Leopard wrasse experts/QT experts, need some help here PLZ!

jbvdhp

Active member
I have three leopard wrasses. Unintentionally.

All three are juvi meleagris. Two pop up during the afternoon when I'm not home, but luckily they get fed cyclops and frozen pods. The third one, pops up in the evening and eats pods and cyclops, mysis at times too.

I haven't dosed prazipro yet as I want them eating well before suppressing their appetite with pp.

However, the wrasse ive seen in the evening is flashing her gill area against the sand. She's done it multiple times when out, and I almost want to convince myself I see an erratic shake every now and then. I'm terrified it's ich, and pray it's just flukes.

They're in qt, remember, so now I'm freakng out as my tank is about to end its fallow period real soon. So the question becomes...

1) should I continue to let them eat more before dosing with pp and then watch them?
2) I've done ttm successfully on two batches of fish, and yes in theory it's easy, but how to perform with leopards? They sleep obviously, and people say don't go digging in the sand for them, so how can this be done... WITH THREE? If I run my fingers in the sand, it freaks them out and then I risk stressing them out and killing them. The wrasses are out at max one hour/day.

The oldest wrasse (by a week), I've had for 2.5-3 weeks, and just recently popped out more. The other two, barely a week.

I can't see any spots on the wrasse for the life of me, and I understand it can live in the gills.

ALSO, the tank is a 7 gallon cube. Technically it needs 0.325 tsp of pp, but I can't get to that level of measurement, either 0.25 or 0.375. So would pp still be effective if I dose at 0.25 vs 0.325? I know wrasses can only handle the recommended dosage.

Pros/experts, PLZ guide me as I feel good these girls are sleeping everyday and eating well too. I don't want to be another statistic to losing leopards, and I also don't want disease in my tank.

This thread must be a hot mess.
 
You might consider posting this in the Reef Fishes section as well. There is a lengthy thread there that covers Leopard Wrasse husbandry.
 
You might consider posting this in the Reef Fishes section as well. There is a lengthy thread there that covers Leopard Wrasse husbandry.


Thanks! I read the thread. :) it's a long one, and I've tried to search thru it. :) can't find people with an issue like mine. :/
 
Unless there are obvious disease symptoms, I think the most important thing for newly acquired leopard wrasses is to get them eating, and on a northern hemisphere day-night schedule. Once you have that, then you can use the prazipro.
 
Unless there are obvious disease symptoms, I think the most important thing for newly acquired leopard wrasses is to get them eating, and on a northern hemisphere day-night schedule. Once you have that, then you can use the prazipro.


I dosed prazi this AM for fear of flukes and internal parasites. Would you recommend that I use poly filter and carbon to remove it then? If so I can do that immediately after work
 
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