Missing fish...presumed dead

Brieninsac

Member
I noticed yesterday morning during feed my Coral Beauty Angelfish was no where to be seen. This was very unusual for him since he never misses a meal. Using a flash light I was able to see him swimming inside my aquascape. So I didn't worry too much and left for work.

When I got home yesterday I couldn't see him anywhere. He still hasn't reappeared so I'm fearing the worst. I can't see his body anywhere so he's got be somewhere I can't get to.

My question is if he's dead how bad is this going to be on my tank if I can't get his body out? He was only about 3" long. I have about 10 crabs too.
 
I noticed yesterday morning during feed my Coral Beauty Angelfish was no where to be seen. This was very unusual for him since he never misses a meal. Using a flash light I was able to see him swimming inside my aquascape. So I didn't worry too much and left for work.

When I got home yesterday I couldn't see him anywhere. He still hasn't reappeared so I'm fearing the worst. I can't see his body anywhere so he's got be somewhere I can't get to.

My question is if he's dead how bad is this going to be on my tank if I can't get his body out? He was only about 3" long. I have about 10 crabs too.

The crabs will take care of it. Your tank will spike with Ammonia but if you have enough rock/bacteria you may not even see the spike. Iv`e lost fish and never noticed it.
 
If you have an extra power head lying around you might want to use that & see if you can dislodge the body. While the CUC might take care of it for you, I would much rather remove a corpse then let it sit there and rot for who knows how long. Your Nitrates might rise a little, but nothing catastrophic.
 
With 10 crabs he might be consumed entirely over night.
But I would still check he's not under some rock rotting. Crabs can't get everywhere because of their shell


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If you see it, feel free to pull it out. In all likelihood, you'll never see another trace of it if it is dead.
 
Any chance he's jumped behind the tank? I've found several fish chips over the years with a flashlight behind my tank. Even managed to have a chromis jump behind my canopy which has netting on the back recently.
 
In my experience (2 years) the carcass is consumed within 3-6 hours. The CUC comes out from wherever in full force. I have 55G tank and never saw a Nitrate spike.
The circle of life can spin quite fast in a fish tank. . . .
 
Thanks for the advice. I tested my water today and my Nitrates were 8ppm, Nitrites .1 and Ammonia 0. So I'm going to do a 30% water change tomorrow. I'll use the turkey baster around the area he was last seen. Otherwise, it's business as usual.
 
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