roguemonk
Premium Member
I have two ocellaris, happy inhabitants of my 110 G. reef for a year and a couple of months. Mind you, I've neglected the water changes lately (lazy, planning to integrate with my fully automated basement system, not getting it done on schedule, you know the drill), nutrients may be building up more than they should.
In the meantime, other than some rhodactis that look a little less perky than usual (lights may be needing replacement), nothing else is giving any indications of a problem, but my female ocellaris (ca. 3") is swimming along the glass side of the tank amost exactly as though it were the bottom (I was tempted to think she's trying to see if it will work as a spawning location, since I don't have a good spot for them in the tank and they always seem to be trying to clear a good spot), and at one point drifted up to the surface and seemed very alarmed when she broke the surface of the water right around a powerhead. She did not eat today for the first time ever, seemed not to notice or care about the mysis. I haven't seen any symptoms until this, and still can't see any sign of physical infection (spots, marks, lesions, streaks--anything), but my son was worried the other morning while I was in the shower that both clowns were swimming head up in the tank (he remembers a freshwater fish that died that way)--but this is their usual behavior when the tank is dark, so I told him this was no sign of a problem. Perhaps I should have looked closer, but she seemed normal yesterday.
I've removed her to a bucket to try to contain any outbreak and to treat her if I can discover a likely cause. She's got heat and aeration, but less space than she's used to.
I will either break down the tank on an expedited schedule or do some water changes to improve conditions, since this is enough to kick me in the butt.
In the meantime, has anyone seen a similar symptom, and what treatment worked? I can't find anything that really reminds me of this described anywhere, but if I have to guess I would think it was likely a bacterial infection. Anyone have a favorite treatment? (I've dosed the tank already with garlic extract, which I have on hand and I know works wonders for fish that aren't already too far gone.)
Thanks!
Brad
In the meantime, other than some rhodactis that look a little less perky than usual (lights may be needing replacement), nothing else is giving any indications of a problem, but my female ocellaris (ca. 3") is swimming along the glass side of the tank amost exactly as though it were the bottom (I was tempted to think she's trying to see if it will work as a spawning location, since I don't have a good spot for them in the tank and they always seem to be trying to clear a good spot), and at one point drifted up to the surface and seemed very alarmed when she broke the surface of the water right around a powerhead. She did not eat today for the first time ever, seemed not to notice or care about the mysis. I haven't seen any symptoms until this, and still can't see any sign of physical infection (spots, marks, lesions, streaks--anything), but my son was worried the other morning while I was in the shower that both clowns were swimming head up in the tank (he remembers a freshwater fish that died that way)--but this is their usual behavior when the tank is dark, so I told him this was no sign of a problem. Perhaps I should have looked closer, but she seemed normal yesterday.
I've removed her to a bucket to try to contain any outbreak and to treat her if I can discover a likely cause. She's got heat and aeration, but less space than she's used to.
I will either break down the tank on an expedited schedule or do some water changes to improve conditions, since this is enough to kick me in the butt.
In the meantime, has anyone seen a similar symptom, and what treatment worked? I can't find anything that really reminds me of this described anywhere, but if I have to guess I would think it was likely a bacterial infection. Anyone have a favorite treatment? (I've dosed the tank already with garlic extract, which I have on hand and I know works wonders for fish that aren't already too far gone.)
Thanks!
Brad