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I recently rescued a black moor who lost its eye (thanks to a petstore overcrowding the tank) and I would like to make its life as comfortable as possible. Any suggestions??

2007-05-05 14:49:02 · 4 answers · asked by Leah B 1 in Pets Fish

When I complained to the manager about the overcrowding, he got so sick of hearing from me he just gave me the fish. I didn't have to pay for him

2007-05-05 15:54:56 · update #1

4 answers

I will agree with keeping it away from other fish for now. You need it in a stable, quite environment until it can adjust and before it needs to compete for food. Clean water will be essential to preventing infections and fungus problems as the eye socket heals, I would suggest heavy filtration and frequent water changes. I would also recommend you not add any additives or cure alls to the tank as they would probably cause more hassle that aid at this point. A very vitamin rich and varied diet will also be important to the fish as it heals and recovers, so provide plenty of vegetables and frozen foods in it's diet.

MM

2007-05-05 15:00:14 · answer #1 · answered by magicman116 7 · 1 0

All you desire is salt. A salt remedy can kill off the ich, and goldfish easily desire a touch salt of their water. Use aquarium salt in case you could, or you should apply a organic salt that has no iodine or addatives. Use about 1tbsp per gallon, yet slowly upload it in over the technique an afternoon or 2 so as now to not pressure the fish. Have the water like this for 10 days or untill 3 days in spite of each and every thing seen signs and indicators of ich have disappeared, then do a 40-50% water replace. If he shouldn't have ich, and has a fungus or something rather this remedy is seen a remedy-all and could nonetheless paintings.

2016-12-05 10:08:01 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No sharp decor in the tank as it cannot risk damage to the other eye. Moors need good filtration and a minimum 10 gallon tank for one. Also, as it has a rounder body, make sure to thaw a couple of frozen peas for him twice a week and remove the skin. This will help with swim bladder problems that many fancy goldfish have.
Better yet, put him in a 20 gallon and get another slightly smaller than himself fancy goldfish from Group 2 (oranda, red cap oranda, ryukin). They actually like to have the company :)

2007-05-05 14:53:13 · answer #3 · answered by Barb R 5 · 1 0

Keep it safe from other fish for now, give it a well-aerated tank free from anything, feed it up, get the right balance in the water, then maybe add a friend or mate for it.

2007-05-05 14:52:03 · answer #4 · answered by Unicornrider 7 · 0 0

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