Freshwater Tropical · Goldfish

Columnaris

A highly contagious bacterial infection (Flavobacterium columnare) presenting as white/grey patches, often on the mouth, fins, or gills. One of the fastest-killing freshwater diseases.

Severity: Severe

Columnaris is caused by *Flavobacterium columnare*, a gram-negative rod bacterium found in almost all freshwater systems. It is opportunistic: outbreaks follow stress events — temperature swings, ammonia spikes, overcrowding, or shipping.

The disease is frequently misidentified as a fungus because of the cotton-like appearance of advanced lesions. It is not a fungus, and treating it as one wastes critical time.

Causes

Stress is the trigger. Common precipitants include rapid temperature changes (especially warming above 24 °C / 75 °F), poor water quality (ammonia, nitrite), bag stress after shipping, aggressive tank-mates, and overcrowding. The bacterium itself is ubiquitous; it is the host's compromised immunity that produces disease.

Treatment

Treat in a hospital tank when possible. Lower the water temperature toward 21 °C (70 °F) — *F. columnare* virulence increases with heat. Reduce the salt concentration: contrary to widespread advice, columnaris reproduces faster in salted water. Treat with a broad-spectrum, water-borne antibiotic such as **Nitrofuracin Green** or a kanamycin/furan-2 combination for 7–10 days. For Koi pond outbreaks, medicated food containing kanamycin or oxytetracycline is more effective than water dosing.

Recommended medications

Columnaris

A highly contagious bacterial infection (Flavobacterium columnare) presenting as white/grey patches, often on the mouth, fins, or gills.…

Columnaris

A highly contagious bacterial infection (Flavobacterium columnare) presenting as white/grey patches, often on the mouth, fins, or gills.…

Prevention

Quarantine new arrivals for 14 days. Maintain ammonia and nitrite at 0 ppm. Avoid sudden temperature changes and overstocking. Pre-treat shipping bags arriving from importers with **Nitrofuracin Green** before pouring fish into your system.

Frequently asked questions

Is columnaris a fungus?

No. Despite the cotton-like appearance, columnaris is a bacterial infection (*Flavobacterium columnare*). Antifungal treatments do not work and waste valuable time.

Does salt cure columnaris?

No. Adding salt actually accelerates *F. columnare* growth. Treat with a proper antibiotic instead, and if anything, lower salinity during an outbreak.

How fast does columnaris kill fish?

Aggressive strains can kill a fish within 24 hours of visible symptoms. The chronic form can take 1–3 weeks.

Freshwater Tropical

Columnaris

A highly contagious bacterial infection (Flavobacterium columnare) presenting as white/grey patches, often on the mouth, fins, or gills.…

Severe

Freshwater Tropical

Columnaris

A highly contagious bacterial infection (Flavobacterium columnare) presenting as white/grey patches, often on the mouth, fins, or gills.…

Severe

Freshwater Tropical

Columnaris

A highly contagious bacterial infection (Flavobacterium columnare) presenting as white/grey patches, often on the mouth, fins, or gills.…

Severe

Freshwater Tropical

Columnaris

A highly contagious bacterial infection (Flavobacterium columnare) presenting as white/grey patches, often on the mouth, fins, or gills.…

Severe