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02/04/2018, 12:43 AM | #1 |
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White lesions on royal gramma basslet tail - is it Ich?
I have no experience with marine fish diseases. I have a royal gramma basslet, a bicolor angel, a red flame angel, an orchid dottyback, a Midas blenny, and a banggai cardinal in a 65 gallon tank. All the fish have been in there for three months or longer, except the royal gramma basslet which I've had for around 3 weeks. I check and feed my fish daily, but only yesterday I noticed these white lesions on the tail, sort of like two cottony white bumps, plus part of the tail is missing (unclear if another tank member bit it or if it just degraded due to some infection). It doesn't really seem to look like the pictures of marine ich I've seen, but I can't figure out what else it could be? (Sorry the picture is so blurry!)
How should I treat it? I have two shrimp in my tank, emerald crabs, hermit crabs, and a (dark black/reddish-colored) brittle star. By the way, the brittle star is new. After floating the bag, I added tank water to the water the was already in the bag and then waited; then I submerged the cut-open bag in the water and allowed it to climb out on its own accord (I didn't just "net it out" because I wasn't sure if exposure to air was harmful or not?) But I guess this was a bad choice because it could have introduced disease into the tank via the tank water from the LFS. |
02/04/2018, 06:54 AM | #2 |
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Does your gramma not eat, have trouble breathing, scratch himself on rocks, act lethargically? If he has Ick he will have all these symptoms, and will progressively get worse.
I can see what your talking about, looks like someone chased him and had a bit. I might just wait a bit and see if it progresses, if the fish is sick he will show signs of stress in his behavior. |
02/04/2018, 06:56 AM | #3 |
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Just remember if your going to treat, never in your DT.
The best would be cupramine, (copper) but as I said, outside the DT, or it will kill everything in your DT, and only treat him if there appears to be a real need... |
02/04/2018, 07:14 AM | #4 |
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There is a fungus amoung us.
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02/04/2018, 07:32 AM | #5 |
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The lumps, IMO, look like lymphocytis. It does, however, look like somebody took a chunk or two out of it's tail. No action is needed if it is lymphocytis - the lumps will fall off on their own.
Who else is in the tank? Any hitchhikers you are aware (or unaware) of?
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02/04/2018, 12:24 PM | #6 |
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Flukes?????
Is he flashing or rubbing up against the rocks? Are his eyes cloudy? Something tells me it's flukes!
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02/04/2018, 01:34 PM | #7 |
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02/04/2018, 04:04 PM | #8 |
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Thanks all for your responses! No hitchhikers that I'm aware of. The fish isn't scratching against anything, and there's no unusual behavior. Here's a couple more photos
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02/04/2018, 04:05 PM | #9 |
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Also he was acting slightly sluggishly a couple days ago but doesn't seem to be doing it today (maybe its a coincidence?) His eating has been normal
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02/04/2018, 07:43 PM | #10 |
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02/05/2018, 05:57 AM | #11 |
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I still say it’s fungal.
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Quitters never lose. [QUOTE=CStrickland]Who gets mad at a starfish?[/QUOTE] Current Tank Info: 75g DT, 30G refugium, 10g chaeto tank, 50g stock tank basement sump |
02/05/2018, 11:29 AM | #12 | |
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Quote:
I agree that if a fish shows all of those symptoms it will be few days away from death. But that doesn't mean all fish that have ich will go up to that point or will eventually have all those symptoms. Some fish can gain immunity and others have naturally high resistance against protozoan parasites, so they can show very little external symptoms, but they will still have ich and carry it. |
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02/05/2018, 12:38 PM | #13 |
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So if you could clarify....a fish can carry the Ick parasite.....move through the cycle....fall off then start the division trick.....but never feed on the host?
Can you help me with that? |
02/05/2018, 01:15 PM | #14 |
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True, some fish have a natural immunity from the sea, some develop immunity after surviving a bout.....my point was if you start to see something....Ick is one of the most common, fast action of copper or hypo can save your fish....but I hear you...
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02/05/2018, 01:38 PM | #15 | |
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Even for a "un-immune" fish, by the time you get visible signals, it means ich went trough several cycles and multiplied its numbers. |
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02/05/2018, 04:00 PM | #16 | |
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Simon Got back into the hobby ..... planned to keep it simple ..... yeah, right ..... clearly I need a new plan! Pet peeve: anemones host clowns; clowns do not host anemones! Current Tank Info: 450 Reef; 120 refugium; 60 Frag Tank, 30 Introduction tank; multiple QTs |
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02/05/2018, 04:04 PM | #17 | |
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Simon Got back into the hobby ..... planned to keep it simple ..... yeah, right ..... clearly I need a new plan! Pet peeve: anemones host clowns; clowns do not host anemones! Current Tank Info: 450 Reef; 120 refugium; 60 Frag Tank, 30 Introduction tank; multiple QTs |
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02/05/2018, 08:22 PM | #18 |
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I had understood that after a period of time with no host (and that period max out at 72 days) or after a year of the cycle process (Ick wears itself out) then Ick is gone and only can occur if added to the bio-sphere again through new introductions, or water itself....
Do you agree with this research? I am interested in your thoughts. |
02/05/2018, 09:52 PM | #19 | |
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Quote:
72 days is mostly correct but some say as long as 90 days. Basically that is the time required to break ich's life cycle and starve it to death. The other part is a bit more complicated. There seems to be some evidence that suggest it can get eradicated if all fish gets immune to it and no new fish (or ich strains) are added for a extended period of time. But exactly how long does this take or if it will always happen or not is unclear. |
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02/06/2018, 03:17 PM | #20 | |
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Draw your own conclusions. Mine are that I probably have a milder strain of ich and that it does not 'burn out' after just one year.
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Simon Got back into the hobby ..... planned to keep it simple ..... yeah, right ..... clearly I need a new plan! Pet peeve: anemones host clowns; clowns do not host anemones! Current Tank Info: 450 Reef; 120 refugium; 60 Frag Tank, 30 Introduction tank; multiple QTs |
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02/06/2018, 03:23 PM | #21 | |
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Quote:
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Simon Got back into the hobby ..... planned to keep it simple ..... yeah, right ..... clearly I need a new plan! Pet peeve: anemones host clowns; clowns do not host anemones! Current Tank Info: 450 Reef; 120 refugium; 60 Frag Tank, 30 Introduction tank; multiple QTs |
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02/06/2018, 03:42 PM | #22 | |
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Quote:
So I believe basically it is what you said, their immunity only makes them harder targets, not "un-infectable". This cause the ich populations (that is also genetically constrained) to gradually drop and disappear. But this is why I said this immunity thing is complicated. It might be highly case specific, so one year, 2 years, or longer, or never could be the answer depending on the tank. We know very little about the microscopic makeup of our tanks. Some tanks might have a good population of protozoan predators (like amoebas), protozoan viruses, a large population of filter feeders. All these might determine if it is a complete eradication or a very small but viable population (like in your case). The only case I observed ich dying out is with my dad's tank. My dad has a 300g tank that he has been keeping for more than 20 years. When I was still living with my parents I remember he had ich. But it eventually disappeared. Now he qt's his fish and no fish, new or old show any spots. It makes me believe at some point, ich disappeared. Last edited by Tripod1404; 02/06/2018 at 03:52 PM. |
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02/06/2018, 08:11 PM | #23 |
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I still haven't administered any treatment. If it's ich then the parasites should have "dropped off" by now right? Should I go ahead and give ich medication just to be safe? But some folks^ think its fungus, bacteria, or flukes lol so I'm not sure which to prioritize.
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02/07/2018, 05:40 PM | #24 | |
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It was true, went from COVERED in dots to totally normal in a week. No other fishes have ever got it. I never treated it at all other then step up up my tank cleanings.
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02/07/2018, 05:41 PM | #25 | |
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Honestly, I'd start with feeding garlic. It is amazing! Seriously.
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Tags |
disease, ich, marine ich, royal gramma basslet |
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