Lethargic Chromis Breathing heavily

Theexp

New member
I bought 3 Green Chromis on Saturday from my lfs, They have been fine the last 4 days, eating ground up hikari marine a pellets. So this morning i turned on lights, fed and left for school, and everthign was normal. But then when i got home today 2 of the 3 chromis were laying on their sides, on the rock, breathing heavily. One has a small red dot on the top of his head. I tested ph, ammonia, nitrate, and nitrite, and everything is in order. Salinity is at 1.025. Any advice would be great. Right now I have them quarantined. Any help would be great. thanks alot
 
No offence intended but "everything in order" is kinda vague. Has your tank cycled? What was the ammonia level?

Breathing heavily is often a sign of an ammonia issue which has burned the gills or a parasite infestation of the gills.

Can you provide a picture of the fish? Do you show any signs of ich (salt like spots) or any discoloration/sheen on the their skin?
 
My tank is cycled. I've had live rock in it for months. Ammonia is 0, Nitrates 0, nitrites 0, ph is ~8.7 which is high, I know. (sorry for being vague) the fish has no Ich, but has a slight redening around gill and head area. will post pictures when camera battery charged.
 
Thanks.

If the tank has been cycled for months I assume these aren't your first fish. If that correct - what other fish are in the tank, how long have they been there, any losses and if so when and what symptoms did they show?
 
CHROMIS003.jpg

CHROMIS005.jpg
 
Well they died, at 940. I don't know why. I have some more pictures if that helps. I think they might have taken a ride down the overflow which could have stressed/damaged them. But that was 3 days ago, so i don't know why it'd show up now. (there was a fish in the sump twice, idk if it was 2 different ones or the same one.)
 
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In the first picture, is that the gill tissue that is red? If so...ammonia does sound like the culprit. How big was the tank? If small, 3 additional fish all at once could certainly throw the biological filter off and cause an ammonia spike.
 
its a 65 with a 20 gallon sump. I have checked ammonia, everyday since i got the fish and its been zero. I've had live rock in the tank for at least a few months, and live sand, so i do not think it is ammonia/bio, but not ruling it out. When the lights just came on it looked like the whole upper half of the fish was blood shot, had a reddish hue to it.
 
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