Yellow Hat
New member
Last night I came home from work to find my new yellow watchman gobie ripped open dead and being picked over by my peppermint shrimp. I don't know if it was killed or died of natural causes. Here's the history, if anyone has a guess I'd like to hear it.
Two weeks I bought the gobie and introduced it to my tank. He seemed fine, even picked a little cave right in front view on the tank. He basically stayed in his little 6 inch radius space.
One week ago my bubble tip anemonie died (it had wandered loose and twisted in a knot, again while I was at work this time I couldn't save it). I did a quick water change and tested the conditions. Ammonia was 0 and so was nitrite. Nitrate was at 10 ppm. But after that, the gobie seemed to be breathing rapidly, which he wasn't doing before.
The day he died he was swimming all over the tank instead of his usual territory. Not spaztically, but rather swimming slowly from one rock perch to another. Still breathing rapidly, though.
Now, I have an emerald crab that is as large in diameter as a half-dollar coin (if not larger). While he is not usually aggressive, he does have a favorite spot that he protects. I have two clown fish that the crab leaves alone.
This brings about the question.....did the gobie die because of natural causes (or tank conditions)? Or could the crab possibly have done it? It makes a huge difference because if I want any new fish I might need to remove the crab.
Sorry for the long post. Any ideas?????
Two weeks I bought the gobie and introduced it to my tank. He seemed fine, even picked a little cave right in front view on the tank. He basically stayed in his little 6 inch radius space.
One week ago my bubble tip anemonie died (it had wandered loose and twisted in a knot, again while I was at work this time I couldn't save it). I did a quick water change and tested the conditions. Ammonia was 0 and so was nitrite. Nitrate was at 10 ppm. But after that, the gobie seemed to be breathing rapidly, which he wasn't doing before.
The day he died he was swimming all over the tank instead of his usual territory. Not spaztically, but rather swimming slowly from one rock perch to another. Still breathing rapidly, though.
Now, I have an emerald crab that is as large in diameter as a half-dollar coin (if not larger). While he is not usually aggressive, he does have a favorite spot that he protects. I have two clown fish that the crab leaves alone.
This brings about the question.....did the gobie die because of natural causes (or tank conditions)? Or could the crab possibly have done it? It makes a huge difference because if I want any new fish I might need to remove the crab.
Sorry for the long post. Any ideas?????