![]() |
Helping Your Fish to Have a Nice Day... |
|
Stress gives us headaches, makes us feel lousy, tears down our systems and causes heart attacks that can lead to death. We get our stress from missed deadlines, traffic, arguments, tragic events you name it! We often ignore the warning signals and will live many years under stress. The affects of stress is even more apparent in fish than in humans. Netting the fish, transporting the fish, feeding the fish, handling the fish this all causes stress. Its stressful for them to eat and to spawn. If the pH is off, if ammonia, nitrites or high concentrations of nitrates are present in their water the fish will stress. Weve even seen a case where chasing a very excitable fish with the net caused him to die - we think from a heart attack! Stress leads to all the other afflictions that can occur. Its like there is a big sign on the side of the fish that says Im stressed and ripe for the picking. Parasites and Aeromonas must know how to read because it is when the fish is at its most vulnerable condition that these bad elements tend to attack. Parasites and bad bacterias are present in ponds. The trick is to offer the most stress-free environment for your fish so that they can live healthfully. Heres a few tips on how you can help your fish have a nice, stress-free day:
The fish at the store that are for sale have been recently air-ported, netted, treated, transferred to different tanks and folks are always looking at them they are stressed babies! Though we try to keep the stress levels at a minimum these things are very necessary in order for us to sell them to you. We must remember when picking out a fish that every time we put the net into the water it stresses them more. Thats why its best to bowl only those that you really are interested in, not all that youd just like to see. If we seem a bit rude with this or asking that children not throw rocks into the ponds, its simply that we try to keep the levels of stress down for the sake of the fishes health. |
|
From The Fish Health Edition
of What's Up, Doc?, April, 2000
© Copyright 2000, The Pond Doc's Water Garden Center. All rights
Reserved. Reproduction of this article prohibited without prior consent of
The Pond Doc.
© copyright 1997 - 2009 by PondDoc.com. All Rights Reserved.