New S. gigantea, treating with Cipro

Breadman03

New Old School
Premium Member
I ordered this from LiveAquaria. It arrived well packed and at 80 degrees.

Just a quick look over the QT.


Right into the QT after a 5 minute float since salinity was a match and the QT was about a degree cooler.


Tight fitting egg crate to isolate the anemone from the heater and airstone. I decided to use the airstone because there is no risk of the 'nem getting chewed up with it, yet it still created a decent current.


After several hours, it took this pose for around an hour..


It then wandered down the mug and stayed like this for about a day.


Then after lights out.


It looked like that before I left for work this morning. When I returned home, it looks like this. Other than the first 3 hours or so, the mouth has been tight.


The tentacles have become a little longer since I got it, and it has spread out a bit. The body appears to be quite strong and doesn't flop about in the light current. The only thing my novice eye notices is that the mouth is gaping with its insides hanging out.

I'm curious how this specimen looks to those with more experience, and whether there is a problem that I'm not seeing.

QT parameters: 78 degrees, 1.026, no ammonia registering on alert badge, 8 hour lighting period with 4x48" T-5 (not HO) bulbs. 20 gallon tall tank with 10 gallons in it. At lights out, I siphon out 5 gallons, making sure to collect any debris in the tank, and replace it with temp and salinity matched water. I am dosing 250 mg of Cipro immediately after lights out, which works out to 25 mg/gallon. Due to my inexperience, I decided to treat immediately so that I wouldn't risk missing "the signs" until it was too late, and I don't have a camera like Worm's to enlist your help on the watch rotation.

Also, this is typical of the debris that has been coming from the 'nem. In the 14 or so hours since last nights water change, I only see 3 in the tank.


Thanks for the help!

FWIW, my wife is puzzled that we have to be home from game night by 9 tomorrow so that I can give an anemone its antibiotics. :spin1:

This is from my 5 year old::hb2:
 
He looks good. Keep on treating him. Best of luck with him. LA also have a nice small one and somebody got him quick
 
I may have gotten LA's in-stock email notification at work and taken a break just to order it because I missed them the last few times they came in. They go quick, especially when they've been out of stock for so long.
 
I would put in a small PH. I used a ML 1200 point away from the anemone works fine. Or a Korrelia (sp) 400 works OK also
 
I have an old, no-name powerhead in there, just waiting to be plugged in. I'll get that running, too. I'll turn off the airstone if it starts sucking bubbles, though.

It definitely looks good. Is this the one LA decribed as yellow?

No. This was just "SW - True Carpet Anemone, Tan - Large", that is linked to their S. gigs.
 
Absolutely looks good for a newly shipped animal... The mouth is normal and mine did that for days if not longer as it was adjusting.

Keep us updated.
 
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Early this morning.
 
Looks good in my opinion.. He has great posture, and seems to be holding himself up just fine. Keep it up.
 
Doing great until today. It squeezed through the eggcrate and got a haircut. I came home from work to see that, though with the motor still attached. It wasn't deflated, but was pulled together tightly. I hit the power and carefully rotated the motor off so that there would be minimal weight on the animal. As soon as I had the motor off, it started to open up again to what you see here. I hope to see it free itself from the rest of the powerhead so I can assess the damage and allow healing to begin.

 
1 day after powerhead damage. Necrotic tissue has me worried. The powerhead was firmly stuck yesterday. When I touched the remaining piece, the 'nemesis retracted and tore off a small piece that was still firmly in the plastic. My biggest concern was that the necrotic tissue was trapped against the 'nem and would produce foster an infection.

I'm considering a double dose of Cipro this evening to make sure there's no problem. Is this advisable? It has remained inflated in this corner since the Incident.

Thank you!

 
Do you have any clowns? I know this may sound odd, but every time I've had a nem have a duel with a powerhead the clowns would tend to the wound. They rip off the dead tissue, leaving a clean wound. Looks like a nice bald spot when they're done. Something to consider.

I don't know if doubling the Cipro dose will help, but it sounds like the current 250mg/10 gallon dose is conservative, so I don't think doubling it will do any harm, if you choose to do so.
 
I do have a clown, a female percula. My concern with that is that the clown in an uncycled QT would cause an ammonia spike. Hmm. I wonder if Prime and Cipro could be used at the same time. I've only got about 28 gallons of water mixed, and it's currently heating from about 60 degrees. I've been refilling my 32 gallon Brute whenever I get below half full, which I just did this evening.

Maybe my best bet will be to give it a double dose tonight, then move it to my DT in the morning in hopes that my clown will tend to it.
 
One clown, especially if you feed sparingly and do 50% water change should cause no problem. I think doubling on the Cipro will not cause any harm. I don't know if it help. I double the dose of the Cipro when I treated my anemone mainly to keep it around longer which is of more important IMO. Increase the concentration is just the side effect.
 
The percula is in the tank and Cipro is at 50mg per gallon. I've had an ammonia alert badge in the tank since I started it, so it will be easy to observe, and I've been doing a daily 50% water change anyway.

Thank you for your advice!
 
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