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FAQs on Marine Parasitic
Disease 1
Related Articles: Marine
Parasitic Disease, Marine
Ich: Fighting The War On Two Fronts, Crustacean
Parasitic Disease, Quarantine,
Quarantine
of Marine Fishes,
Related FAQs: Parasitic
Disease 2, Parasitic Disease 3, Parasitic
Disease 4, Parasitic
Disease 5, Parasitic Disease 6,
Parasitic Disease 7,
Parasitic Disease 8, Parasitic Disease 9,
Parasitic Disease 10,
Parasitic Disease 11, & FAQs on: Parasite-infested Systems: Parasitic
Marine Tanks,
Parasitic
Marine Tanks 2, Parasitic Reef
Tanks, Parasitic Reef Tanks 2,
& FAQs on: Preventing Parasite Problems,
Diagnosing Parasitic Diseases,
References on Parasitic
Diseases, Index Materia Medici for Parasitic Diseases
(medicines), Treating Marine Parasitic
Diseases, Using Hyposalinity to
Treat Marine Parasitic Diseases,
Hyposalinity Treatments 2,
Fallow Tanks, & Best Crypt FAQs, Cryptocaryoniasis,
Marine Ich, Marine
Velvet Disease
Biological Cleaners, Using Hyposalinity
to Treat Parasitic Disease, Parasitic
Worms, Crustacean
Parasitic Disease, Isopods,
Gobiodon citrinus with marine ich, Cryptocaryoniasis.
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Sneak attack? Ich on fishes
I acquired a Blue Line angel about a two months ago and things had been going
well until three or four days ago when he started to breath rapidly, the only
external signs of anything afoul were ich like spots on his eyes. I promptly
gave him a fresh water dip w/Formalin totaling 5-8min.
<a good move IMO>
and upon removal his respiration rate easily doubled.
<immediately after, yes... but minutes/hours later it should be stable or
better if dip was done properly (pH adjusted, water aerated before being used...
scary close match with tank temp, etc)>
At that point I thought it best to just keep an eye on him which made for a long
evening, some 4-5hrs later his breathing slowed down but not to a normal rate.
<Ahhh... yes, good. As it should be>
The following day I gave him another dip exchanging the Formalin
with Methylene blue and putting him in a Q-tank with copper and
antibiotics.
<Yikes... I was with you on the repeat dip (needed) and the Methylene blue
(increases O2)... but you lost me on the copper. Angels are very (!) copper
sensitive.>
He had been eating up until two hours before I put him to sleep, he finally
started to list over on the bottom. I had to have my wife put him down for me
and explain to my little one why we perform euthanasia. It tore my heart out to
see him slowly suffocate, today, we'll be burying him per my daughters wishes.
My original point of this correspondence, it's been my experience that ich
doesn't kill that quickly, does it?
<You are very correct. Most folks think takes a few days... but even that is
not true. It establishes a week or more in advance (usually 2+weeks) and is
expressed very subtly at first as the closing of one operculum or occasional
scratches or glances off rock long before any "spots" appear>
I forgot to mention that he had a 1/4" bump on his side that didn't break
the skin nor raise the scales, its cycle was about five days and went away on
its own with no intervention. Do you have any thoughts?
<The bump on the side also was not fatal and quite likely secondary. I can't
be sure with certainty what the cause of death was... but prolonged siege by the
parasites unnoticed contributed... the Os o the display may be depressed and
amplified it... the copper treatment may have been the killing blow on an
already stressed fish. Formalin is very "safe" on a wide range of
fishes... Methylene blue is good for most (except scale less fishes) ... and
copper has severe limitations IMO (efficacy and range of tolerant species).
Formalin and FW dips always get my vote. Sorry for your loss my friend. Best
regards, Anthony>
Sick fish
Hi wondering if you could assist me. I have a 55 salt water tank about 11 mo
established. all water parameters are great. in tank were 1 yellow tang,1 very
small picasso,1 sm clown, a few small hermit crabs. I am in the process of
cycling another 55.about 2 weeks ago I purchased a lionfish I couldn't resist
now I wish I did) well I decided to put him in with my others until new tank
cycled I know my mistake not quarantine him) well within 2 days all of his
brilliant pec fins started to wither away. So I quickly set up q-tank and got
him in he was eating for a day or 2 then died. Now 2 days later woke up tang was
dead with no signs of anything but clown was very whitish not specs but a white
sheen to him. next day clown was dead. now Picasso is also showing whitish sheen
so he is in q-tank treating with CopperSafe. (he doesn't look well) my questions
are 1. if this is a parasite is it still present in main tank even though there
are no fish in it.
<Yes... likely "velvet"... the algae Amyloodinium. Please read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/velvetfaqs.htm>
2 when and how will it be safe to add new fish. 3. is CopperSafe the proper
treatment for Picasso. any advice would be greatly appreciated thanks. PS I will
NEVER again add livestock without quarantine 1st!!!
<I'll bet... please read over the WetWebMedia.com site re marine parasitic
diseases. Bob Fenner>
Help ME !!!!!!!!! (marine parasitic disease)
After reading a lot of your already posted articles I was wondering if
marine ich can be in the form of white dots?
<Yes. This is most often what the symptoms (the reaction from fish hosts)
looks like>
I had black ich which I cured buy adding cleaner shrimp to my tank which is a 30
gallon. My question is if this is ich the white dots all over my Banggai
Cardinal fish an my Flame Angel seems to be rubbing against rock which I thought
was a sure sign of ich.
<No... can be other things... or nothing in the way of a disease>
I have liverock an sand, shrimp, starfish, snails etc on cleanup crew. What is
the best method of getting this under control I don't want to lose my clown he
loves my anemone an my friend has had little luck getting a Percula that gets in
his anemones an takes care of it.
Thanks for any information you can give me, this is my first dealing with this
type of WHITE DOT infection and I want to learn how to get this under control
before I go an set up my 135g RR Oceanic.
Thks
Larry Williams
<Time to go back, read over the Marine Parasitic Disease sections, FAQs pages
on WetWebMedia.com
Bob Fenner>
Re: Ich
Bob
You said conditions favorable to parasites. I assume you mean water conditions
and health of fish. But my fish seem to be thriving also. What should be done to
give the good guys advantage over bad guys?
<Please read here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/mardisease.htm following the
linked files where you take yourself. Bob Fenner>
Re: Restocking tank
How can we tell if (and when) the parasites are gone.
<Time, experience>
They
are no longer on the Hippo. He looks VERY healthy. We
treated tank with Kick Ich and Rally both by Ruby reef. We
raised temp to 83 for over a month, we lowered salinity to
1.018 for about 3-4 weeks. We are slowly raising it back up
and trying to lower the temperature. We do at least 10
gallon water changes with vacuuming sand once a week. And
have done a few 15 gallon changes since all fish died. We
used to see these little black dots on the wall, but they
too have been gone for almost a month. Everything appears to
be great! We are trying to fins tank raised perculas to add
(hopefully they won't introduce anything to the tank) and
then after a while we want the new tang. Your site says any
of the Zebra... tangs are good and the Yellow eye is good. I
read your site all the time, I just like to ask you
personally to see if anything has changed and some things
are situational so I figured I would ask you anyway.
Thanks again, your information is a great asset to us...
<If you trust the chemicals you used, the protocol you followed, you should
be fine. Bob Fenner>
Re: Restocking tank
Sorry to bother again, but I am reading your site on
parasites (it seems you add new FAQs everyday)
<Yes, everyday>
and I wanted to
mention my fish died of what appeared to be velvet. They all
were dusty not like ich) and they started either hovering at
the power head or towards the bottom. They never darted or
dashed, but I still think it was ich. They also started
"shedding" their skin. When we FW dipped them we got these
very strange things that looked like Mysis shrimp but with
two long straight horn like things coming off one end. All
the fish that had those are now dead. We FW dipped the Hippo
a few times and got some things off him, but none of these
things. So we REALLY believe he is going to be just fine. He
eats great!!! Looks perfect and is getting very FAT because
he is the only fish in this 50 gal. He picks on the shrimps
and crabs a little. But I think he is just bored... Have you
ever known a hippo to pick up Hermit crabs by their shells,
carry them to the top of the tank and drop them? He does
this a few times a week. It is rather funny!!!
<Interesting. Bob Fenner>
Ich/Velvet.
Bob,
I have read your website and followed the advice/guidelines given for treatment
of these diseases. As I have learned in my short experience of saltwater, it is
always a good idea to quarantine all new arrivals before adding to the main
tank.
<Yes... I have tried for decades to convince the trade/industry to do this
before sending on the livestock... citing all the obvious reasons... principally
not having their ultimate customers leave the hobby...>
(Which I now follow to heart).
But I first had an Ick outbreak followed by Marine Velvet (white dusting). Based
on the information given on treating parasitic diseases I FW dipped
(w/spectrogram) my fish and quarantined them for 2 weeks. During that time I
increased the water temperature to 83 degrees and dropped the salinity to 1.017
in the main tank. During the course I had Coppersafe in tank at about .15 ppm.
After the time was up, I reintroduced the fish back. The next day they showed
tiny white spots, smaller than grains of salt.
<Mmm, the copper level as measured how? Think this may have been a
sub-physiological dose>
What should I do now? Should I set-up my q-tank again and let the main tank sit
fallow for a month? I plan on dropping the salinity below 1.017 and increase the
temp to about 84 degrees. Would that kill off the disease?
<Not kill off likely... but hopefully sufficiently weaken...>
(or tune the tank at a lower salinity level?) During this time should I have
some level of Coppersafe or should I treat it w/o the CopperSafe and remove it
during the treatment process with a PolyFilter and the protein skimmer running?
And what about the live rock and sand? I know copper can be harmful. But will
the disease survive on the rock and in sand during the treatment? The nitrates,
nitrites, ammonia and PH are were they should be. So the copper doesn't seem to
have affected the LR and sand yet. What are your suggestions?
<They are stated over and over on WWM...>
Or is my second option the worse case scenario by breaking down the tank and
starting all over again. I hope not. Or is first option to let it run fallow for
a month acceptable.
<Yes>
But how will I keep the bacteria levels good w/o fish in the tank producing the
ammonia? Your help is much appreciated and I constantly read your website for
advice.
<Read it again, maybe using the search feature there. bob Fenner>
Finally, if I run the tank fallow for the month and copper was used (if you
recommended it) Would the copper be completely out if I used a PolyFilter to
remove it. I would like to add cleaner shrimp and cleaner gobies as preventative
precautions to parasitic outbreaks. And what other steps should be taken to help
control or prevent outbreaks? Keep the salinity levels low, between 1.017 to
1.021? Besides the quarantine and dipping steps recommended.
Thanks,
Alan
Or would I have to start the tank all over again?
Another question.
<Hello, JasonC here...>>
Thanks for the response. Your website is excellent and have now added it to my
favorites. The Flame has been removed because it was showing signs of stress and
I don't think he is going to make it. .
<<ahh good, it's set as my homepage...>>
But now I have another question. I have had problems with Ich or maybe even
Marine Velvet. The first Ich infestation was white spots the size of a salt.
<<ok>>
Most recently the fish have been covered in dusty spots. My Maroon has come down
with it and I just set-up my hospital tank and waiting for the levels and temp
to match the main tank. To help fight these diseases I have kept Coppersafe in
the main tank at all times. <<you mean you've been running this all the
time?>> Is this wise to have in a main tank? <<not full time like
this, no.>> (I have no inverts) <<even so, it's actually pretty bad
for your fish long-term.>> This practice is what I am following based on
the advise of local marine pet stores. <<your local fish store does this
because of a function of business, and they certainly aren't trying to keep
those fish for years and years. The LFS wants to sell the fish to you somewhat
healthy, and perhaps parasite free - obviously that didn't work for them
though... These parasites come from somewhere - evidently lived through all that
copper-safe.>>
In all the outbreaks, my Fire Gobies and scooter blenny have not shown signs of
Ich. Since I plan on removing the Maroon to the hospital tank, should I also
move my Coral Beauty. Of course, I plan to do a FW dip to remove the parasites
and then keep the fish in the HT. <<do make sure you match the pH of the
freshwater to that of the tank... your fish will thank you.>> Should I
increase the temp of the main tank to increase the parasitic life cycle and
fully kill the disease. <<increasing the parasite's life cycle may/will
also speed up its reproductive cycle. Also wise to reduce salinity to 1.017-ish
while you do this.>> Then re-introduce the Maroon and Coral back to the
MT.
Since I have lost fish to this disease have considered in buying a UV light
system. Is that a good idea? <<no, not worth the money. Better to be
religious about quarantine protocols.>> I also am planning to quarantine
all new arrivals. But for how long? <<minimum of two weeks, perhaps longer
if necessary.>> Do fresh water dip and finally add to the main tank. Any
advise would greatly be appreciate
<<If you haven't already, read up on Bob's dipping article:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/dips_baths.htm >>
Javier
<<Cheers, J -- >>
New tank, "saltwater ich"
Bob,
I have read your articles on wetwebmedia.com, and find them very helpful. I have
a 50gallon tank, that my fiancé' treated with a non-copper treatment two weeks
ago when I was on the road, and she noticed the fish had white spots on them.
When I got home, they had died. My question is: Should I sanitize my tank
completely, or try hyposalinity to kill the parasites in the substrate?
<It's up to you... more time, risk in waiting...>
I have 30 pounds of live rock, and wanted to know if it would survive either
treatment.
<Much would survive mild hyposalinity (down to a spg of 1.010>
I also have placed my few invertebrates (sea urchin, coral banded shrimp,
cleaner shrimp, feather duster, and two starfish) in a 10 gallon hospital tank I
set up. Should I lower the salinity there, or are they most likely infested. Any
advice is greatly appreciated. Thank you!
<I would not lower the spg. much in the ten gallon, but leave these animals
there a month w/o fish as potential hosts. Bob Fenner>
Craig E. Stahl
Sick fish
Hi Robert,
It's me again. I have the same hippo tang. I have had
the right amount of copper in his tank for over two
weeks, I have been feeding him garlic soaked foods,
and I have lowered his salinity. He finally stopped
scratching after a week of doing this and seemed fine.
Today he has started scratching A LOT again. I can't
see any spots, although there may be some. I'm pulling
my hair out. Can you help me?
<Mmm, this fish may be "scratching" due to the medication alone at
this point. I would consider removing the copper, leaving the spg low at this
point (like 1.016 if other livestock can tolerate this)... feeding vitamin
soaked food, using a purposeful cleaner organism... Please read over the
WetWebMedia.com site re these "parasite" issues. Bob Fenner>
White and black spots on tangs
Please help me quickly!!! We lost 4 fish about a month ago due to marine
velvet I
think) We ended up saving two- a hippo tang and a true Percula. We left them
alone for about a month and both healed fine. We bought a UV sterilizer to try
to eliminate any future outbreaks. We recently bought a smaller hippo tang, a
gold rim tang,
<Not a hardy aquarium species: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/GoldRimSs.htm>
a smaller true perc. and two Heniochus. They all were fine for
about 2 weeks, but my big Hippo started getting these same black spots he had
before. I thought it was stress from adding all the new fish(es was chasing the
new hippo around) but then he calmed down and started to look somewhat better.
Now... Every morning I wake up my two Heniochus have a few white dots in their
tails and fins they go away as the day progresses) my gold rim is almost covered
in tiny white spots that go away once I Feed him( I have been feeding Tetra
anti-bacterial and anti-parasite flakes as well as Mysis shrimp mixed with
garlic extract), but the two hippos have LOTS of bigger white and black dots as
well as white ulcerated areas, the Heniochus try to clean them and the hippos
literally lay in front of the cleaner shrimps, but they are useless. We are
using a product from Aquarium Pharm. called Melafix along with medicated food I
mentioned. I think problem could have been that my hubby installed the UV Ster.
IN THE WATER and it was shocking the fish!!!!
<Yikes!>
I removed two days ago, and we
installed a new one properly last night. But woke up again this morning and all
but my clowns had white or black spots. All of my fish eat very well, but I
can't figure out what to do to get rid of the parasites.
<Please start reading here: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/parasiti.htm
following the links as they lead, interest you. There are ways to "the
light at the end of some tunnel" here... you need knowledge to set your
path>
Everyone seems to get
along well now, the tangs occasionally chase each other out of their respective
territories but nothing bad. I am going to add a ground probe today, but is
there anything else we can do. We don't want to quarantine as the last time we
did that we lost 4 of our 6 fish. We only saved those two cuz we put them back
in the main tank. Could this all be due to the improper installation of the UV
ster. and if so when should they
look better?
<Soon, a few days if so... but there are more factors to this equation of
health/disease...>
Why do they look good after they eat, but wake up looking horrible?
<Stress, lack of movement during the night...>
Please help me I really love these fish and do not want to lose them!!!!!
<If you do care for your livestock, then study, apply yourself to their cure,
careful husbandry>
PS. we
check water quality a few times a week and everything is fine, Phosphate is
rather high, but we have heard that is not a big deal.
<Mmm, can be a very big deal... depending on what the cause/s are>
Temp is at 83(almost
always, occasionally dips at night)
<Be studying. Bob Fenner>
Re: White and black spots on tangs
Thank You for your response, but I have read your links many times and still
cannot figure out what to do, i.e. what is wrong with them.
<Your principal problem/disease is ich/Cryptocaryon.>
The two hippos do "lay" while they sleep so that could explain why
lack of movement would cause this on them. Do you know what is wrong and how to
cure it without a quarantine. We have spent over $1OOO ++++ on our fish in the
past 2 months trying to fix all of these problems.
<You don't need to spend much here... a copper solution, freshwater, a place
to move/keep your non-fish life...>
We feed them a variety of food, clean them once a week, given them vitamins,
check water quality often and still can't figure out what we are doing wrong.
Unless this is all due to the UV sterilizer being installed wrong. I am sorry to
seem so dumb in regards to this, but we have tried all we know and still can't
determine what parasite, bacterial problem they have and a natural way to cure
it and keep it from coming back..... Please help, your links are great, but
there are so many things going on in the tank I don't know where to begin.
<Read over where you have been sent. Your system has an ich/Cryptocaryon
infestation. You must treat the SYSTEM as well as the fish hosts. Bob Fenner>
Re: White and black spots on tangs
I am sorry to seem redundant, but is there a way to treat them that is safe
for inverts (crabs, shrimps and snails)
<This is gone over on the WWM site: no>
we have rock crabs that live in rock so it is impossible to treat tank w/out
ripping everything apart if we use copper. Plus the last time we used copper, 4
fish dies in 2 days!!!
<Should have quarantined incoming livestock...>
Fish we had for over 12 months. Can I mix Kick Ich ruby reef product) with
Melafix (aquarium pharmaceuticals Product)
<Both these products will not, do not treat your problem...>
or do I need to run carbon in tank for a day to get Melafix out and then use
kick ich or another reef safe product. It is my husbands tank and he doesn't
want to do quarantine or use copper. Can fresh water dips, feeding medicated
flakes, adding chopped/fresh garlic, raising temp and using the UV sterilizer
get rid of the ich or do we definitely need to use medication?
<At this point, it is necessary to treat with a copper-based medication...
the above will help, but not at all likely produce a cure. Bob Fenner>
I am sorry to keep bothering you!!!!!
And thanks again for your help!!!!!
Brandy
<Not a bother... but try to understand... unless you have a better, bigger
"picture" of what is going on, you will be eternally frustrated and
confused. Seek to know the underlying science, principles at work in your
system... Not simply the "do this/that" of disparate opinions. Bob
Fenner>
Got Garlic?
Can adding fresh chopped garlic help with the parasite problems I am having
and
if so how much and how often can I add?
<Please read over, use the Google search feature on our site:
www.WetWebMedia.com here.
Some people claim some success with some species of parasites using garlic
prep.s, chopped fresh garlic... Bob Fenner>
Liverock Question
Hello Mr. Fenner,
I recently setup a 55 gallon predator fish only tank.....I have a 2 inch Niger
and a 4 inch Lunare Wrasse. This tank also contains 45 pounds of liverock with
lots of Coralline Algae.
My concern is; would treating for parasites such as Ich with copper destroy the
liverock completely....or just the inverts? Would the Coralline Algae survive?
<Will kill a good part of the LR including the Coralline algae, and the
invertebrates... Fishes should be treated elsewhere (or reciprocally, all else
moved, kept free of fish hosts... Please read through this section: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/parasittksfaqs.htm>
I have not yet purchased a quarantine tank yet.....this purchase may all depend
on what I could do to treat the fish if need be?
<No... not really... you would do well to consider quarantine, dip/baths as a
preventative measure in this "other" system to avoid having to treat
anything>
I was also wondering if there is a product equally effective for treating
parasites like ich that have no detrimental affects?
<None exist. The products that claim this are false, misleading.>
Thank-you for your time.....
<Do read through the www.WetWebMedia.com site re "Quarantine",
"Disease".>
Rob!
<Be chatting. Bob Fenner>
Brooklynella OR VELVET??
I am fairly new to the saltwater world and I'm having a real hard time
diagnosing what my fish have in a fish only tank. My Tang died two days ago from
something that looks like snow on its body. He was covered in it overnight.
<A tang, overnight? Does sound like Velvet>
I have a big tomato clown that has the same powdery look. The clowns fins look
frayed and it has a white dusting mostly on its head between the eyes. The Niger
Trigger has what look like white cysts on its eye and a light dusting on it. The
Hawkfish, blue head wrasse, and lawnmower blenny show no signs at this stage. I
have been told ich, Brooklynella, and velvet disease.
<Not likely Brooklynella from the rapid onset, indiscriminate use of
hosts>
I am not comfortable diagnosing this alone. What does this sound like to you and
what do I buy to treat it. The clown and Trigger are very lethargic and hanging
towards the bottom of the tank. They do come up to feed but that's about it. A
swift reply would be much appreciated. I'm panicked. Thank you. Kim
<You should be deeply concerned. And you need to act quickly to help save
your fish livestock. Please read over the following on Marine Parasitic Disease:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/parasiti.htm
and onto the links to other articles on ich, velvet... their treatment...
including the need to "treat the system". Bob Fenner>
Ich or Something like it?
Bob,
This is kind of long. I am so sorry to bother you.
<Not a bother. Take your time>
I have been reading
your site and can't find a problem that is similar to ours. We have a
healthy (for the most part or else this email wouldn't be necessary) 75
gallon tank. In our tank we have had a dog-faced puffer for a month now.
From day one he has had little white spots on his fins and then they clear
up and then the spots look like they are gone and then he has on his body
sort of like what a wart would look like on a human in a clump together.
<Might actually be viral, viral mediated as well.>
Sometimes the white spots are on his eyes and he will close the eye or I
will see him trying to scratch himself on the sand or live rock. We have
done the RO dips and some days he looks great and some days he just looks
terrible! No filmy look to him at all. My heart feels for him. He still
eats GOOD, and gets around. Some days he rest a little more than others.
But for the most part, our little guy gets around. He also sleeps in the
very same cubby hole every time he rests. Do we need to vacuum out his
little nest he has?
<No>
What is this exactly (these little clumps that look
like warts on the body and the white spots on the fins)?
<Likely either some sort of protozoan or fluke (trematode) infestation>
We have other fish
in the tank (lionfish, Huma Huma, wrasse, and eel) none of them appear to
have anything. Occasionally the trigger gets white spots on its fins, but
is not bothered by it and it goes away the next day. Nothing spreads. We
have had this tank set up and complete for five months. Please help. We
bought a UV Sterilizer and it should be here in the next couple of days.
What do you think about that? Sorry this has been so long.
<The UV will help indirectly... and, see below>
Thank you for your help. Lord knows we need it!
Angie
<I would try "boosting" this animals immune system by adding a
liquid vitamin and iodide preparation to its food (ten, fifteen minutes ahead of
feeding), AND add the same prep. directly to the water once a week, AND sneak in
either bits of garlic or one of the prep.s into its foods as well... AND lower
the specific gravity of this system down to about 1.017 for a month. All of this
should conspire to "tip the scales of health/resistance" in your
Puffer (and other fishes) favor. Bob Fenner>
Ick? Parasites? No idea...
Hi Bob---
<Howdy>
I have a 55 gallon saltwater aquarium with a clown
trigger (immature), Heniochus, flame fish, green
wrasse, and four damsels (plus a starfish and sea
urchin). Everyone peacefully coexists
<For now...>
, but in the last
three days I've noticed very small white spots on both
the trigger and the Heniochus. I've seen no
scratching, no change in swimming or eating habits, no
signs of distress from either. I did a very brief
freshwater bath for the trigger (maybe 10-15
seconds...it showed signs of distress almost
immediately) which seemed to help a bit, but am
concerned since there is still some sign of the spots
(they seem to come and go). The spots are probably
smaller than a very sharp pencil point and are not
significantly raised.
<Maybe ich, velvet... perhaps nothing but "stress">
I am running two outside filters as well as an
undergravel filter, keep a UV sterilizer running
constantly, and occasionally use a protein skimmer. I
do regular water changes, and keep a close check on
nitrates, etc.
Am I better off quarantining the trigger and the
Heniochus and treating with copper meds, or am I
better off purchasing a cleaner shrimp or two and
waiting to see signs of scratching or obvious distress
from the affected fish?
<The shrimp would likely get eaten. I might try a Gobiosoma Goby:
http://wetwebmedia.com/clnrfaqs.htm>
This is the first real problem
I've encountered since starting my tank about 8 months
ago, and would very much appreciate your input.
Thank you in advance for your help, and thank you for
a wonderful and informative website.
<Thank you my friend. Do keep an eye on your livestock, consider beginning
environmental manipulation if the cleaner goby doesn't stop the recurring spots.
Bob Fenner>
All good wishes,
Daryl Klopp
Possible ich break out?
Hey Bob,
Always enjoy reading your website. Got a question for you, I noticed today that
there was a small white spot on the dorsal fin of one of my false perculas. It
looked almost like a tiny piece of bread crumb, there was a also
a similar spot on his right gill side. These spots are fairly tiny, maybe the
size of a pencil point or so, but should I immediately remove the fish? Or
give him a few days to see if he gets worse.
<Hmm, need more info. to give a more substantive response... How long have
you had this specimen, what else is in with it, do you have any purposeful
cleaner organisms?>
He has exhibited no signs of
stress and is swimming well, eating... I have for perculas, two fire gobies,
a striped damsel, and a cleaner shrimp in the tank (55 gallons).
<Ah, here we go.>
I have
two big powerheads and a prism protein skimmer rated for a 90 gallon tank.
All of the other fish seem fine. The only thing I can think of is we had bit
a cold snap out here and the temperature dropped about 4 degrees. Is this
enough to cause an infection or Ich? Water quality looks good, but I have yet
to test PH.
<Maybe. I would leave this fish for now... maybe start the environmental
changes listed here that others have tried: http://wetwebmedia.com/marparasitcurefaqs.htm
If any of this is unclear, incomplete, please do write back. Bob Fenner>
What do next? Part II (ineffective ich treatment)
I failed to mention that the "Stop Parasite" product I mentioned
previously
is to help us get rid of ich in our tank. We introduced it into our tank by
buying live rock with it infested all over it. Of course we didn't know
until after the fact. Now we can't seem to rid of the problem.
<Have you read over our site re this parasite, it's treatment?
WetWebMedia.com>
Or should I
say the white spots only show up on the fins of our trigger but I noticed
last night that our dog faced puffer (my fave) now how two white spots on her
eye and couple on her fins. What to do???? Should I did her now or am I
paranoid. We have done the r/o dip in the past on the trigger. Sorry this
is so long. I do value your opinion. Thanks so much!
<Do read through, starting here: http://wetwebmedia.com/parasiti.htm
I would develop a long-term plan for eradicating this pest or striking a balance
in your system... using real products to rid the hosts of the ich. Bob
Fenner>
Angie
Re: lots of questions <Avoiding parasitic problems>
Hi Bob,
First, I would like to thank you for the help you have given me in the
past. Its greatly appreciated! Next I have a lot of questions many of
which are unrelated. I apologize in advance if its too much.
<Never too much my friend. Service to you>
I have two marine systems: a 30 gallon that I have had running on and offfor about 5 years with out a problem and a 75 gallon that I have had for
about 3 months. After a month the 75 got ich which also got transferred to the
30 gallon tank. I lost all but a single fish in the 75 but saved all
the fish in the 30 with copper treatment. I have been keeping both tanks
coppered for a little over three weeks now. Here's my dilemma! I want to
remove the copper and begin adding live rock to both systems, but I am now paranoid of getting ich again and with live rock in the system I can't
use copper if ich resurfaces. Right?
<Yes... this is so... the LR will readily accumulate the copper, and it will
kill much of the life that is the "live" rock>
I usually read the daily questions on
your web sight every other day or so and one thing I have noticed is that
every day there are several people who have ich. Am I doomed to get it
again or can it be easily prevented? If so, how?
<You are not doomed... Oh, I do wish the "trade" would adopt
better, consistent practices in preventing these simple to stop epizootics... I
can imagine (as well as you...) simple pH-adjusted dips to just exclude ich,
velvet (and a few other pests)... Well, back to reality... though I will post an
old "letter to the industry" that I drum up every decade or so
decrying the lack of such prophylaxis and what it could do for the entire
interest... Oh, found it: http://wetwebmedia.com/ltrquartrdbiz.htm
Along the same lines, I have purchased a 20 gallon tank to use as a
quarantine tank. I read info on your web site and elsewhere on how to set
it up, but I still have a few questions. First, do I have to cycle the
quarantine tank?
<Hmm, not really... if you can/do use "cycled water"... like from
one of your "clean" systems...>
Can I just add water from my main tanks and consider it
cycled or would that not work (I am going to run an AquaClear power filter
on it. is that enough?).
<Oh! Yes... do monitor aspects of cycling, be ready for water changes, feed
sparingly...>
Second, because I already have the living room
with two tanks there is really no where for me to put the quarantine tank
except in the basement. Do I need a light for the tank or will the 100w
bulb in the basement left on during the day be ok. Do I need light at
all?
<Some, but not much... on a timer... and/or some outside lighting so there
won't be too much light/dark transition>
Finally, should I keep the tank running even when I don't have fish
to quarantine or medicate?
<Mmm, probably not... unless you're quite regularly moving livestock... it's
probably better to store the gear in-between uses>
Next, the 30 gallon has an undergravel filtration system with a couple of
Percula clowns and a scooter blenny. I am considering changing to an Eheim
canister filter instead. Can I just hook up the Eheim and turn off the
undergravel and remove a lot of the crushed coral from the tank floor or
will this cause the system to recycle or crash??
<Should be fine as long as there is "not too much gunk" under the
plates, within the substrate... I would encourage you to "break the tank
down" rinse the gravel... and rebuild it (with the plates back in, minus
risers)... to remove chance of there being "too much gunk".>
I wanted to change
because there is so much waste that gets stuck in the gravel even after
regular gravel vacuums. I don't have this problem with the 75 which has an
Eheim and a protein skimmer. Should I just leave well enough alone??
<I would make the change, but do the clean out... we'll both feel better>
Also the 75, as I said has an Eheim and a protein skimmer. I was also
going to add an AquaClear power filter to this system as well. Is this a
good or bad idea, or does it even matter?
<Redundancy in life support systems is a good idea/thing/practice>
Finally, Could I put a flame angel and a juvenile (about 2 inches) emperor
angel in the 75 together or would they fight?
<They would likely get along...>
I realize that the emperor
would eventually get too large for this small system, but could it be kept
in there for a little while? How long would it take to outgrow the tank?
<A year or so>
Thanks so much for your help! I don't know how you find time to answer all
these emails, but I am glad that you do!
<A passion for me... to provide assistance, ideas, attitudes to aid people in
their quests for understanding, improving their captive systems, and by way of
these involvements, their lives. Bob Fenner>
Sincerely,
Jeff
Parasitic crustacean incident?
Hi Robert Fenner,
<Salutem dicit>
I am writing you because I have a problem of parasites with my yellow and purple
Tang, first I saw small sticks in the back part, close to the tail, then I
introduced a healthy purple tang, and now the purple tang has the sticks too!!!,
all of my other fishes are healthy, only this two tangs have the sticks, the
sticks are white, almost transparent, my yellow tang also has small spots in the
front part and it is not ich, they do not show any signs of stress, they are
colorful and they eat well, my water parameters are acceptable.
Any information about this parasites would be great.
Thanks. Alejandro Brosig V.
<Interesting... the "sticks" do sound like a parasitic copepod...
ala the infamous genus Lernaea of pond fishes... can likely be extracted by
using tweezers (netting the fishes, holding them gingerly, wet in a net and hand
towel) in the direction away from the head... grasping the parasite near its
insertion into these fishes... Hopefully this will be the end of the infestation
(the sticks are reproductive structures)... if not, the use of the economic
poison, DTHP used in ponds may be efficacious (http://wetwebmedia.com/pndparasitcont.htm)...
I would remove these adults and hope for the best at this point. Bob Fenner>
Ick/Oodinium/stress question...
Have read through the FAQ's... have a Holocanthus puffer who seems to have
Oodinium if I go by the diagram in CMA [finally scored a copy - a wonderful
read].
<Hmm>
Thing is... I've been trying to treat this fish/tank for three weeks with
the hypo-salinity/high temp mechanism because I just don't have enough
treatment/quarantine space for all the inhabitants. The puffer has also had
a good five minute pH adjusted fresh water/Methylene blue dip. If one were to
base an opinion strictly on behavior, everyone is happy and healthy...
including the puffer; everybody eats, everybody wins.
<For now, relatively>
But on closer examination of the puffer, the spotting never looks any
better. He is well salted as it were, and it covers his entire body and is
even visible on his eyes. I do have room to treat this fish individually
with some harsh mechanism [copper, et al.] ... perhaps it is now time.
<Perhaps>
So to the question... with no apparent stress visible, am I the only one
stressing? Should I go beyond the prophylactic and not worry so much about
stressing the puffer? Given the environmental tweaking for hypo-salinity...
is the white spotting a reaction to the altered temp and salinity? If so
will the return to more normal conditions help alleviate the problem?
TIA.
J --
<You have tried biological cleaners? I would likely go the route of moving,
treating this puffer if it lost appetite, seemed to dis-improve. Bob Fenner>Re: ick/Oodinium/stress question...
Actually... ready for a funny story?
<Almost always>
While you were away, I mailed Zo and asked him what he thought my chances
would be trying to sneak a Gobiosoma into my FOWLR. Of prime concern were
the fish with a glint in their eye for such small fare: the puffer and
harlequin tusk. He wished me luck but wasn't overly optimistic.
<I'd guess it "made it">
Well, within a day or two of that email the tusk leapt to it's death during
feeding time, while I was ogling at my other tank. Dumb mistake, all mine.
Anyway, I managed to procure another one, smaller this time and he's been in
quarantine ever since - roughly three weeks. Quite healthy and ready to get
out of the 20-long. Didn't want to dump him in the FOWLR until I cleared the
hurdle mentioned in the previous email.
<Okay>
Anyway... while I was waiting, I also procured a Gobiosoma, and after dinner[for the fish], I dumped him in with the tusk - you know, to see if this mix
would work out - or not. That seemed like an incredible mistake for about
ten minutes while the tusk tried to hunt him down - at least the goby didn't
cost as much as a cleaner shrimp, which would have easily been toast. So...
luckily the goby found the PVC reef-thing in the tank and has been out and
about ever since. The tusk is well fed, and now seems to mind the goby not
at all. Have no idea if the goby has made any cleaning attempt on the tusk,
but... he too [the goby] is happy, healthy, and eating well. Have observed
the Gobiosoma swimming about away from cover with no apparent antagonism
from the tusk.
<Good>
This leads me to believe that in fact, the goby will do well in the FOWLR,
and additionally it's such an amusing fish, I wouldn't mind two or three. I
like to Feng Shui things and right now I have an even number of fish so I
need one more to make me feel at peace with the tank. Those neon gobies are
quite handsome and more resourceful that I would have thought. I get a big
laugh out of this fish every day.
<How large a system? Sometimes better solitary>
So... the FOWLR is on it's way back from low-salinity-ville and still lowerthan I would like [1.018]. Should I just not worry about it, acclimate these
two fish to the lower salinity - their tank is 1.023 - and dump them into
the FOWLR or wait until 1.020 or so which will hopefully be this weekend -
if all goes according to plan.
<That is one approach... I would wait till all can be/is moved back to near
seawater conditions>
Help [a biological cleaner] is on the way. If things go south before the
optimum transfer time, I also have a 10 gal quarantine just waiting for the
puffer.
<Hmm, where's the funny part? The Choerodon exiting ala a Polaris? I would
slow down the stocking recruitment till your systems' are on a more even keel.
Bob Fenner>
Thanks again.
J --
Re: ick/Oodinium/stress question...
Ahh so...
Ok, so maybe it wasn't funny [ha-ha] just funny [ironic] or perhaps just
funny to me. Will do on the wait for NSW in the FOWLR. Won't be all that
much trouble. The Polaris tusk wasn't funny at all, but like any other
life-lesson, a valuable/tough one.
<Like so many. Thanks for the allegory. Bob Fenner>
Thanks again.
J --
|
Ich or What?
Dear Bob,
You and your friend Zo helped me out so much earlier, I thought I'd ask
another question.
<Okay>
I am very new to this "hobby?" (I've learned it's much more than
simply a
hobby, it's a lifestyle).
<You and I are in agreement... the hobby has many lessons, revelations to
grant>
I purchased a purple tang and am following your
advice on quarantining him before putting him into my 90-gallon reef. He
has developed two dots, one on each side, that I am a bit concerned about.
The dots look like ich, but they have been on him for over two weeks. I
have given him a Methylene blue dip using his tank water and a Methylene
blue dip using fresh water. After the fresh water dip I thought I had
killed him, but after a day or so, he seemed to be back to some semblance of
health. After the treatments, the dots did not go away, but did seem to get
smaller (I say seemed because you know how when you're concerned over
something like this you may see what you want to see, rather than what's
there). I administered the dips 2 days and 5 days after I first saw the
dots, but have not had the heart to do another fresh water dip due to the
stress on him and me.
<I understand>
The quarantine tank description is as follows:
- 20-gallon All-Glass aquarium with hood and florescent light
- Millennium power filter with activated carbon inserted at all times
- 8-watt UV sterilizer with a Rio 400 pump
- Powerful air pump with air stone
- Small amount of aragonite gravel
- CPR Backpack II skimmer added within the last few days
- Several pieces of live rock added within the last few days
- PH: 8.3
- Ammonia: 0.0
- Nitrite: 0.1
- Specific Gravity: 1.017
- Temperature: 75
- Feeding: About three times a day with green, red, and purple algae;
Sometimes I add garlic to the food
- Water from Poly-Bio-Marine Kold Ster-il system
- Salt: Instant Ocean
- Main tank light is kept on for about 10 hours a day with other room lights
kept on for two hours before and after the main tank light
<Sounds very nice... and the two dots are likely not much to be concerned
about... likely more stress than parasitic... and will resolve once the fish
settles into its permanent quarters>
Due to a problem with keeping nitrite down, I have been doing 50% to 75%
water changes every several days, but that seems to be ending now.
My concern is that he does not show the usual signs of ich. He does not
scratch against items in the tank, there are only two dots, he has a great
appetite, he seems very vigorous, and his color is very good. However, in
the last two days, I have treated the tank with Rid-Ich (I know you are not
a fan of these products, but I really want to avoid copper due to the
stories I've heard about tangs not being able to handle copper very well).
No change after the Rid-Ich.
Any thoughts as to what this could be? If it is ich, will Methylene blue
dips with his tank water cure this or will I need to do more fresh water
dips? Is copper my only hope?
<I would do nothing more than what you have already. Do doubt this is a
problem/contagion... would place the specimen in the main tank>
If it is not ich, what could it be?
<"Pimples" of sorts>
As always, your advice is greatly appreciated.
Best regards,
Michael Rivera
<Chat with you soon. Bob Fenner>
Maybe you can help (Parasitic Disease Problem, marine)
I have a true fish only saltwater aquarium. I want to keep it fish only. It
is a 135 gallon with a 2 inch sand bed. 50 pounds of which is live sand. LFS
said it would help cycle.
<Yes, this is so>
It has a 200 wet/dry and a UV filter. All levels in the aquarium are perfect. It
has been cycled since February. This is when the trouble began. I had a yellow
tang and five damsels all perfectly healthy. In my own stupidity I bought a
Queen Angel and put it into the main tank without quarantining. Big mistake, it
infested the aquarium with what I believe to be gill flukes. Within one week the
yellow tang and Queen died. LFS told me to use a product called Clout and not to
put any fish in for a month or so. I did use the clout as advised. After the
treatment I again introduced a yellow tang. It was healthy for about two weeks.
After the first week without any problems, I ordered another Queen Angel online
(it has not been delivered yet). That's when the disease (gill flukes or flukes)
popped up again. The fish is rubbing on the overflow and is dusted (almost looks
furry) with white specks on its body. I am 99.9% sure it is not Ich. So now my
dilemma, what should I do? Treat the whole aquarium as a medicated quarantine
tank. Can I medicate the whole aquarium? I guess my question or statement is
HELP!!!!! All fish in the future will be quarantined before entering the show
tank. One good note as of today, all fish eat well. But, if I do not do
something soon I know that will change.
<Very glad to hear of your resolute pledge going forward... the Clout might
have cleared the system of flukes... but would have been better used with
formalin/formaldehyde for this purpose... Much to say here besides... do read
over the "Parasitic Disease" section of our site: www.WetWebMedia.com
and if you can't cancel the Queen Angel order, don't place it in this tank...
You might try environmental manipulation as detailed on the WWM site... and
Cleaners as well... and do this NOW. Bob Fenner>
Thank you for your help,
Mark
Tough Marine Parasite Situation
Dear Mr. Fenner,
I have recently found your website and bless you! Now for our problem. We
started a salt tank about six months ago and learned a great deal the hard way,
but learned none the less.
<Ahh>
What we have now is a white "parasite" in our tank that we cannot get
rid of. A month ago, these beasts were colonized on the glass as well as free
floating. They are very tiny and wiggle around on the glass. They are truly
disgusting. We used copper, MarOxy and Maracyn Two. When that didn't work, we
set up a hospital tank, decreased the salinity, increased the temp and did
freshwater dips. Sadly we lost all our fish, which really hurt. Out of
frustration, my husband took a chunk of chlorine, (for our pool) and let it
cycle for two weeks dissolving the suckers. Then tore the tank down got rid of
the live sand and started over.
<The best route to take considering.>
After a few weeks of no fish we added a damsel and an engineer blenny. And today
the worm like parasites are back. We have no idea what to do next. Through all
your website info I cannot find anything that comes close to what these beasts
are. Please help us ASAP as I can't stand to lose any more fish. We have a
yellow tang in our hospital tank with copper, she won't go into the tank until
we eradicate those bugs. Thank you very much, Maureen.
<Going over your message it dawns on me that this "white" mass may
be non-biological... that is it may be some sort of evidence of a toxicity...
the fish livestock reacting to something in the water... Barring this
possibility and checking a bit of it via a microscopic analysis, I would try a
formalin/formaldehyde treatment. Look for one of the prepared solutions made for
this at your local fish store... Kordon/Novalek's is my choice, but others will
do... take care to follow the manufacturer's instructions... and do increase
aeration while it is in use. Oh, almost forgot to mention the rationale: the
other medication materials don't kill all the common parasites (like
Brooklynella). Bob Fenner>
Coral Beauty with... beginnings of... ich
Hi Bob, Jaime here again. I have a question for you , I just added a coral
beauty to my tank and have noticed very small white spots on it
occasionally. I noticed that he picks at the suction cups that hold the
heater and Fluval suction line and these have a white silt on them or is
this ICK.
<Does seem so... perhaps self-curing at this point... with vitamin use...
perhaps environmental manipulation...>
I am trying my best to describe this and I have checked the web
for pictures without luck. Sometimes it he appears clean and other times he
has many spots. They seem to be floating on him and it appears heavier
after he has been nibbling on the silt covered suction cups. Please help.
Thanks for the previous help
<Please read over the "Marine Parasitic Disease" sections posted on
our website: www.WetWebMedia.com and soon... Bob Fenner>
New Hobbyist
Sorry to bother you with what must seem a very mundane sort of question but
I have a new outbreak of ich in my new tank 33 gallons - I'm nearing the end
of my "new tank cycle" Nitrites are down to below 3 ppm. I have a
Valentine
Puffer, a Coral Beauty Angel, Blue Damsel, Three Spotted Damsel, and two
cleaner wrasses. Initially I only had the two damsels for cycling then my
wife who works at the LFS brought home the puffer whilst I was at work - I
was quite annoyed at this as we were just past the bad Ammonia stage of the
cycle, I told here no more fish till the cycle is done. Unfortunately she
did not listen and brought in the angel and wrasses and put them in the tank
herself without even letting me do a freshwater bath.
<Yikes... a painful lesson in store...>
Needless to say I
suspect one of the newest additions was responsible for introducing the
ich - during this stage of the cycle I was wondering what advise you would
give to treat the ich - if it can be avoided I would like to avoid the
chemical route - I have raised the temperature to 82.3 F and lowered the
salinity to around 1.015 - I have vacuumed the substrate as well as I could.
<Please read through the many articles and FAQs sections on "Marine
Parasitic Disease", "Ich", "Copper Use"... posted on
our website, www.WetWebMedia.com for this oh-too common scenario... and bookmark
it for your wife's perusal>
Sorry for the long winded prose there.
And two tiny little questions - I plan on removing the two damsels once
things are better - and I would like to add a trigger - either an assassin
or a Huma Huma/Picasso - would this be ok in my tank?
<Um, no... this system is too small for a triggerfish>
Do you know of any locations online that ship to Canada - or even better a
quality online Canadian retailer - as there are no LFS that carry any good
quality Live Rock in any kind of volume in my area - Winnipeg
<Please see the "etailers" listed on the Links pages on WWM>
Sorry for all the questions. Hope you can help me -
BTW - I find all your work here very interesting and very informative
Thank you in advance
Sincerely, David Taylor
<Be chatting, Bob Fenner>
Ich?
Hi Bob,
We spoken here in the past, and I feel awkward about taking your time on
something that's been talking over again and again, but I'm a new aquarist and
I'm feeling confused and unsure even though I read the FAQs several times. Would
really appreciate your advise.
<Please help me to be more clear, complete>
I bought a small Picasso Trigger, per your size recommendations about 3",
name is Jerry.
Jerry has been in my tank now about a month, eats fine, looks good.
About ten days ago I noticed a white salt grain sized speck on his dorsal fin. I
thought it was a speck of sand, but several hours later it was still there. A
couple days later he had a second white speck on his tail fin.
I started reading about Ich and I could be terribly wrong but I thought in one
of your Newest Questions and Answers that you had recommended soaking the fish
food in regular slices of garlic, and had even given it, the common garlic, a
Latin name. I did so with Jerry's Formula One since on three occasions.
<There are indications that such practices do indeed help...>
Since then I have scoured all the FAQs here at your site, and it seems that you
are Not a proponent of garlic at all...am I horribly confused or getting my info
sites mixed up or did you change your position on this?
<Hmm, don't want to be/sound confusing... there is a difference between
relating others experiences and making an outright endorsement oneself... Put
another way, I have heard, read of others' successes (of credible people) with
administration of fresh garlic, garlic preparations, but I am not a user,
promoter of same... Does this make sense? "I've heard it works", but
"I don't use it/them myself"...>
I thought it might be a good alternative to chemicals or copper.
Would appreciate if you would clear up my confusion here.
Jerry's two specks have not multiplied in the last 10 days but he still has
those two, only. They have not gone away.
<Likely this/these are NOT ich, and I would NOT treat them per se... Do
consider a "supplement" that I DO ENDORSE (!), that is, Selcon
(vitamin mix) added to this fish's foods, and do try to be patient... these
"dots" do come and go (though sometimes not for months)...>
What's my best recourse? Should I quarantine him and treat with a copper med.
Should I fresh water dip him? Or should I lower my SPG and raise my temp
slightly?
<No... just keep the system optimized, stable...>
I have seen No indication of him rubbing on rocks at all and other than these
two specks he seems really healthy and not itchy. Could he possibly have
something else?
<No worries>
I don't want to be rash and go overboard, but on the other hand, if this is a
prob, I'd like with early detection to nip it at the bud.
<I understand.>
Your thoughts, as always, are much appreciated by so many, including myself.
Thanks, Jennifer
<Ah, thank you my friend. Have seen these markings (perhaps a protozoan, but
not outright dangerous in any case) come and go on many such specimens... not
fatal, not easily "removed"... but do go in time... Bob Fenner>
Ich, Velvet in the wild
Hello Robert
Hope you are doing well today. As usual I have a few more questions. But first
of all I really love your book! I am reading it for the second time starting
this evening.
<Outstanding... also one of my habits... reading at night before bed that
is.>
My questions are as follows: As far as ICH or VELVET diseases go do the animals
get these only in a captive system, or do they also get them in the wild?
<Assuredly, these twin scourges of reef disease are found in the wild as
well... have seen infested fishes on several occasions>
If they do get them in the wild, how do they overcome them,?
<The "strong survive"... and many agents are "washed out to
sea"... and am sure that "biological cleaners" have their roles
here... as well as predators to thin the hosts ranks... what more?>
The second question is what wrasses (parasite removing) would be of great
assistance in the captive reef aquaria?
<Some species, in some cases, yes... for most systems however, other cleaner
species are more appropriate, applicable. Sections of the www.WetWebMedia.com
site (that need spiffing up greatly) begin to address these matters.>
that's all for now.
thank you and take care.
<I will my friend. Thank you. Bob Fenner>
What disease??
Hi Mr. Fenner. I am an enormous fan of your book and thank you very much for
all the info in it.
<Ah, thank you for your kind, encouraging words>
I have a 120 gal tank.
Filtration:
Amiracle SL-250 wet/dry
Aqua-C EV-150 skimmer
Emperor aquatics 18W UV
3 tangs (Kole, hippo, and Sailfin)
1 clown (Percula)
1 purple Dottyback
3 damsels (2)3 stripe and 1 yellow tail)
1 urchin and some button and star polyps.
I check my tank on a daily basis. Just today I noticed white speckles that were
widely spaced apart on my Kole tang and hippo tang. Both of these fish are
swimming around fine and eating great. No abnormal behavior what so ever. No
scratching, hiding, or strange movements. Some of these fish had ich about 2
years ago but, other than that everything has been fine. I'm not sure of what
disease this is. I will be sure to look in my marine books tonight.
<Does sound like a "weak", latent ich infestation... would counter
it at this point with a cleaner shrimp or two... and adding Selcon to the
fishes' diets (soaking this prep. in a dilute solution a few minutes before
offering)>
Please let me know if you need any more info about my setup.........oh duh! 0
ammonia, 0 nitrite, nitrate is somewhere 20-40ppm, slight copper reading, trying
to get rid of phosphate with 2 only pads Calcium is about 350-400 started adding
it to my tank not too long ago, was after corals were put in.
<Set-up sounds okay... but the nitrates a bit high... would try growing
macro-algae in the main system and likely a sump/refugium addition... as the
Tangs will likely eat most all...>
Near future is to replace my wet/dry with a sump and live rock in tank and my
first priority is to get a RO/DI for copper and phosphate removal. I currently
use well water.
<Ah...>
PS Can corals get any fish diseases or any for that matter???
<Not fish diseases, but a whole group of their own yes>
Thank you in advance and I appreciate your time for my letter
Rob
<Please read over the algal filtration parts stored on the site:
www.WetWebMedia.com
Bob Fenner>
PARASITE?
Robert, I was told you could help me in trying to diagnosis what type of
parasite my fish has. I have a clown trigger that has a brown line that goes
from his body (near his top fin) and extends through the top fin. The unusual
thing is that there is a brown or tan ball like thing at the end of it. I
don't see any specific parasite that I can identify. Just looks like
something is running up his top fin with a ball on the end. Do you what
parasite/what that might be? Also about 2 weeks ago when I first noticed
the thing on his fin, he also had a cloudy eye. The cloudy eye has cleared
up, but still has the thing on his fin. He also seems a little sluggish and
doesn't maneuver in the tank as good. Something he seems to bump into the
coral. He is eating good, and the first two days of his cloudy eye he spent
most of the time hiding.
Thank-you,
Rick
<Actually, along with the collateral damage you mention, this sounds more
like an "environmental disease", specifically a trauma, rather than a
biological/parasitic problem... Knowing how tough this species is (almost
always), I would simply try to keep the system optimized and the specimen
feeding... Though this could (unlikely) prove to be some sort of crustacean or
worm type parasite, you can easily address this down the line... i.e. it should
not become overly deleterious as long as the host (your trigger) stays in good
shape... Do take a closer look at your system and water chemistry, husbandry
protocols... something slipped if this fish had a cloudy eye... maybe just a
"bump in the dark", maybe something more insidious.
Bob Fenner>
Help!
I've read the FAQs and articles you suggested.
I can't say for certain what kind of infestation. There was no speckling as I
understand is present in many cases of white or Blackspot, or marine velvet. The
fish was, however, scratching its pelvic and dorsal fin areas relentlessly and
shimmying in the water, clearly irritated by some sort of parasitic
infestation...
<or perhaps water quality is/was the net cause...>
My LPS suggested I lower the SG to 1.015. This struck me as rather extreme and
likely to kill my brittle starfish (as well as anything on my small amount of
live rock). While I did lower it somewhat (to 1.018) this did nothing for my
tang. I went back to my LPS who suggested Cupramine.
<You're making my day! Not the Large Polyp Stonies, but the Livestock store!
good advice...>
So I normalized the SG, set up a quarantine tank ($$$), and used a maturation
fluid, but had only a couple days to do so... the tang was in serious distress.
I removed the tang to the quarantine tank and used the Cupramine.
<All sounds good... and the quarantine costs are less than constantly
replacing livestock...>
Soon after, the tang seems to be doing fine but the quarantine tank is beyond my
control; despite frequent water changes, constant siphoning and testing, and it
still isn't stable.
<Need to practice preparing bio-media.... like sponge material... to make up
for disrupted microbes ala the copper>
Should I simply place the tang back in the main (55 gal) tank?
Thanks again,
Robert Duff >>
<I definitely would move the Tang back, and in the process through a ten
minute freshwater dip... as proscribed on our site:
Bob Fenner>
Possible parasitic problem
Hi Bob.
I have recently had some issues with my tank. I have lost 2 Gramma
loreto's in the past year. The last one got some sort of parasitic infection
(dashing against rocks and obvious white spots; looked a lot like Ich) and
finally got to the point where I had to put him down. I gave him 2 or 3
freshwater dips, and it appeared as though the spots went away, but they
came back very soon thereafter. I did NOT quarantine him (not quite set up
for that at this point; and to make matters worse, I'll be going on a 2 week
hiatus in another 2 weeks - not sure if I have enough time to treat my
current fish and get him back in the main tank before we leave (getting
someone to fish-sit is one thing (HARD), but having them attend to the needs
of 2 tanks will be next to (if not) impossible for us).
<Hmm, the Royal Grammas the last couple of years have not "come in"
in any good condition, 'excepting the ones from Brazil...>
Anyway, I picked up another one yesterday, dipped him and he seemed
to acclimate to the tank rather well. Today, however, he is dashing on the
rocks, just as the other did.
<Not a good sign... have heard various theories on the species low
acclimation, survival rates... poor decompression, use of Quinaldine (real
anesthetic, but still enhanced mortality)...>
I'm not sure what to think - all my other fish look GREAT. Why would
this disease pick on the grammas?
<Don't think this is a parasitic or infectious disease... but some subsequent
disorder from collection, handling stress...>
Anyway, if you have a down-and-dirty suggestion (given the time
problem) I'd really appreciate hearing it.
I am prepared to quarantine him in a 10 gallon tank w/ an aqua clear
mini and heater if need be.
<Please take a read through the marine index pieces on Acclimation,
Quarantine, Dips/Baths... stored on our site: Home Page ... may be some input
there of use, at least consolation.>
Please advise. As always, your feedback is appreciated.
Oh, while we're at it, what do you think about those trace mineral
blocks? Even with 20% water changes every month, my levels get low (calcium,
KH).
<They're definitely better than nothing... and way often less toxic than the
Kalkwasser route so many folks fall into... I have used them, and we make our
own sorts of "delivery mechanisms" out of similar materials for our
use (a small, non-commercial coral farm here>
TIA, Bruce
>>
<Be chatting my friend, Bob Fenner>Re: Possible parasitic problem
Bob,
Went to the web site, didn't see much on acclimation that applied
(Methylene blue in high concentrations (a squirt versus a few drops) has
been my weapon of choice...).
<Mine too... and a worry/bother that the materials aren't more intuitively
accessible.>
The Gramma definitely has external parasites of some sort (spots on
the forehead, as did my last fish). He is still dashing and I am wondering
if a dip/copper treatment would be in order.
<Would hold off, lest you can really determine that this is a parasitic
problem... the/a treatment might well be worse than the current problem.>
The last Gramma I had was in my tank for about 6 months before he
developed these symptoms. It was not immediate so I don't think your
hypothesis about stocking stresses would apply.
<Sounds more like an "environmental disease..." would look to your
supplementation, foods/feeding/nutrition practices.... and try the default (for
me) practice of vigorous live rock culture... maybe even some starting material
from the tropical west Atlantic...>
This is really starting to bum me out...
Your thoughts? Maybe some parasite that hangs out in the rocks? (I'm
reaching here...)
????
Bruce >>
<Don't reach, unless it's for a microscope and some help locally by someone
who knows more/different about such matters... Do you have exposure to such?
Bob Fenner>
Re: Possible parasitic problem
The Gramma definitely has external parasites of some sort (spots on
the forehead, as did my last fish). He is still dashing and I am wondering
if a dip/copper treatment would be in order.
<Would hold off, lest you can really determine that this is a parasitic problem... the/a treatment might well be worse than the current problem.>
The last Gramma I had was in my tank for about 6 months before he
developed these symptoms. It was not immediate so I don't think your
hypothesis about stocking stresses would apply.
<Sounds more like an "environmental disease..." would look to
your
supplementation, foods/feeding/nutrition practices....
I have recently began using Combi-San (about the same time this all
started too, maybe?) and Selcon. I've cut back on them both because of algae
problems (the long green stringy stuff), although I DO still use them. Also
Phytoplankton (Kent) for the inverts. Cut back on that, too (again, algae).
Food is NORMALLY OSI marine flakes. Sometimes brine, rinsed and soaked in
fresh water for at least 5-10 minutes. This 2-3 times per month (I find my
star corals need to be fed with target feedings of brine...). Occasionally
frozen foods (formula one).
I figure I have at LEAST 100 lbs of rock in my 85. I also have (BTW)
a sump with 24X7 lighting with some Caulerpa (no room in the cabinet/power
strips for a timer... Still working on it).
PH is about 8.3, haven't checked the salinity in a while, but last I
checked it was 1.024. Hard to keep constant with all the evaporation brought
on by my cooling methods.... Calcium/others are lower than I would like, but
still (what I would believe to be, at least) acceptable.
Not really any that I can trust farther than I could throw them, no.
And now?... I think I'm gonna make an effort to prepare the
quarantine tank tonight, maybe catch him tomorrow night and isolate him so I
can keep a better eye on him.
Any other thoughts?
And, oh, thanks for the prompt replies. Very nice when time is an
issue... Bruce
>>
<If you can catch the specimen, would take care to provide shelter (even pvc
parts) in quarantine... and look for Grammas out of Brazil for now...
Bob Fenner>
Re: Possible parasitic problem
I will go with the quarantine route, hopefully he will be in the
tank tomorrow night.
So you think I should try some treatment method for him? It sounds
as if you really aren't too fond of copper, so how would you suggest I
proceed?
Thanks. >>
<Am actually a HUGE fan of copper... pls just take a look at the med. parts
of our site... but Grammas, esp. ones in trouble already are easily pushed over
the edge with stock Cu++ treatments... would do a smear prep. and look under a
scope ahead of any dosing.... in the meanwhile utilize environmental
manipulation (lowered spg., elevated temp.) to do about as much good as can be
done.
Bob Fenner>
Re: Possible parasitic problem
Call it denial, but this evening the lesions are almost invisible. I suspect that they were trauma from being nipped by the other fish.
<Ah, as I suspect/ed... not really an infectious or parasitic disease, but
something environmental...>
I had understood that CopperSafe was CuSO4 and required an ionic (free) Cu test kit.
<Hmm, perhaps my memory is even faultier than I remember (!), but isn't
copper sulfate in CopperSafe a chelated product? Is this the Aq. Systems
product? Is it just pentahydrate and citric acid?>
The level of 0.15 was the level at which my previous fish died...so I am pretty skittish about the accuracy of the test kit.
<Don't blame you.>
I have a microscope and slides (I am a Family Practice physician). I'm not quite sure what the procedure would be. Do I net the fish and do a skin scraping with the edge of the slide? If so, would you expect to capture
the parasite? For the future, are there any good references for fish microbiology?
<Yes, and yes. Edward J. Noga, Fish Disease, Diagnosis and Treatment. 1996.
Mosby, the world.>
I would risk moving them if you think that this is water condition caused.
But I would hate to introduce a lethal infection into the tank. There are other fish there, I just meant that the water quality was sufficient to support the invertebrates.
thanks
>>
<It is indeed a toss up... and you can get a fuller grasp of what is being
"in the balance" of consideration in my "Three Factors... "
piece stored on our site: Home Page though I suspect such a detailing of initial
states of health, suitability of the env., and presence/pathogenicity of disease
causing org.s will be "old hat" to you.
Bob Fenner>
|
Marine Parasitic Disease Article
Mr. Fenner:
I am writing to ask permission to use an article found on Wet Web Media entitled
"Marine Aquarium Fish Parasitic Diseases" in my newsletter. My
newsletter, "Aqua Serve News" is used to give updates regarding my
small business and to provide informative articles...some I have written and
others I find on the web. I will give you full credit for the article and
include any link to what ever URL you would like. Please let me know. Thanks so
much for your time
Duane Clark
Aqua Serve Aquarium Publications
www.aquaserve.com
<Thank you for your interest and asking. Yes, please do post the piece, and
make a link to our site: www.WetWebMedia.com to afford your readers awareness of
what else we can offer. I have looked over your site, aquaserve.com, and though
it does have commercial elements (for which we generally sell rights to the use
of our content), the thrust of your intent is obvious, and confluent with ours:
To inspire and educate others. Be chatting, Bob Fenner>
Parasitic Isopod
I have a 90 gallon tank that's about three weeks old and is still going
through the cycling process. I have a yellow tailed damsel an a domino
damsel in the tank. I added some Fiji live rock that was cured in a LFS for
3-4 weeks. It is covered with coralline algae. Everything has been going
well until this morning when I discovered (what I believe to be) a parasitic
isopod attached to the domino damsel at the base of the anal fin. The
domino also has some white abrasion/patches near his head (Last night when I
turned the light off on the tank he looked perfect). The parasite is a
yellowish color about 1/8+ of an inch long. I couldn't catch the damsel
(they are fast little suckers) this morning before work so I decided that I
would remove the rock from the tank and try to catch him this afternoon when
I had more time. I called my wife a few hours later and she said that the
parasite was no longer attached to the damsel. My questions are as follows:
1. What is this parasite and what do I need to do to get rid of it?
<Likely an isopod as you state. Ridding it involves catching the host, and
gingerly prying the crustacean off with tweezers... It is likely still in the
tank... maybe even... Shades of Silence of the Damsels... in the fish's
mouth!... check there... a common spot, attached to the palatine bones...
removal, the same>
2. Why did it fall off? Is it because of the light, was it full from eating
on the damsel or is it going to multiply and infest my tank?
<Maybe any of these... but not reproducing on its own...>
3. What other parasites do I need to look out for from the Fiji live rock?
<This is a very long list... but likely not to be the cause... the isopod
likely was on the fish... not the rock... >
4. I've always heard that live rock is so good for marine systems, but now Ihave at least one type of parasite and god knows how many others. If I
treat the tank with medications I will end up killing most of the beneficial
organisms and bacteria along with the parasites. It seems like a waste to
even use live rock. I've seen so much enfaces placed on quarantining fish
and killing the parasites that come along for the ride on newly acquired
livestock but no mention anywhere about the potential problems with live
rock other than curing it, bristle worms and mantis shrimps.
<The rock is overwhelmingly a good idea... and very unlikely a source of
parasitic problems>
5. What do I do?
Thanks, Tom Hettleman
P.S. I have your book " the Contentious Marine Aquarist". It's one of
the
best books I've read on the subject. Thanks again!
>>
Contentious? Conscientious? You're making my day. Do just keep your eye on your
livestock, and system, and try not to over worry... All will work out.
Bob Fenner
I have a powder brown tang which has picked up a quarter of an inch
long light brown crustacean
on its anal fin. The bug looks kind of like a terrestrial rolly poly or pill bug. Also this thing seems to be pinching
the fin. I already have a cleaner wrasse and shrimp. Do you know what this thing is and if and how I should get rid of it?
I bought your book this weekend and there the bug was right on page 148.
Also I have a white faced tang and I now feel pretty bad about buying that cleaner wrasse. Anyway the copepod disappeared after about 8 hours so I assume the cleaners got it.
I am glad I bought your book. It answered a lot of questions and gave me a lot of ideas. Thanks for your time and Ill investigate further before submitting a question.
Everett West
>>
Yes, this is a parasitic isopod... an aquatic type of rolly poly... and it is
best to remove it by catching the fish and prising it off with a stout
tweezers... Get ready and at the same time, daub a little mercurochrome or
Merthiolate on the remaining sore with a "q-tip"...
Bob Fenner
I recently had a few fish pass that showed the same initial symptoms
The
fish looked healthy and had been feeding quite nicely. They would aggressively
go to food but then hesitate. If they did eat it, they would often shutter after
eating the food. They became more lifeless; clamped fins, lack of color, hiding
in corners, sometimes a fungus in the mouth, until they passed. I removed one
sebae clown that was headed down this same road. I thought I had seen something
white in his mouth, so I opened his mouth and noticed what looked like a
parasite. I removed it with tweezers from what I will call the
"tongue" of the fish. This caused this fish to bleed and eventually
die. Also due to my rough handling.
The parasite was about 6 cm in length, white with small eye in the front, and
had a arched back that was fairly hard. My guess is that this guy and his
friends are what caused the demise of my fish. Any idea on what it might be, and
how to rid that tank of the creature? I am worried about buying new fish until
the parasite is removed from the tank and don't want to loose any other fish.
One other quick question, I have little white swirls on the back tank glass that
are about 1 to 2 cm in diameter. A friend said these are snail eggs. Is he
correct? Thanks for all the help. What did we do before the Internet and e-mail?
<And it was gray in color... Well, the animal you describe is probably a
parasitic isopod crustacean (sort of like a terrestrial Rollie-Pollie,
pill-bug... but not near as fun)... and I doubt if it was responsible for
infesting your other fishes... (they tend to be rather species, size specific).
I would definitely start with a search of your water quality as a prime cause of
the losses...
Don't know what the small swirls are in the back of your tank... more likely a
type of encrusting worm than snails... but I wouldn't be overly concerned with
them.
Do you dip/bathe, quarantine incoming livestock? You should develop and stick to
an acclimation protocol... to avoid much of the world of infectious/parasitic
disease.
Bob Fenner>
Fresh water dipping stresses
Hi Bob,
This time I really am writing ONLY to say thanks for your response to my last
question :) I just re-read your article on Acclimating Livestock. I see your
point on adjusting the pH of the water that is added to the acclimation vessel
to match that of the shipping water. I feel kind of silly in not figuring that
out for myself, since I work as a chemist...
Anyway, thanks again for your help, I think I'm on top of this now.
Dan
<Outstanding. Clarity is pleasurable, and acid-base reactions are of course
very important in biological phenomena. Be chatting, Bob Fenner>
Re: Fresh water dipping stresses
Hello Again Bob,
Just wanted to say thanks for answering my question re: "fresh
water dipping stresses." Also, thanks a lot for pointing me to your
WetWebMedia site, it looks like a wealth of information is there to be had.
I actually have a follow-up question regarding fresh water dipping technique. I've read your articles on acclimation at the WetWebMedia
site, but I just want to be extra careful, since my next purchases will be
the first that I'll be dipping. I like to drip acclimate my new arrivals
by transferring them to 5 gallon bucket, then dripping my water into
the shipping water at a slow rate, over the course of about 45 minutes
(emptying the acclimation bucket half way several times). When this is complete,
I plan on doing the fresh water dip in water that is at the same
temperature, buffered to 8.2, and dechlorinated. To me, it seems that the
instantaneous transition from salt water to fresh would be quite shocking to the fish.
Is there any kind of acclimation to the fresh water that I should be
including here?
Thanks again. Sorry if I'm asking a simple question whose answer I
missed at the website. Hope you're enjoying Hawaii! Dan
<Thank you for your uplifting message. I think I understand where
you're coming from and to. The pertinent comments: I'm leery about not responding
to your statements re your current acclimation procedure. If the shipping
water has little metabolite content, such "drip" methodology should be
fine. If there is any detectable ammonia and a depressed pH, the addition of higher
pH water can have deadly effects... actually this is how most livestock
is probably killed, all the way from the collectors through to end users...
You will know the relationship between any ammonia and high pH (much more
deadly than low pH situations).
And the issue of rapid freshwater introductions? Not a problem with
fish livestock that is otherwise healthy. Sometimes I'd like you to dream
of diving in the tropics and drifting past a river inlet (to the sea) or
being a small tropical fish yourself, caught in a TidePool and a big
rainstorm...
This happens, and no problem with the fishes...
Bob Fenner who has just been in a similar situation (not as a tropical)
at Two-Step on the Big (Hawaiian) Island's dry side.> |
Question: I have (had) a powder blue tang with Ick. He was in near
perfect water conditions in a reef tank. In the PM he was covered with cysts, In
the AM the cysts would seem to go below the skin. Because of the corals, my
course of action was to not medicate at all. I just upped my temp by about 2-3
degrees and increased aeration big time to compensate for increased metabolic
rates.
The condition seemed to be running its course and did not set up camp in any
other fish. Just when I thought he was clearing it, he seemed to not want any
flake food whatsoever. He appeared to not want to eat anything at all. After
about a week of this, and the Ick looking like it was on its way out, but he
went into severe respiratory distress and died.
I have a few Questions.
- (A) do you think these salt sized cysts were definitely Ick?
- (B) can the Ick if it still exists in the tank take up residence in any coral?
- (C) Why do you think the fish crashed so abruptly, when the condition, at
least outwardly, appeared to have begin subsiding?
P.S. I had a torch coral that I lost colony by colony to what I thought was a
protozoan infection (brown jelly gook surrounding its rim and eventually
smothering the polyps). Without getting into the details of this hopefully
separate problem, can the two infections be related?
Bob's Answer: Anthony... you start to understand the need for
quarantine or at least preventative dips. The problem is probably ich
(Cryptocaryoniasis), and you definitely need to be concerned about resting
stages of this protozoan "waiting out" the introduction of new fish
livestock to infest.
But it's not "in the coral" itself. The fish "crashed" no
doubt when the "age class" of the parasites cycled "up" in
numbers, after going through a reproductive phase off the fish.
Next time, and for all browsers, besides quarantine/dipping, do try a/some
biological cleaner(s), like tank-bred Gobiosoma, and Lysmata shrimps.
Re: the coral, pull this specimen and run it thru a freshwater and iodide dip
- quick - and place it in the quarantine/hospital tank you're going to set up
and use.
The "ich" problem. I'd wait out a good two months before putting
any other fish in, and one's that are hardier and more ich resistant.
Question: Hello - first time writing you, excellent column. I had two
sea horses the brown ones, and a few months ago one of them appeared to have
white discoloration on him almost transparent, (not ich).
He had these white markings for a short while, I thought he was changing
color, he soon just died. The other seahorse seemed to be not affected by this,
however about 4 days ago, I saw a small white patch or something by his pelvic
fin, he died yesterday, what's the deal??
Also I am converting to a bigger and better tank, do not want to import
bristle worms. Can I fresh water dip my rock to kill them off, and not kill my
polyps and tube worms? Traps are lame.
Bob's Answer: Seahorses and their kin (like Pipefishes) are
exceedingly easy to kill. Yours had a protozoan infection that they have a
penchant for. Try other, more historically hardy species till you have the
resources (money & time) for a dedicated set-up with culture facilities for
growing their food.
On the LR, some freshwater dipping might help rid it of worms, et al., but I
wouldn't waste my resources on this activity. If you're really interested, you
can whittle their numbers down by doing your own "curing/quarantine"
of the rock (very good idea for everyone) by putting together and using a
"tub" set-up with new or "water change water", a trigger,
crab, shrimps... other worm eaters and leaving the rock spread out over a piece
of eggcrate/louver (for access) for a few weeks ahead of placing in your main
system. But, be aware this is not a 100% gambit. There are none. | |
|