I believe I shot these Sunday AM.
It is now Monday AM, and honestly, things are improving. The appetite of the Lightning Maroon remains strong, which I’ve used to ensure that it continues to feed on the Dr. G’s antibacterial formula. I should preface this by saying that the Lightning Maroon has always been a timid feeder, so food generally has to flow right by its face / into its territory for it to feed. So I’m definitely not following the Dr. G. feeding protocol (as much as they can eat in one minute, every other day).
In talking with the man behind Dr. G’s feeds, the feeds are set up to roughly deliver a “minimum effective dose”. In the case of the anti-parasite Dr. G. formulation (which is laced with Chloroquin Posphate), you can quadruple the feeding regime (twice per day vs. once every other day) and have no ill-effects on the fish (although the Dr. doesn’t recommend that). Knowing how most every antibiotic is normally delivered, it honestly doesn’t make sense to dose every-other day via feed, so I’m going to feed the food once per day to maintain antibiotic levels. It’s worth mentioning that the active ingredients in the Dr. G formula are Kanamycin and Metronidozole.
All in all, this means that I have no less than 4 antibiotics running around. I’ve been talking with two fish vets who I’ll refrain from naming for the time being. One has of course, expressed concern over the “shotgun” approach, understandably so. For me, I’m thinking that the repeat of the Maracyn & Maracyn II are probably of little efficacy, but they were what I had on hand to immediately address the problem. Still, I am more likely to credit the Dr. G’s as the moment, if only because positive progress only started being made once it was introduced to the regime starting on Saturday evening. Still, it could be the other medications.
The main goal here is twofold – #1. effectively cure this latest round of garbage. #2. figure out WHY it’s happening soas to prevent it. As of Monday AM, the eye looks better (less white stuff), so maybe we will get through this latest bout again. But I’m fully wondering what the heck is causing the fish to break down repeatedly. Mechanical damage? Food?
Or could we even be looking at an old-age, immuno-compromized fish? Afterall, they DON’T live forever, they are NOT immortal. Could it simply be that the Lightning Maroon is an older fish, nearing it’s time, and all my drastic measures are simply staving off the inevitable? I hope not.
Despite all this, the male is cleaning the tile like crazy.
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