Black Spots on Clown Fish

My big clown has developed black spots. Otherwise she seems healthy"¦eating and swimming. No other fish, including three other clowns, is showing these black spots. Someone mentioned black ick, but I find that hard to believe after looking up the life cycle of that parasite (and seeing no other fish with these symptoms)"¦..liver of a snail; to the scales of the fish; fish gets eaten (most likely by a bird); infected bird poop returns to the water to be eaten by snails. Any ideas?

Oh, and please no comments about her Mohawk dorsal fin"¦.she is very sensitive about her "œhair" style.:rolleye1:

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Is it attempting to be hosted by any corals? It looks like the "sting" marks that can happen to clowns when they are hosted by corals, mainly with zoas and/or GSP. Besides the looks, it is harmless.

BTW -- I would consider getting rid of 2 of the clowns. Once a pair forms between the dominate male and female and they start spawning they won't take to kindly to the other clowns.
 
I have the same spots in my clown fish. I wasn't sure what they were and it doesn't seem affecting them. It still looks very healthy and eats like a pig. My pair have different spots they like in my tank. I will see them hosting the torch then sometimes i will see them on my hairy mushroom. Sometimes I even see them in my Xenia for some odd reason. Would one of these be stinging them?
 
is it attempting to be hosted by any corals? It looks like the "sting" marks that can happen to clowns when they are hosted by corals, mainly with zoas and/or gsp. Besides the looks, it is harmless.

Btw -- i would consider getting rid of 2 of the clowns. Once a pair forms between the dominate male and female and they start spawning they won't take to kindly to the other clowns.

+1
 
My male tomato clown also have these types of spots i too thought that it was black ich or something but he was in QT for 6 weeks and now even in main tank for 3 weeks & no other fish shows the symptom or anything.He too eats like a pig.There are some hitchhiker zoa's though.
And 1+ on keeping a pair.The female can go crazy any movement on your other clown.
 
My Clowns had black spots on there body. It's related to them attempting to host in something that stings. Eventually it went away with the help of my Cleaner Shrimp.
 
My Clowns had black spots on there body. It's related to them attempting to host in something that stings. Eventually it went away with the help of my Cleaner Shrimp.

Can someone please explain what the cleaner shrimp have to do with the disappearance of the black dots on Sean's clown fish?
 
If the spots were caused by the clown trying to be hosted by a coral, the cleaner shrimp had nothing to do with the spots going away.
 
My clown pair has slowly been gaining more black spots over the years. They have always been hosted by a Magnificent Anemone and have never ventured more than 12 inches from the anemone so I can be certain that the spots have nothing to do with trying to snuggle up to some other coral.

My guess is it is a function of aging, but that's only a guess . . .


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Sorry i know this is a late post but i have a small clown that is getting these spots and its also super healthy and eats like a pig. I havent seen him host yet but was also curious.
 
I think these must be parasites of some sort. My tomato clowns had none when I first bought them. Then the tomato & percula clowns started to develop them. The tomato is really covered now. More so than any pic that I have seen thus far.

A little over a week ago I bought a tang & now he started to develop those spots too. He was clear before that. The spots seem deep & not simply on the surface of the skin.
 
I think these must be parasites of some sort. My tomato clowns had none when I first bought them. Then the tomato & percula clowns started to develop them. The tomato is really covered now. More so than any pic that I have seen thus far.

A little over a week ago I bought a tang & now he started to develop those spots too. He was clear before that. The spots seem deep & not simply on the surface of the skin.

I believe you're referring to black ich a parasite.

The images of the clowns look more like hypermelenization from the nemocyst of LPS corals.

The black spots of black ich are actually areas/scabs from where the worm feed.
 
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