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Naso Tang Problem. Help needed


si_sphinx

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Tank is a RSM 130

2x blue/green chromis

1x Naso Tang

1x cleaner shrimp

1x linckia starfish

1x RBTA

various corals etc.

Today at midday I noticed my Naso Tang lying in the back of the tank. I thought he was dead so gave him a nudge and he swam out around the tank ad then settled down in the back again against a rock and seemed to be resting.

My fist reaction was to do a water change fast.

So changed 20% of water (forgetting to save some for tests)

And I had to get back to work.

I cam home at 5.30 and noticed he was still in the back of the tank.

He seen me come to the tank and he came out like he always does expecting food.

He is now swimming around the tank all wobbly and looks dazed.

He has gone dark with the usual gray spots when they are stressed.

So I did water tests on the tank now I had time.

Ammonia 0.0

Nitrite 0.0

Nitrate 0.0

pH 8.2

Phosphate 2.0 - 5.0

Only thing I have done different since I added him 3 weeks ago is a 150mm dia Brain coral last Saturday.

After close inspection of the Tang when he stopped in a corner I think I can make out tiny white spots on his fins and possibly on his body. If it is Ich then the spots are a LOT smaller than what I am use to on freshwater fish. So small I wouldn't even have considered is as Ich

Would Ich cause my Tang to be acting like this or is it something else?

Some advise would be very helpful as all this marine stuff is new to me and I don't have a lot of experience.

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Yes it looks quite stressed already.

I definitely think it is Ich now having a closer look at it.

I have read about a freshwater dip to help relieve the Ich, it kills the Ich on the fish and gives the fish a chance to recover if put into QT. However it would get infected straight away again if I put it back in my tank.

Has anyone got experience with this?

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Well the fish is dead this morning.

Looks to be Ich got the best of it. hundreds of tiny shiny dots on it. Could that be velvet?

Ive read velvet attacks the gills first and by the time you see it on the body it can be too late. But the fish wasn't breathing heavily like the symptoms say it should have.

IMG_20121103_090329.jpg

IMG_20121103_090212.jpg

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bummer

depending on the individual fishes physiology symptoms can express differently

usually by the time we notice something is wrong with a fish it is an advanced stage

catching and moving them just adds more stress which can lower their immune system even further

it takes awhile for either disease to develop and show on fish

keep your eye on the rest of fish and keep water parameters good

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