any sort, but this one just really worked out. I stopped at an lfs, which I rarely go to anymore, and saw they had (3) 4" discus for sale. One had ich, another looked like it was surviving, and the third looked pretty near death. The tank next to them had a smaller discus, maybe 3", that was already dead.

So I called the one employee over and told him that the one 4" discus was going to end up like the 3", but I would take it & try to help it recover if possible. But I also told him I wasn't going to pay for a fish that had a better chance of dying than living. To my surprise, the guy said I could take it home if I wanted, since his boss actually told him earlier to remove it from the tank.

Alright, so now I have this really banged up discus. It appears fine, minus the fact that it is lethargic, kind of floats rather than swims (if you know what I mean?..), and is obviously under extreme stress - it's entirely brown with the even darker vertical stripes... not sure on what strain it's suppose to be, but the tank listed red scribble & snakeskin.

If anyone has any recommendations on how to help this discus recover, if it's even possible, I would appreciate it.

The store tank looked to be about 50g, had the light on, and one relatively large floating plant, and a single large piece of driftwood. Unfortunately, the best I have for the discus is a 10g quarantine that I can set up with the help of my already established tanks. I am going to take a Whisper Power filter (10-20 gallons) from a tank that is using two, and put it in alonge with a spare tank heater.

The store employee told me they were using RO for water changes, to try and keep the pH between 6.8 and 7. My pH is neutral.. I am going to throw in whatever plants I can, keep the tank light off... I guess I'll even add some gravel.

If it manages to take food, I have a multitude of flake foods, frozen bloodworms, and some fresh brine shrimp.


Sorry for the long post, and thanks in advance...
 
keep the tank Warm upper 80's (88-90) you can add salt to the tank if you suspect ich. the normal course for Discus is salt and warm water.. add an airstone to help keep the O2 level up as warm water tends to hold less O2.
no lights on only ambient.

the salt and warm water will make it difficult for live plants.
 
Okay. I only have basic plants like bronze crypts, java moss, & java fern. I don't have an air stone/pump though.
 
keep the tank Warm upper 80's (88-90) you can add salt to the tank if you suspect ich. the normal course for Discus is salt and warm water.. add an airstone to help keep the O2 level up as warm water tends to hold less O2.
no lights on only ambient.

the salt and warm water will make it difficult for live plants.

Would a supply of vitamins and/or protein be smart? garlic..?


with somehitng like ich would you really just want to QT it in like maybe a rubbermaid?
 
I see no visisble signs of ich on the discus, but another one in the tank had it.
 
SOP for discus is salt and warm water..
i would make sure the water is kept pristine tho.

i am not a big fan of garlic.but others like it.

is the discus feeding well?

if it is you can try Garlic but again.. clean warm water and good food to start. keep lights low and let the fish rest.(don't disturb it much)

how does it look? emaciated? under fed?
a 10 g for s single discus is fine for treating.
 
It's hard to say... it looks thin, but I don't think I would call it emaciated. Once it is in the quarantine tank, I will take a couple of pictures if I can. Not sure about the eating - should I try brine shrimp before frozen bloodworms? Or is there something else? I mostly have flake food aside from that.
 
It's hard to say... it looks thin, but I don't think I would call it emaciated. Once it is in the quarantine tank, I will take a couple of pictures if I can. Not sure about the eating - should I try brine shrimp before frozen bloodworms? Or is there something else? I mostly have flake food aside from that.
try a little of all...

just need to get some nutrients in him and trace of garlic helps fight illness. Not 100% sure frozen food is good
 
If the discus hasn't been fed well, frozen bloodworms (preferably Hikari brand) is your best bet. It is definitely an all time favorite food, preferred over flakes hands down.
 
AquariaCentral.com