Did you know when cane toads were introduced to Australia?

on this day in 1935, cane toads were introduced into Queensland in order to control the cane beetle that were wreaking havoc in the sugar cane plantations. The toads proved ineffective as a biological control method against the cane beetle. They have instead, become a real pest to the environment, spreading across state borders and a real danger to your pets if they try to eat these critters.

In the aquarium industry, we need to be more responsible than to release non-native fishes into the environment.

What to do if food is accidentally tipped into your aquarium?

The lid fell off, you sneezed or your child tipped the lot in? The food will need to be removed as soon as possible because uneaten food will pollute the tank. Use a fine net to retrieve the food and then with a gravel siphon, vacuum it up off the bottom. Do not feed the fishes for the next 1-2 days and in addition to your weekly water tests, monitor the ammonia and nitrite levels daily for the next week or so to see if there is indication of any pending adverse consequences.

Action against improper use of chemicals

Re-post from AVA UEP SIG:

From: Brendan Carmel
Date: 19 June 2011 14:21:33 AWST
To: UnusualExoticPets@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [UnusualExoticPets] Pesticide usage
Reply-To: UnusualExoticPets@yahoogroups.com

For those of you who fortunate to be present when Matt Landos presented at
the AVA conference in Adelaide, you would have heard about the concerns with
pesticides and dangers with inappropriate usage/agents and their effects on
animal (and human health). It was riveting stuff, very thought provoking,
and depressing!

There is a petition supported by the WWF regarding pesticide usage (and
abuse) in Australia. I urge all members to consider supporting this. The aim
is to promote proper scientific based decisions about usage of such
products:

http://wwf.org.au/act/takeaction/Australian-pesticide-laws-must-be-fixed

Brendan

Review The Fish Vet

If you would like to give me a review, please click on the following link: http://www.aussieweb.com.au/business/review-listing.aspx?id=2304337

Tropical fishes in winter

A quick reminder to check your thermometer is in working order. It might be useful to have at least two thermometers in each tank so that you can check them against each other. Better still, have different types.

Tap water and rain water collected will bd much cooler than your tropical tank at gjis tine of the year. More frequent, smaller water changes is one method to reduce temperature stress to your tropical fishes.

Two-headed fish: Chemicals suspected to be involved

One of our fellow fish vets (from Future Fisheries Veterinary Consultancy) is batting for accountability and a more responsible use of agrichemicals since finding evidence to support their detrimental effects on neighbouring farmed fishes (golden perch, silver perch, mullet, bass and saratoga). The aforementioned fish farm had been in operation for 20 years without incident and 5 years ago, has become bordered on 3 sides by a Macadamia plantation. The evidence suggests that elevated mortality rates (up to 100%) and increased incidence of deformities (from <10% to >25%) are a consequence of air and water contamination from spray-drift during the use of common agrichemicals.

Positive residue tests indicating off-site movement of pesticides onto the fish hatchery, and into its ponds and tanks and throughout the local river system (Noosa River). This included detections of carbendazim, trichlorfon, nonylphenol, octylphenol, bisphenol A, methoxyfenozide and urea at the hatchery. In the NoosaRiver carbendazim, endosulfan sulphate, atrazine, metalochlor, galaxolide and TCPP were detected in passive samplers.

Temporal epidemiological association between many acute mortality events and reported spraying activity. Weather reports corresponding to the times of chemical application on the plantation favoured spray drift (low humidity and high temperatures).

The syndromes recorded include mortality of adult fish in ponds; mortality of larvae in ponds; mortality of larvae and fingerlings in tanks; malformation of embryos and larvae in tanks (including absence of eyes, body length shortening, axial duplication (two heads) and triplication (three tails); growth impediments in fingerlings; and neurological dysfunction in larvae.

Dr Landos from Future Fisheries Veterinary Consultancy remains very concerned that the observed embryonic and larval mortality and malformation syndromes at the fish hatchery, may be occurring in wild fish within the Noosa River and more widely in agricultural catchments of Australia.  Urgent regulatory precautionary action and research attention to this matter must be a priority.

Two-headed fish & a vet

Two-headed fish probe flawed: vet
June 9, 2011

Brisbane, AU – A vet has savaged the findings of his own taskforce after it
found no definitive link between farm chemicals and two-headed fish at a
Queensland hatchery.

Fish scientist and vet Matt Landos was part of a taskforce formed to look at
deformities, including double-headed and three-tailed fish, at the Sunland
Fish Hatchery near Noosa. But Dr Landos says its majority finding – that
chemicals used on a neighbouring nut farm could not be definitively blamed –
is seriously flawed. He says the taskforce was stacked with bureaucrats and
others who lacked the right scientific expertise to make a proper judgment.
Among its members were 10 scientists, six government communication and
policy officers, and the chief executive of the Australian Macadamia
Association.

The scientists included toxicologists, Queensland’s chief biosecurity vet
and environmental health officers who concurred with the majority finding.

Dr Landos and vet Roger Chong, the government’s aquatic animal expert, did
not agree with the finding. “There is a high likelihood that the chemicals
caused the deaths and deformities,” Dr Landos claimed. “On four occasions we
took larvae to another property. The ones on this property survived while
the ones at the hatchery did not and some of the dead had deformities.” He
said much of the residue testing was poorly timed and samples were collected
long after any spray drift might have occurred.

Taskforce chairman and Biosecurity Sciences director Jim Thompson has
defended the findings, saying they were based on expert opinion, backed by
independent toxicologists. He said the investigation carried out all
monitoring that was possible at the time but noted some of the incidents
happened before the taskforce was formed.

Disease, ……….

See the source for the full story: http://tinyurl.com/3kqgo4y

Fighting fish over-wintering

Question:

My fish appears to have a very swollen abdomen. Could this be due to me overfeeding him?

Persistently enlarged abdomen post-feeding.

Answer:

Siamese fighting fish (Bettas) originate from Thailand (hence “Siamese”) and this is a tropical country where temperatures would not normally drop to what we experience in Perth. It is true that during transporting (exporting/importing) of ornamental fish, the temperature is reduced slightly to decrease their metabolic rate, this is not usually tolerated for long periods. Fighting fish may “survive” one or two Perth winters, but will eventually succumb to disease/illness in unheated tanks during winter. The abdomen is swollen, most likely because the food ingested is not being digested, and is instead being fermented. Differential diagnoses include granulomatous reactions from Mycobacteria or Nocardia infections or problems with fluid balance, usually associated with bacterial nephritis. My advise would be to cease feeding for 1 week and in this time, slowly raise the temperature to 26degC.

The Fish Vet is now blogging!

There are very few veterinarians who are involved with fish health. And the majority of these are employed in a commercial capacity (involved with aquaculture). Their services are often beyond the reach of the local suburban clinic for your much loved pet fish. So this is a ground breaking step forward for both the clients and for the veterinary profession. Pet fish health has somewhat been neglected for many years and it is now time to make that change.

My aim is to help pool the knowledge that aquarists already have, dispel false information and then educate my clients where appropriate.

I understand that fish give you so much enjoyment that I will do my best to make sure your fish are happy and healthy.

PET TIME is VET TIME!

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