My Clams are dying: 1 left. Your help.

flamehawkfish

New member
hi All

Well, I lost about five clams recently, spread out over only 2-3 weeks. I lost a 7" Derasa, 2" Blue Maxima, 3" purple Maxima, a 2" Squamosa, and a 4" teardrop Maxima.

I have one 4" blue maxima left.


Here's what happened... The deresa and the 4 maximas were established for a few months & showing signs of growth. This past August, I added the Squamosa last. I got it from Liveaquaria. It looked nice for a couple weeks, but then withdrew its mantle for a day, and suddenly looked like it was obviously dying. I figured I did something wrong, or it just didn't acclimate properly.

After a few weeks, the purple maxima showed similar signs of degradation. I chalked that up to a rock falling from its shelf, and landing on my maxima. After a day, its mantle was withered, withdrawn, and the clam was dying. I removed. it.

About 1 week later, the Teardrop showed the same symptoms... It had been placed near the now-dead purple maxima, so I figured it was also damaged from that rock-fall.

About 2 weeks later, the 7" Derasa showed the same signs... heavily deflated mantle and within a day, withered and dying. This really bummed me out, as that Derasa had been with me for almost a year. It grew, and helped keep my tank clean.

At that point, I had two clams left, both blue maximas. They lived side-by-side in the sandbed, when after a couple weeks, the brighter of the two maximas didn't fully open, withdrew its mantle feebly, and died after a day.

Meanwhile, my acans, SPS, cleaner shrimp, and fish were all doing great. I had a couple bouts with Flatworms (for which, I treated w' Flatworm Exit). This treatment resulted in a lost fish, and one lost SPS, but at the time, it didn't seem to affect the clams.

I'm confident that something predatory is eating away at my clams- perhaps from their foot. All of my clams lived in the sandbed. As a precaution for my final remaining clam (a 3" blue maxima), I perched it up on the rockwork a bit. It's since settled back toward the sand-bed.

Also, when I removed the dead (or dying) clams, I inspected their innards for any obvious signs of predation (pyramid snails, a nest of worms, etc.). Nothing.

My pH is 8.2, salinity, 1.023 (and kept stable), nitrates undetectable, and, again, my other LPS & SPS are doing great.

Can you guys suggest ideas for what's causing this wipeout of my clam population?

I'm not going to get any more clams, but I hoped to salvage this last one.

Please let me know. Thanks in advance.
 
first things first, place a strawberry basket around your clam to isolate it if you don't have a separate place to house it.
i have a hunch it may be your cleaner shrimp harrassing your clams, but for it to harrass 7" models is a little sketchy.
for the pyramid snail inspection, it needs to be done 2 hours after lights out. also please provide a detailed livestock list including all fish and invertebrates.
(this is all assuming your parameters are spot on)
 
did you check your other levels. (calcium, iodine, ect) if those levels are off, i would deff. point the finger at that.
 
It might be that the new clam had a parasite Perkensia and it spread to the other clams. It is a dinoflagellate. It is a fatal mantle pinching disease.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14044749#post14044749 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Crustman
It might be that the new clam had a parasite Perkensia and it spread to the other clams. It is a dinoflagellate. It is a fatal mantle pinching disease.

That definitely sounds like a possible culprit. Beyond running carbon & making water-changes, I'm not sure how I can shield my last clam from an eventual attack from this parasite. Any ideas?

Also, EZCompany- you suggested that my cleaner shrimp could have caused this. I doubt that, as clams and shrimp lived together happily for some time- along w' most other inhabitants (detailed- as requested):
- pair of Maroon clowns
- blue damsel
- flamehawk
- 4-line wrasse (hawaiian)
- purple tang
- 10 pieces of SPS Acropora (all growing well)
- 10 Acan frags &/or full colonies (variety; mainly maricultured)- all doing well- growing fast.
- Frogspawn coral (multiple heads)
- sun coral
- star polyps, zoanthids, various shrooms
- Maze LPS brain coral
- open brain
- 2 cup corals
- 2 cleaner shrimp
- candy cane coral

Water params are solid, but someone mentioned iodine; i don't test for it, but I dose it & SPS/shrooms/frogspawn/shrimp are iodine-sensitive & they're doing well.

Here's a full tank-shot of my 95g wave-shaped tank... The last remaining maxima is at the bottom and to the right...


3151564058_91de59eedc.jpg


Last remaining clam...

3151607320_f1929a3da1.jpg
 
I've seen quite a few purple tangs take vicious nips at clams, which may also be the culprit.
It may also be a flatworm that is predatory on clams. have you shielded the maxima yet?
 
I don't think there is a cure to the parasite. The articles mention a fresh water dip but I don't know much about it. I don't think the parasite will live in your tank when the clams are gone. If you start a new collection, make sure these are parasite free.
 
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