New Queen Angel. How to get him eating?

Dark

New member
Hi guy's!

I introduced yesterday a queen angel, and I was wondering if you had some advices to get him used to eating dry food. Also, I noticed that he tended to rub against the rocks from time to time. Is this a sign of a parasite or something?

Any advice are welcome...

Thanks in advance!

Dark
 
Rubbing against rocks, often called "flashing" can be indicative of parasites like ich.

Obviously QT'ing new fish is best so that such a problem is treatable.

As for eating, queen angels aren't usually very picky. If he's healthy, he'll eventually eat anything and everything you throw in there. Try finely minced meaty foods like shrimp, scallop, mysis, brine shrimp, etc.
 
Just like SDguy says QT is best. Hopefully it's in QT right now...If there isn't any visible signs of ich yet, it could be flukes or internal parasites. But I would dose Prazipro in a QT since its a pretty safe for the fish, but those are definitely some signs. Also watch to see if it twitches sometimes along with rapid breathing at the gills. I would try to increase oxygen in the tank as well. Queens usually take dry pellets, but get it to eat mysis first. Then you can wean in the dry pellets as it starts eating. I use VitaChem to dose the food also. Hope that helps.
 
QT will kill external parasites that make the fish uncomfortable. Healthy queens will eat nearly all kinds of pellets. You can try scallops,mysis, or brine shrimp first.
 
Thanks for responses!

Can you explain more about QT's? I'm not sure what is the best way to QT.

Dark
 
You're basically setting up another tank to quarantine your fish. This is what most people do prior to introducing a specimen into their display tank to prevent a disease breakout with your current livestock and to get your specimen eating regularly to build strength and reduce stress.

It could be as simple as a 20-30 gallon tank (or depending on the size of fish), with no substrate or live rock. However I like to keep some in there to keep it as natural as possible, keep it cycled and running in case of emergency. Maybe a pvc elbow or tee for a hiding spot. A heater, HOB filter with carbon, powerhead, sponge filter, and light. Some like to prophylactically dose medications with Prazipro, like I do, and then treat with Cupramine if Ich is visible on the fish. Others dose immediately upon arrival. I like to wait a couple of days before treatment, get them to eat (with vitachem supplement), do a water change, dose the medication per the directions on the bottle.

QT period can be for 4-8 weeks depending on your confidence level that the specimen is healthy. Most people are strict at 8 weeks minimum or longer. Bottom line - get them healthy before you put a specimen in your display tank with fish that may be territorial and want to beat it up for fear of their food supply. This will get them acclimated to captivity better than dropping it in your display tank right from the get go. If they get stressed out they may go on a hunger strike and starve themselves to death. I've seen it happen first hand during my early years in the hobby.

BTW - just so you know this is to reduce the chance of spreading disease in your tank and to get your specimen as healthy as possible, but it's not always bulletproof. Some do a strict QT procedure only to have it still get some disease somehow, so keep that in mind.
 
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