oama
Premium Member
Steve
Great Job on this article!
One other thing about IDing Amyloo. If you take a flashlight and shine it down onto the fish while looking through the glass of the tank, it will highlight the "sheen". If one does this to their fish often, the will become familiar with what looks normal, and be able to tell that something is very different when the "sheen" appears.
Also, some other behavioral clues... Head orientated into the current. Fish become distant to each other. As if they are keeping as far away as possible from another fish so that they has as much O2 ladden water as they can get. This happens both vertically and horizontally w/in the tank. Very classic sign in an aquaculture situation. All fish pointed in the same direction and equaly spaced through out the tank.
You mentioned the dipping method for a cure as cited in Montgomery-Brock et al, 2001. Though you and many others shudder at this, I have used something similiar. We use to call it the "Dip and Run" Method. Works great with trematodes. Though I have not used it for Amyloo, I do not see that it would not work. Of course, at the time, I was at a research facility, and had dozens of tanks availible to do this method. Most hobbists do not have that capibility.
I plan on trying to get a video of the FW dip test to post here on RC. So that people can see the "dust devil" form and the color/size of it. Just gotta have a camera at the time I see Amyloo again.
Keep up the Great Work.
Douglas, aka Oama
Great Job on this article!
One other thing about IDing Amyloo. If you take a flashlight and shine it down onto the fish while looking through the glass of the tank, it will highlight the "sheen". If one does this to their fish often, the will become familiar with what looks normal, and be able to tell that something is very different when the "sheen" appears.
Also, some other behavioral clues... Head orientated into the current. Fish become distant to each other. As if they are keeping as far away as possible from another fish so that they has as much O2 ladden water as they can get. This happens both vertically and horizontally w/in the tank. Very classic sign in an aquaculture situation. All fish pointed in the same direction and equaly spaced through out the tank.
You mentioned the dipping method for a cure as cited in Montgomery-Brock et al, 2001. Though you and many others shudder at this, I have used something similiar. We use to call it the "Dip and Run" Method. Works great with trematodes. Though I have not used it for Amyloo, I do not see that it would not work. Of course, at the time, I was at a research facility, and had dozens of tanks availible to do this method. Most hobbists do not have that capibility.
I plan on trying to get a video of the FW dip test to post here on RC. So that people can see the "dust devil" form and the color/size of it. Just gotta have a camera at the time I see Amyloo again.
Keep up the Great Work.
Douglas, aka Oama