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View Full Version : DETECTIVE WORK: chain reactions you'd never believe...


Sk8r
03/01/2014, 11:32 AM
1. case one: fish turns up with red mark on side. Disease suspected.
A: possibly so, but in one case of this, the red mark was from a pistol shrimp. How detected? The wounded fish dens in burrows and low in the rocks at night. More than one fish turned up like this. Fatally so. Removing the pistol shrimp prevented further cases.

2. case two: another red mark, but no pistol present.
A: The offender turned out to be a rabbit in too small a tank. Ordinarily the rabbit is not aggressive, but when too small a tank---they start eliminating their tankmates, who manage to tick them off and corner them. Freaked-out rabbit = dead tankmate.

3. case three: red spot with hole in side.
A: Culprit: a tang, again, too small a tank. When fish are too crowded, they freak. The position of these wounds is usually dictated by a combination of the victim's usual posture in dodging, and the sidelong tail-swipe of the killer.

4. case four: everybody in the tank showing sudden irritability---water test reveals plummeting alkalinity. [This affects fish's skin and gills---as you would feel if you were swimming in water of a burning ph.]
A: What caused the alk to plummet? New addition to the tank was a very healthy 3-head stony coral. Prognosis: unchecked, fish would be susceptible to disease and the coral would close up and die. Cure: rebalance the water. When the coral hit the water, it started feeding---and that means it was sucking up all the calcium it could get. When calcium depletes, it affects two other situations: your magnesium level, and your alkalinity. These three exist in a balanced 'lock' in which, if you supplement calcium either with a calcium additive or kalk, the coral gets what it needs and does not take the water out of balance.

5. case five: related to case 4. Mostly fish, none doing well.
A: Alkalinity is the answer. The owner was concerned about ph, but not testing alk. This becomes very important in a marine tank. Ph shifts all the time, hour to hour, and you can go nuts trying to 'fix' it. Use it as an indicator of when to look at your alk, but alk is the Big Deal: test that at least weekly, and have a supplement to correct it. Hint, from case 4: no matter what kind of tank you have, fish-only, FOWLR or reef, learn that cal-alk-mg balance [420 cal, 8.3 alk, 1200 mg] balance and keep it---your fish will be happier.

chaaban
03/01/2014, 11:42 AM
Im printing this and putting it by the tank. Great info! Thanks

snorvich
03/01/2014, 04:02 PM
Well done!

ReneeF
03/01/2014, 05:44 PM
Your posts are great, thanks!

moondoggy4
03/01/2014, 08:43 PM
Thanks for all the helpful tips.

reefwiser
03/01/2014, 08:48 PM
Good stuff

EricBuzz
03/01/2014, 09:26 PM
Thanks for the tip

julie180
03/02/2014, 09:40 AM
I could see a rabbit being ****ed off in a reef tank. Do you mean a rabbit fish :)

Sk8r
03/02/2014, 09:49 AM
Yes. When we say frog we mean frogspawn coral. Rabbitfish are poisonous, and can deliver a necrosing sting to us, rather like a fiddleback spiderbite: I wear leather gloves under my waterproof ones if I have to intervene in a tank in any way that could intersect that fish.

trinidiver
03/02/2014, 11:57 AM
Nice read

Sk8r
03/02/2014, 12:25 PM
Test for that weekly.
If it's 'off' a water change can help matters, but you may need to supplement, over time.

This will be ok for fish and corals.

Note that if you have stony coral or clams, it can suck the calcium out and crash the other two readings. You DO have to supplement with stony and clams.

CoralBeauty13
03/02/2014, 01:53 PM
Sk8r, you give some of the best info. I have learned something new...again.