Pets & Animal Pets Fish

Koi Eye Diseases

    • A Koi pond is a beautiful addition to property.koi pond image by MPH from Fotolia.com

      Koi parasites and diseases are present in most koi ponds, but a disease episode is usually triggered by some type of stressor. Poor water conditions, rough handling, poor nutrition or harassment by a predator can cause an outbreak of illness among the fish. Determine the cause of stress so you can take care of it after treating their illness. It's important to quarantine new fish before introducing them into an established group to avoid the possibility of spreading disease. Some bacterial infections will spread quickly in a koi pond, and fish should be separated from the others until symptoms are gone. Sick fish should be isolated in a quarantine tank for treatment. In an ideal situation, each diseased koi has an individual quarantine tank. Koi require very good water conditions and adequate nutrition while being treated.

    Cloudy Eye

    • Koi need good water conditions and regular nutrition.japanese koi carp image by Geoff Hobbs from Fotolia.com

      Cloudy Eye is usually due to a gram negative bacterial infection. It is similar to a disorder in which a translucent film appears over the entire eye. Sometimes just the iris, the colored portion of the eye, becomes cloudy from an infection caused by one of the gram negative bacteria. Redness and swelling may develop around the eye. Parasites or flukes that attack a Koi's eye cause a cloudy, opaque film to form over the entire orbit.

    Pop Eye

    • Changes in the water can stress koi.koi image by Earl Robbins from Fotolia.com

      Pop Eye is a progressive bacterial infection caused by Aeromonas hydrophilia or Pseudomonas bacteria. It may develop into Dropsy or Pine-Cone Disease in which the fish builds up fluid in his body and around his eyes, causing them to bulge. As disease advances, the fish's scales stick out until it resembles a pine cone. This disease has occurred when Koi were moved from acidic to very alkaline water. The symptoms become more severe and, without treatment, Hole-in-Body Disease develops. Shallow raw areas become deep ulcerations, holes, on the fish's body.

    Spring Viremia

    Koi Herpes Virus (KHV)

    Saprolingiasis and Protozoan Infection

    Eye Injury



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