Maxx
Staff Housemonkey
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2003
- Messages
- 2,935
Hi Lee,
Managed to aquire a smaller pair of A. leucokranos clowns...by pair I mean two, (as opposed to mated) and by smaller I mean the larger one is about 1.25 inches, and the smaller not quite an inch in length.
These fish shipped very poorly, and looked about as close to dead as I'd ever like to see fish in my care. I was warned that they might look "lethargic" when I got them, and if looked like that when I got them, I was told to do a fast (less than 30 minutes) acclimation and get them in the tank. They were in the bag for about 15 hours, (start to finish), and I did the fast acclimation and got them into a 10 gallon tank. They looked stressed, but not horribly so, in fact they ate the day they arrived.
The next morning, I looked at the larger one and saw several white patches that appeared like a mucous coating, some larger white spots that could have been ich, and the fish was breathing very rapidly...somewhere in the vicinity of 150 + bpm based on gill plate movement...
Quick double check of the signs/symptoms of Brook, and I was pretty sure she had it....which meant the other one had it too...
I was able to get the large clown caught...but the smaller one evaded me. I did a 30 minute formalin bath in one gallon of water as per this link here...
http://www.petsforum.com/personal/trevor-jones/formalinbaths.html
She was "rinsed" and returned to the 10 gallon tank....I know, but I was gonna be late for work otherwise, and didnt have time to set up a proper hospital/qt tank.
The next day, I caught both clowns and did another 30 minute formalin bath, "rinsed" them both, and then put them in the only other tank I have, a 2.5 gallon tank. It has an airstone, a small heater, and a piece of PVC, and I lowered the salinity to 1.009 as per my refractometer.
This morning, did another formalin bath. Water for the bath came from the 10 gallon tank, "rinse" water came from another cycled tank which is a completely different system, and the QT was siphoned empty, and fresh water from the same system the "rinse" water came from was placed in the qt, and it was lowered to a salinity of 1.009 again.
Just checked the clowns again when I got home from work....the larger one is looking much better, and actually chasing the smaller one away from the PVC....they both ate today...so things are looking up.
My questions, (finally) are this....
When I'm done with the formalin baths, how long should I watch the clowns to see if the Brook is completely gone? The 10 gallon has a Golden Dwarf Moray in it currently, along with two anemones. I'm thinking that Brook can use the GDM as a host as well, cant it? With the anemone's in the tank, I will not be doing anything to the tank in general....but do I need to do a series of Formalin baths on the GDM too? I've read that dosage of Formalin on scaleless fishes is less then the dosage for scaled fish....what would be the right dosage in this case? How long do I need to leave the 10 gallon fallow of fish (if at all) to be sure the Brook is gone? Is hyposalinty necessary in this case? I realize it wont treat the Brook, but is the lowered osmotic pressure helping the fish in case or is not really necessary?
Any suggestions or advice would be much appreciated in this situation.
Thanks,
Nick
Managed to aquire a smaller pair of A. leucokranos clowns...by pair I mean two, (as opposed to mated) and by smaller I mean the larger one is about 1.25 inches, and the smaller not quite an inch in length.
These fish shipped very poorly, and looked about as close to dead as I'd ever like to see fish in my care. I was warned that they might look "lethargic" when I got them, and if looked like that when I got them, I was told to do a fast (less than 30 minutes) acclimation and get them in the tank. They were in the bag for about 15 hours, (start to finish), and I did the fast acclimation and got them into a 10 gallon tank. They looked stressed, but not horribly so, in fact they ate the day they arrived.
The next morning, I looked at the larger one and saw several white patches that appeared like a mucous coating, some larger white spots that could have been ich, and the fish was breathing very rapidly...somewhere in the vicinity of 150 + bpm based on gill plate movement...
Quick double check of the signs/symptoms of Brook, and I was pretty sure she had it....which meant the other one had it too...
I was able to get the large clown caught...but the smaller one evaded me. I did a 30 minute formalin bath in one gallon of water as per this link here...
http://www.petsforum.com/personal/trevor-jones/formalinbaths.html
She was "rinsed" and returned to the 10 gallon tank....I know, but I was gonna be late for work otherwise, and didnt have time to set up a proper hospital/qt tank.
The next day, I caught both clowns and did another 30 minute formalin bath, "rinsed" them both, and then put them in the only other tank I have, a 2.5 gallon tank. It has an airstone, a small heater, and a piece of PVC, and I lowered the salinity to 1.009 as per my refractometer.
This morning, did another formalin bath. Water for the bath came from the 10 gallon tank, "rinse" water came from another cycled tank which is a completely different system, and the QT was siphoned empty, and fresh water from the same system the "rinse" water came from was placed in the qt, and it was lowered to a salinity of 1.009 again.
Just checked the clowns again when I got home from work....the larger one is looking much better, and actually chasing the smaller one away from the PVC....they both ate today...so things are looking up.
My questions, (finally) are this....
When I'm done with the formalin baths, how long should I watch the clowns to see if the Brook is completely gone? The 10 gallon has a Golden Dwarf Moray in it currently, along with two anemones. I'm thinking that Brook can use the GDM as a host as well, cant it? With the anemone's in the tank, I will not be doing anything to the tank in general....but do I need to do a series of Formalin baths on the GDM too? I've read that dosage of Formalin on scaleless fishes is less then the dosage for scaled fish....what would be the right dosage in this case? How long do I need to leave the 10 gallon fallow of fish (if at all) to be sure the Brook is gone? Is hyposalinty necessary in this case? I realize it wont treat the Brook, but is the lowered osmotic pressure helping the fish in case or is not really necessary?
Any suggestions or advice would be much appreciated in this situation.
Thanks,
Nick