Dear all, I would be grateful if you could help me to identify and approach a few problems I encountered with my fish. I built a DIY one-in-all pico reef tank. The tank successful cycled, CuC was introduced. After a few weeks I added basic beginner corals (GSP and mushrooms), small cleaner shrimp and sexy shrimp.
The water parameters were in check for next few weeks (undetectable ammonia, nitrate, nitrite and phosphate), so I decided to introduce yellow clown goby and hi fin red banded goby. Both fish were first drip acclimatised to tank water, and subsequently freshwater dipped (RODI) for 3 minutes prior to addition to the tank. Both fish were a bit stressed for the first day, but then started acting more confident and eat readily (frozen food).
1 Problem:
I realised that the cleaner shrimp started illiterately pestling the hi fin red banded goby to the point that the fish become really stressed and irritated by the presence of the shrimp. The second dorsal fin was partially ripped. I also observed that the shrimp tried to clean mouth and gills of the fish in a bit brutal manner. As a result, the fish looks more stressed than right after the addition to the tank, spends all the time hiding and stopped eating food readily and often spits after grabbing it. It looks a bit skinny. This is in total contrast to the yellow clown goby that eats everything happily and is not disturbed by the shrimp. I tired to spot feed the hi fin with a pipette, but it wasn't very successful.
2 Problem:
The yellow clown has been healthy, eating well and exploring the tank for the past week since the addition. Then I realised little white spots on his body and I also observed that it tried to scratch its body with the rock. Next day some sort of dimples appeared on its body, perhaps related to scratching. In addition, I noticed that the hi fin tried to shake / scratch its body in a sand. My first impression was that it could be related to the population of copepods and amphipods in the tank.
Photos:
Healthy fish after addition:
After one week:
I would be grateful for any suggestions. If this is caused by pests then removing cleaner shrimp would be counter-intuitive. However, the hi fin red banded goby seems to be very stressed.
The water parameters were in check for next few weeks (undetectable ammonia, nitrate, nitrite and phosphate), so I decided to introduce yellow clown goby and hi fin red banded goby. Both fish were first drip acclimatised to tank water, and subsequently freshwater dipped (RODI) for 3 minutes prior to addition to the tank. Both fish were a bit stressed for the first day, but then started acting more confident and eat readily (frozen food).
1 Problem:
I realised that the cleaner shrimp started illiterately pestling the hi fin red banded goby to the point that the fish become really stressed and irritated by the presence of the shrimp. The second dorsal fin was partially ripped. I also observed that the shrimp tried to clean mouth and gills of the fish in a bit brutal manner. As a result, the fish looks more stressed than right after the addition to the tank, spends all the time hiding and stopped eating food readily and often spits after grabbing it. It looks a bit skinny. This is in total contrast to the yellow clown goby that eats everything happily and is not disturbed by the shrimp. I tired to spot feed the hi fin with a pipette, but it wasn't very successful.
2 Problem:
The yellow clown has been healthy, eating well and exploring the tank for the past week since the addition. Then I realised little white spots on his body and I also observed that it tried to scratch its body with the rock. Next day some sort of dimples appeared on its body, perhaps related to scratching. In addition, I noticed that the hi fin tried to shake / scratch its body in a sand. My first impression was that it could be related to the population of copepods and amphipods in the tank.
Photos:
Healthy fish after addition:
After one week:
I would be grateful for any suggestions. If this is caused by pests then removing cleaner shrimp would be counter-intuitive. However, the hi fin red banded goby seems to be very stressed.