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white fungus on driftwood


honcho

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Hey guys...

I added a piece of grapevine driftwood into one of my fish tanks so it would get water logged..

After 2 weeks its gone down..

So i added it toy shrimp tank..

On clower look ive realised it has some white fungus/ slimy stuff on it...

Is it harmfull to my shrimp..

Hope someon has some kind of experience with this stuff..

Cheers...

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Hi Honcho that seems to be a problem with golden vine too. I have it in with my shrimp and just suction it off occasionally with air line so I don't get any shrimp with it. I have had it in my tank for about 5 months and both pieces- in separate tanks- have stopped producing it now. The shrimp actually eat it some times and I have had no losses in either tank

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Just take a sample piece, put in a bowl, mix 1/2 teaspoon of sugar, stir, then 1/2 teaspoon of salt. If the water turns red, it's poison to the shrimps. Haha ... Personal joke to honcho ! Lol

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Just take a sample piece' date=' put in a bowl, mix 1/2 teaspoon of sugar, stir, then 1/2 teaspoon of salt. If the water turns red, it's poison to the shrimps. Haha ... Personal joke to honcho ! Lol[/quote']

Oh no it turned red and all my shrimp are dead:(

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Hahaha :smiley_simmons:

I have to some thing one my piece of GV & the shrimp do munch on it every now & the, also they've been in the tank with it for a few months :victorious:

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Fungus tends to appear on newly submerged wood as the fungus feeds on the nutrients leaching from the wood. Its probably not dangerous as some organisms may gain nutrition from them (think the Panaque catfish from South America which eat wood to obtain nutrients from the biofilm that is breaking down the wood. In many cases the fungus will disappear on its own as the amount of nutirnets leaching from the wood declines over time, however I have pieces of wood that have fungus on them that have been there for years, even in the presence of some Panaque catfish! In this case, manual removal is about your only option, but this hasn't kept it from coming back.

I've yet to hear anything in regards to whether funguses on wood are harmful to shrimp, but I suspect for the most part they are not harmful as fungus forms an important part of biofilms, which are a primary food source for shrimp in the wild and in many aquariums.

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i have it on my goldvine as well but not slimy? Used a bbq skewer to get off, it comes off easily in chunks, noticed more but just left it not harmful at all.

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Really Honcho I have had it in my tank with cherries and also mishlings and have had absolutely no trouble . BB brought the devil out in me:encouragement:

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BB brought the devil out in me:encouragement:

Shame on you ineke, succumbing to peer pressure. LOL

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Shame on you ineke' date=' succumbing to peer pressure. LOL[/quote']

I am so easily led:o

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does boiling the gold vine prior to entry into the aquarium stop the fungus from occurring?

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Can't comment for gold vine specifically but IME boiling doesn't guarantee there wont be any fungus develop.

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  • 3 weeks later...

As fishmossy has already mentioned, it's common on new drift wood.

Boiling the drift wood won't necessarily eliminate it since the fungus does not originate from the drift wood ... the fungus is already in your water.

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Well.. its been a couple weeks in my shrimp tanks i think..

And all seems well..

No deaths and fungus cant really be seen.. not even sure if its there anymore...

Soooo happy days :D

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