Black Spots on Aquarium Fish

10.10. Black Spots on Aquarium Fish

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There are many species of “black spot” flukes. They are poorly studied. Almost all species have a life cycle that goes through birds, then snails, then fish, then birds etc. As a result, black spot is almost always found in fish that have been raised in ponds. They all seem to be pretty harmless and go away with time (like several months).

Black spot disease is typically caused by the larvae of parasitic digenetic flukes of the genus Neascus (Cercaria and Metacercaria).  It is called diplopstomiasis. The larval flukes burrow into the skin of a fish, causing the formation of a cyst. The term “Black Spot” refers to the formation of black pigmented patches in the muscle and skin around which the parasite lives. Infested fish exhibit black, slightly raised nodules in the skin which are often less than 1 mm in diameter (the size of a grain of salt).

The “raised nodules” are very small so they don’t really “stick out into the water”. The swelling is only observable under a microscope or with an eye loop. Black spot disease can be difficult to spot in a dark fish as the black spots tend to blend in. The rainbowfish at the top of this article is one such fish.

These flukes normally cause little harm to the fish. Young fish have growth problems if heavily infected. Like other flukes, these flukes cause the fish discomfort and the fish flash, twitch and rub themselves against substrate and decorations. They sometimes produce slime coat syndrome.

Black spot is cured by Praziquantel but treatment really isn’t necessary. The disease tends to be self-limiting and typically will just go away on its own with time.

Black Spot disease on a fish
Black Spot disease on a fish
Black Spot disease on a fish
Black Spot disease on a fish
Black Spot disease on fish

There are many species of these type of flukes with very complex life cycles and somewhat varying presentations. Digenetic flukes are a subclass of parasitic flatworms (class Trematoda) characterized by a complex life cycle involving developmental multiplying stages in a mollusk (typically a snail) intermediate host, an adult stage in a vertebrate such as a fish, and most often involving an additional transport host or an additional intermediate host like a bird (di = two, + genesis = generation).

Note some class these trematodes as parasites of birds. This is not correct. You cannot class these trematodes as being parasites of only one type of organism. They are most often parasites of THREE types of organisms: birds, fish, and snails.

There are some interesting myths about black spot. Some say it is due to too much spirulina in the diet. Others say the black spots are due to nerve damage from aggression. Others say it is due to ammonia poisoning. As usual, the purveyors of these myths are quite strong in their beliefs. I cannot sugarcoat it. These people are simply wrong.

Black Spots on the Chin

There is another type of black spot that can spread in the freshwater aquarium. The black spots occur largely on the chin and mouth of cichlids. The spots come and go rather erratically. The spots can be there one day, gone the next, and back the next day. It is probably just a fluke with a different presentation but it may well be a completely different problem. There isn’t any data I can find on them. The spots do seem to be harmless and the fish do not flash when they have them.

Black Spots on a fish’s chin
Black Spots on a fish’s chin
Spot Disease on the Chin
Spot Disease on the Chin

Genetic Black Spots

Most black patches on fish are genetic, and not a product of a disease. They typically occur in highly hybridized inter-genus fish. Parrotfish commonly have black spots which come and go with stress levels. These are nothing to worry about.

Genetic Black Spot on Parrotfish
Genetic Black Spot on Parrotfish

Light colored discus often get “freckles”, which is called “peppering”. It is genetic and there is nothing one can do about it.

Peppering in discus
Peppering in discus

And of course black spots on goldfish are almost always genetic. They do not indicate “ammonia poisoning”. That is just another common fish myth.

Genetic Black Spots
Genetic Black Spots

Note sometimes it is VERY difficult to tell if it is genetics or flukes causing the problem. This fish probably has black spot flukes based on the slime coat disease obvious on the head. But these black spots COULD be genetic. It is tough to be sure which it is.

probable black spot disease
probable black spot disease

Startpage Aquariumscience

Source: Aquariumscience.org – David Bogert

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