Powder Blue Tang.. Hellpppp!!!!!

Wsantos

New member
Heres a better picture guys.. I need help identifying whats on his tail. Up close to the naked eye, it looks like a small cottonball. I also see it on his fins by his stomach.
 

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that is not a powder blue but rather looks like an atlantic blue...
hard to tell in pic but it could be a lymph cyst...
you can try to gently "slide" it off with your fingers...moving down towards the end of her tail...
you could also wait and watch- they do sometimes fall off on their own..
can you post some better and larger pics?
good luck...
 
Well, you can wait til she falls asleep and catch her and try to gently remove with your fingers....or wait and see...I only see the one on her tail and those do usually fall off...I can't see the others you mentioned..
good luck...
 
How about trying a R/O dip for 5 minutes along with trying to remove the object? This is a new fish in a quarantine tank with 5 other mates..
 
I am not sure what an ro dip would do...doesn't look like flukes etc...
I would wait until she is asleep and gently try to scrape it off- again moving towards the end of her tail...
 
Just a word of caution, be very careful to match pH and temp when doing a Freshwater Dip. RO water can many times have a lower pH due to many of the impurities that buffer our tap water being filtered out Just plunking the fish down in some RO water could definitely do more harm than good.

That being said, I am a big proponent of the FW dip method, especially when getting a new fish. If the fish is remotely healthy, it should be able to spend at least 10 minutes in FW. I have dipped a moorish idol for as much as 30 minutes. In my experience, I generally see the flukes start to appear in the first minute and they usually fall off after 3-4 minutes.

Regardless of all that information, a white ball is much more symptomatic of Lympho. Treatment for that is excellent water quality and excellent nutrition. My understanding of the disease is that it is a virus and not much can be done to combat it, outside of surgery in very extreme cases. At this point, I would not recommend a freshwater dip unless signs of flukes are present (heavy breathing, flashing, poor appetite,etc.)

I would do a water change and then be sure to offer some form of algae on a clip daily and also another quality herbivore food. I would add some Vitachem to the herbivore food, I like Ocean Nutrition formula 2 if you can find it.

Lastly, it is definitely an Atlantic Blue tang. Good Luck!
 
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