Ailments and Enemies of Goldfish

   At the very beginning of this discussion I want to say that none of the diseases or parasites which sometimes plague goldfish affect human beings. Hygienic precautions should be taken by anyone handling sick goldfish, but only against transferring trouble from one fish to another. There are, indeed, many types of misfortune which can befall goldfish, but take heart, for all of these things are not going to happen to your goldfish. In fact, if you keep a pool or an aquarium for the next fifty years, you probably won't run into more than a very small percentage of them.

   As in any health program, prevention is far more effective than remedial treatment. Here are a few measures which will keep the health of your pool or aquarium at the highest possible level.

To Keep Goldfish Healthy

   1. Observe at all times the advice given as to capacity of container, temperature of water, and feeding of fish.

   2. Before introducing new aquatic plants, sterilize them as outlined in Chapter 18.

   3. Before adding new goldfish to pool or aquarium, regardless of where you bought them, sterilize them, too, for an hour or two in a potassium permanganate solution, 1/8 grain per gallon of water. Like other dealers, I sell a prepared fish dip, which is also an effective sterilizing agent.

   4. Watch for drooping dorsal fins (on fish which normally hold them stiff), for sluggishness, congested fins, and excrement containing slime or bubbles. Isolate ailing fish immediately and treat according to symptoms.

   5. Also sterilize dip-nets and containers used for treating fish with the potassium permanganate solution mentioned above.

SICK BAY

   Ailing fish removed for treatment should be kept in a broad, shallow receptacle in only 2 to 3 inches of water. A dishpan makes an ex- cellent sick bay, and so does a used washtub or partially filled goldfish bowl. Have the water in the treatment receptacle of the same temperature, as closely as you can judge, as that in which the fish have been living. Keep ailing fish out of strong light, and suspend feeding unless otherwise specified, while they are being treated.

GREEN WATER TREATMENT

   Any tired, sluggish fish seem to revive immediately upon transfer to different water. This water, if green, is all the more beneficial. A good provision to make for treatment is a spare aquarium planted with a few oxygenating plants and kept ready for use. Otherwise, obtain green water from your own or from a neighbor's pool, or from a stream where fish are known to live.



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