Ok so I recently started up my very first saltwater tank. It's a 60 gallon aquarium that I let run for about 2 months before I added some Chromis', 10 hermit crabs, and some snails. After seeing them successfully strive in my tank for about 3 weeks, I decided I wanted to go ahead and get a clown.
I went to a local aquatic shop and found the clown I wanted who was a baby black ocellaris. I noticed he had some white speckles on him but when I asked the owner of the aquatic shop about his health he insisted the fish was healthy. He prepared food for him and allowed me to watch him eat (which he happily did) to show his good health. He was a good swimmer, and ate fine. The owner of the store insisted he did not have ich.
i've only had to deal with ich once in my freshwater tank a long time ago, so i couldn't know for sure if this was what ich would look like on a clownfish so I went ahead and trusted the guy who had owned the aquatic shop for 16+ years, figuring he knew what he was talking about.
But the SECOND i got him home it just looked way too much like ich not to worry about it. He's been in my tank for three days now, and still has the white speckles all over him. The guy at the store told me he was just missing some scales due to some aggressive tank mates, but I do not believe that's what it is anymore.
Can you tell by this picture if this is Ich? and if it is, how should I go about treating it? I've never dealt with ich in a saltwater tank before, and since I have 2 other fish in there I don't want to harm them, but my hospital tank is not ready yet to add a fish into (it is still cycling) and I don't want to stress him out even more by moving him into a smaller tank. My other fish are fine, do not have ich. My clown is eating just fine from what I see and is very active. So anyways, please leave some tips! I know the pics aren't the best quality, it's hard to get a good shot on my phone of a clownfish who is always moving.


I went to a local aquatic shop and found the clown I wanted who was a baby black ocellaris. I noticed he had some white speckles on him but when I asked the owner of the aquatic shop about his health he insisted the fish was healthy. He prepared food for him and allowed me to watch him eat (which he happily did) to show his good health. He was a good swimmer, and ate fine. The owner of the store insisted he did not have ich.
i've only had to deal with ich once in my freshwater tank a long time ago, so i couldn't know for sure if this was what ich would look like on a clownfish so I went ahead and trusted the guy who had owned the aquatic shop for 16+ years, figuring he knew what he was talking about.
But the SECOND i got him home it just looked way too much like ich not to worry about it. He's been in my tank for three days now, and still has the white speckles all over him. The guy at the store told me he was just missing some scales due to some aggressive tank mates, but I do not believe that's what it is anymore.
Can you tell by this picture if this is Ich? and if it is, how should I go about treating it? I've never dealt with ich in a saltwater tank before, and since I have 2 other fish in there I don't want to harm them, but my hospital tank is not ready yet to add a fish into (it is still cycling) and I don't want to stress him out even more by moving him into a smaller tank. My other fish are fine, do not have ich. My clown is eating just fine from what I see and is very active. So anyways, please leave some tips! I know the pics aren't the best quality, it's hard to get a good shot on my phone of a clownfish who is always moving.



