Graphite Disease in Bettas

10.16. Graphite Disease in Bettas

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There is a disease of blue or black bettas where the fish has fins that disintegrate and/or gets dark metallic gray patches on its body. The key point here is the name “GRAPHITE“. This is called “graphite disease” because it looks just like dark gray metallic graphite. Here is what graphite looks like:

What a Piece of Graphite Looks Like
What a Piece of Graphite Looks Like

The well-intentioned commentators on social media then tell everyone that “graphite disease” is caused by oodinium. This is incorrect. Oodinium or “velvet” is tiny gold specs. If there is no tiny gold specs, it is NOT oodinium. So a solid dark gray coloration CANNOT  be oodinium. This is what oodinium looks like:

The Gold Specks of Oodinium
The Gold Specks of Oodinium

Graphite disease is very limited in the fish affected and the presentation. It MUST be a blue or black betta and the diseased patch MUST be graphite colored (i.e., very dark gray). If there is a true metallic dark gray patch (graphite colored) on a blue betta, then it is PROBABLY a type of mycobacteria that is untreatable. Black bettas will have whitish spots on them. But fin disintegration and whitish patches on any fish can also be bacterial (probably columnaris). The blue/black betta below probably has graphite disease, but it might also have columnaris. It is just impossible to tell.

Probably either Graphite Disease or Columnaris
Probably either Graphite Disease or Columnaris

So far, two types of mycobacterial infections have been observed in Betta splendens. The first type is a relatively slow, chronic infection of environmental mycobacteriosis (typically mycobacterium marinum). The major defining symptom is the accumulation of internal granulomas, which can eventually cause the fish to appear lumpy/misshapen and swollen and are observable upon necropsy.

A second type of mycobacterium (a “mycolactone-producing mycobacteria” or MPM) produces an acute infection that typically causes death within days. A change in coloration, usually on the fins, occasionally on the body, is the first visible sign of an infection. The region initially turns a dark gray/graphite color that changes to black or complete color loss as the infected cells die. Fin rays and webbing disintegrate while scales lose partial to all pigmentation (“Mycobacteriosis in Fishes: A Review”, Gauthier, 2009, “Mycobacterium ulcerans and Other Mycolactone Producing Mycobacteria Should Be Considered a Single Species”, Pidot,et. al. 2010).

Graphite Disease
Graphite Disease

This infection seems to be limited to bettas which are completely blue, black or white in color, with no red, yellow or orange color in their coloration. The lack of carotenoid pigments seems to induce a genetic immune system disorder which predisposes these fish to this unusual mycobacteriosis. The diagnosis of mycobacteriosis for graphite disease in blue bettas has been confirmed by multiple fish necropsies at university research centers commissioned by two betta breeders who had plagues of this disease in their blue betta breeder tanks.

PROBABLY Graphite Disease in a “Copper” Betta
PROBABLY Graphite Disease in a “Copper” Betta

If the betta is a black or “copper” breed graphite will present as grey/white patches against a black background. The fish above PROBABLY has graphite disease. Note this disease presentation can also very easily be a columnaris or “saddleback” infection. It is impossible to differentiate the two with a visual examination.

What is important here is that the dark gray color comes on rapidly, in a matter of days. If the color has been there for months then it is probably just a genetically black coloration.

Graphite Disease

Treatment

There is no treatment for mycobacteriosis. But given that this identification is VERY tentative and many of these “graphite diseased” fish are probably infected with only a columnaris bacterial infection, I recommend treating with an antibiotic in the food and ONLY in the food.


Startpage Aquariumscience

Source: Aquariumscience.org – David Bogert

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