jmm
New member
I started a new tank with all new equipment. The rock, dry rock, was "cooked" with Muriatic acid. The sand was dry sand (Reef Flakes) that I thoroughly washed before adding it to the tank. It was so clean that there was no clouding up when I added the RO/DI water. I cycled with pure ammonia (Dr. Tim's) and Dr. Tim's bacteria. It actually cycled in two days. The refugium section had new Marine Pure blocks.
Next in were two Blood Shrimp (fire shrimp). They were fed New Life Spectrum pellets for two weeks. Then I started buying fish and quarantining them for 6 weeks in a 30 gallon I keep for that. No fish added to the display tank showed any sign of disease.
Fish now included a pigmy wrasse, a clownfish, a Tinker Butterfly, a Mitratus Butterfly, a Pearlscale Butterfly, a Magnificent Foxface (a mistake, a trap is on order), and an Indian Ocean Teardrop Butterfly. None of these fish are recent additions. It has been several months since I added fish.
In all this time there has been no hair algae, no bubble algae, no pest algae or cyano of any kind. All I've had to do was clean the glass. The fish had smooth, unblemished skin and clear fins. There was no itching and behavior was eager and competitive with no bullying except the Foxface would chase but not catch the Mitratus.
Today, this morning, in fact, some of the butterflies had a little cloudiness to their fins. As the day has progressed, some more cloudiness and some of the others are showing it. It's not a fine powder like Ick. Or is it? It now shows up on some of their bodies as well as their fins. So far, their appetites are still competitive and only three of the butterflies are displaying symptoms.
What is this and where did it come from? If it's bacterial or chemical sloughing, what did I do? This tank has been trouble-free in all respects for so many months and nothing has been changed and nothing new added.
Any ideas?
If general dirtyness was possible since it is an open top tank I changed the socks, replaced the GFO and carbon and I am now mixing up a water change. Any more ideas?
Next in were two Blood Shrimp (fire shrimp). They were fed New Life Spectrum pellets for two weeks. Then I started buying fish and quarantining them for 6 weeks in a 30 gallon I keep for that. No fish added to the display tank showed any sign of disease.
Fish now included a pigmy wrasse, a clownfish, a Tinker Butterfly, a Mitratus Butterfly, a Pearlscale Butterfly, a Magnificent Foxface (a mistake, a trap is on order), and an Indian Ocean Teardrop Butterfly. None of these fish are recent additions. It has been several months since I added fish.
In all this time there has been no hair algae, no bubble algae, no pest algae or cyano of any kind. All I've had to do was clean the glass. The fish had smooth, unblemished skin and clear fins. There was no itching and behavior was eager and competitive with no bullying except the Foxface would chase but not catch the Mitratus.
Today, this morning, in fact, some of the butterflies had a little cloudiness to their fins. As the day has progressed, some more cloudiness and some of the others are showing it. It's not a fine powder like Ick. Or is it? It now shows up on some of their bodies as well as their fins. So far, their appetites are still competitive and only three of the butterflies are displaying symptoms.
What is this and where did it come from? If it's bacterial or chemical sloughing, what did I do? This tank has been trouble-free in all respects for so many months and nothing has been changed and nothing new added.
Any ideas?
If general dirtyness was possible since it is an open top tank I changed the socks, replaced the GFO and carbon and I am now mixing up a water change. Any more ideas?