Fish fat/bloated with white stringy poo

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librarygirl

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I already know this isn't a good sign, but thought I'd post here anyway since I have zero experience with fish illness. Sorry for the long post, just want to include as much info as I can.

So after a marathon 3 month fishless cycle, I finally introduced new fish last week. First I received 12 Celestial Pearl Danio (CPD) from a breeder. All fish arrived alive and I drip acclimated them to the tank. Tank temp is kept at 75-76 Fahrenheit. Later that day I noticed one fish that looked like it had something white on its side; it looked cottony at first, but then started to look more like mucous. After a couple of days observing him, he started to swim in jerky movements. I removed him from the tank and put him in a 5.5 gal QT tank with Primafix and aquarium salt. After a few hours he sunk to the bottom and started to roll. He then started swimming again but he was clearly struggling then sank back to the bottom. After three times of this, the third time he sunk down and died. :( This was last Sunday. I'm not sure if it's related to what's happening now but thought I'd mention it.

One day after introducing the CPDs, I added 5 Panda Corys and 2 horned nerite snails.

Last night I noticed another CPD who looked fatter than the rest. This fish came this way, as I noticed it when I received them, but figured she was older/larger than the rest or perhaps just fatter. So last night I noticed her pooing a longish thin stringy white thing with a blackish band on the bottom. I've been feeding them various things to see what they like; the breeder sent some food samples with them (sticks, wafers, and some very small pellets; none of the foods are white). I also have NLS Community Micro Pellets and Hikari Algae wafers. I have frozen food that I haven't fed them yet.

I observed the fish last night more and she pooed again, seems to be pooing quite a lot and each time it's a thin, white string. She is also very large, bloated maybe, and looks like she's struggling to swim a bit, as if it's difficult to keep herself from floating down. I also caught her swimming by the outtake of the HOB filter; at first I thought she was exercising but now I'm not so sure.

Last night I thawed and de-shelled a frozen pea and put it into the tank. All of the fish ate it except for her. I kept it in overnight, I'm not sure whether she ate it at all but when I watched her she did not seem interested in the food at all.

This morning I caught her pooing white again (I also caught a few other CPDs spawning, but that's another topic :D). She also looks like there's something sticking out from her underbelly, I can't tell if it's a scale or anything to be concerned about, but it's there.

So what do I do? Should I keep monitoring her? Should I treat the whole tak and if so with what? If it's a parasite or bacterial I'm guessing it's inside the whole tank now and the whole tank would need to be treated. But with the CPDs being so small I'm concerned about overmedicating them. I also need a med that's safe for the Corys and snails. And I'm very concerned about putting anything in the tank that's going to kill all the beneficial bacteria that took me months to grow. :bb:

Please help..... I'm a week into fishkeeping and so far it isn't going well. :bawl:

Specifics on my tank if it helps:
20 gallon tall
Driftwood piece, fake plants
Black Caribsea Sand for substrate
Filters: AquaClear 20 HOB and internal Fluval U2
Temperature: 75-76 Fahrenheit
Ammonia: 0
Nitrite: 0
Nitrate:<5
I do a 5 gal water change twice per week

Thanks again.
 
If you want to try a parasite medication, and we are just guessing here, the Jungle Parasite Clear is economical, treats a variety of parasitic ailments, and is effective in my experience. It comes in fizz tablets, and is easy to use.
 
If you want to try a parasite medication, and we are just guessing here, the Jungle Parasite Clear is economical, treats a variety of parasitic ailments, and is effective in my experience. It comes in fizz tablets, and is easy to use.

Thank you! I'm reading some great reviews on this medication and they also have a medicated food formula.

Should I QT and treat the one infected fish that I saw or treat the whole tank? I'm concerned for the Corys and particularly the snails in the tank as I read the Jungle med isn't safe for inverts.
 
abrahamavelar said:
Also you added too many fish at once and u might get a miny cycle ive done that mistake

It was a fishes cycle with pure ammonia...no problem there.

My vote (which you know) is to isolate the fish in QT, observe both him and the main tank, treat the ill fish if you believe you know what you're treating for, and if any similar issues arise in the DT...then it's time to treat the entire tank. I'm simply not a fan of dosing the display tank with medicine if you don't know exactly what the issue is and there is a quarantine available.
 
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