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ttabbal
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Topic: Clownfish suddenly lethargic Posted: June 05 2015 at 8:03pm |
The clown I put in early on was doing great. It would swim all over the tank from day one and ate great. Suddenly it seems lethargic, and not eating well. It's been in the tank for a few weeks without issue.
I don't see any signs of ich or other external parasites or injury. The other fish in the tank and all inverts appear fine. I do have a mushroom coral that appears somewhat unhappy, but that's it. The only recent change was to install some mechanical filtration as I wanted to have the water clear up a bit and while doing that added some AC. I did throughly rinse everything. That was 3 days ago.
Temp 78F Salinity 1.024 SG Ammonia 0 Nitrite 0 Nitrate 10-20 (between colors) stays steady in this range Ph 8.5 Alk 8.3 KH
Those are the tests I have on hand. All parameters have been steady since the nitrogen cycle completed.
I haven't seen any sign of aggressive behavior. Perhaps I'm overreacting, but I want to make sure I'm not ignoring something major.
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Mark Peterson
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Posted: June 06 2015 at 11:54am |
Hi Travis,
This is a common situation with new tanks. All the parameters look right but some or all fish are not doing so well.
Patience and not moving too fast to stock a tank is very important in this hobby.
This tank is just about 1-2 months old, right. It's not mature enough to keep many animals. Give it 6 months and more animals will do better. Even then, after the tank is years old, there will be animals that don't last long. That's the nature of keeping these mortal animals in relatively tiny glass boxes, trying to imitate mother nature's immense ocean.
Aloha, Mark
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ttabbal
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Posted: June 06 2015 at 12:24pm |
Thanks Mark. I pulled the mushroom out and put it in a bag with water.. It seemed to be losing bits and I was concerned about it polluting the water. The clown seems to be improving, so I'll just keep an eye on things. I just wanted to make sure I wasn't missing some sign of illness or similar. I'm not planning on adding anything else for a while. The only other stuff I was considering was corals, but I'll wait and see how the existing stuff does.
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Mark Peterson
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Posted: June 07 2015 at 4:41am |
Mushroom Leather Coral (Sarcophyton) though generally considered very hardy, may infrequently deteriorate fast, even in a good old tank. I recently rescued a huge Sarco from a friends tank. It had lived for 20 years and had at one time been ~18" across and 12" tall. It had not been looking good for a while and in the last month there was a lot of deteriorating flesh, possibly caused by an invasive competing organism. I removed it and gave it a good freshwater dip. It lost a bit more flesh but now seems to be in stasis in my coral farm. I'm hoping it recovers.
In a situation not unlike yours, another Sarco, much younger and much smaller, living wonderfully in it's aquarium, after being recently moved to a new tank, swiftly reached a point of deterioration where it had to be removed and tossed in the trash.
Soft Coral, like leathers and button polyps, are generally hardier than fish. In general, Coral filter the water while fish pollute the water. The way I do things, I gradually stock a good amount of soft coral and only a couple fish in new aquariums, until they reach a point of maturity, 3-6 months down the road, where stony coral can be introduced. It's not easy to describe what that aquarium "maturity" actually looks like, it's just kind of a "sixth sense" that I have acquired over many years of doing this.
Are you using Activated Carbon to clean the toxins from the water that the Sarco left behind as it deteriorated?
Are you saying there is no other coral in your new tank?
Would you like to post a pic of the tank here, to see if I or others here can see any potential problems?
Just asking because I assume you'd like to help your tank continue growing and maturing properly.
Aloha, Mark
Edited by Mark Peterson - June 07 2015 at 4:51am
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ttabbal
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Posted: June 07 2015 at 3:53pm |
I do have AC in the HOB filter. I have a few coral frags. A zoa, some green star, and a torch. And 4 individual zoa polyps I found buried in some grape cupulara today. I figure it must be a hitchhiker from one of the small rocks you gave me. I put them on a rock were they can get some light. The corals all seem happy and open.
Edited by ttabbal - June 07 2015 at 3:58pm
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Mark Peterson
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Posted: June 07 2015 at 10:28pm |
Oh my!
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