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sabrina
08-29-2010, 12:16 AM
can anyone identify what is wrong with my Whitecheek Tang?

10 days ago he developed a white fuzz all over his body. some areas around his head had small white bumps, which lead me to believe he had Ich. his tail and lips also turned orange. his lips being especially bright orange.

4 days later he was given a freshwater dip (85/15 freshwater/saltwater mixture), for 5 minutes, then returned to the tank.

the next day the white areas were gone, his tail and lips were much less orange, but he still had that fuzz on his body.

3 days later we got a quarantine tank set up, where he currently resides. i've been giving him Ich-X (malachite green), but don't know really what disease i'm treating him for.

he is still fairly active, but his appetite is pretty much gone.

the latest is the reddish discolorations you can see in the photos. any ideas?


http://imgur.com/I8jVI.jpg
http://imgur.com/35CqR.jpg

i found this picture on another site that is a good example of the white fuzz i saw on him at first.

http://www.aqua.org.il/pic/Articles/SaltParasitic/mini3.jpg

Zoaelite
08-29-2010, 12:50 AM
I would say it is some sort of bacterial infection and you should treat as such, would wait for the experts to chime in as I have never dealt with personally.

Here is a good read:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/ca/volume_6/volume_6_2/mycobactera.htm

BlueWorldAquatic
08-29-2010, 12:59 AM
Possible Head and lateral line erosion (HLLE).

http://reefkeeping.com/issues/2005-06/sp/index.php



HLLE does not usually kill fish and affected individuals have been known to survive for years with only mild progression of clinical signs.

Home Care

To correct this condition, a change in husbandry is nearly always required. Improving nutrition combined with removing external stressors (aggressive tankmates and poor lighting) may arrest or even reverse the syndrome.

Treatment with antibiotics alone is unsuccessful, although, resolution of the lesions may be seen with vitamin C supplementation or elimination of activated charcoal from the filtration systems.

Preventative Care

The best way to prevent this frustrating problem is to avoid keeping species that are susceptible to the syndrome. Your pet store clerk and a variety of text books and magazines can help with species selection.

If you do keep HLLE-vulnerable species, then you will want to provide them with optimal environmental conditions, including: a fresh, balanced diet, artificial sunlight, preferred water temperatures and crystal clean water with frequent water changes.

Just some information I came across.

Ken - BWA

fishoholic
08-29-2010, 05:10 AM
Sounds like marine velvet to me, copper in a QT tank was the only way I saved some of my fish when they had it, also my sohal looked like your tang when he was in QT so there's a chance it could be that.

Here's a link about velvet
http://www.reefkeeping.com/issues/2004-07/sp/feature/

freddy
08-29-2010, 03:40 PM
In the past couple of months I bought a kole tang,seemed healthy next day looked terrible,just like that picture you found,started feeding metronidazole and focus in with their food,in about 4 days he looked like a brand new fish,I should have quarantined but didn't,and I forgot to mention my bicolour caught whatever the kole had,both are fine now,meds never affected inverts or corals,I also soak my food in a vitamin supplement and garlic quard,this is just my expierience,thouhgt I would share,does your fish have white stringy poop.

naesco
08-29-2010, 08:40 PM
I would treate with Mardel Maroxy for saltwter. It may be a bacterial fungus.
You need to deal with this soon to save the fish,.

piusma
08-31-2010, 03:52 PM
The reddish area could possibly be cause by ammonia. How many gallon is your QT setup and have you changed water since it's been in there? You need to stay on top of water change because this tank is most likely not cycled yet. I'd suggest you to do 30% water change for the next 5 days. That should improve on the water quality. And you should start a filter running for the tank. (That probably won't be effective for another 2 weeks or so and during this time you should do approx 20% water change ever couple of days)

Similar situation happened to me when I first started and I had a QT setup to help my fish. I had 3 fish in there and my yellow tang didn't make it because of the poor water quality. Now I run a much better QT / hospital tank setup to deal with things.

Steven

Joe Reefer
08-31-2010, 05:27 PM
Your fish has hemorrhagic septicemia or a similar bacterial infection. You need to treat it with a anti-bacterial medication ASAP. Copper will do nothing to treat this.

Spiny
09-01-2010, 12:07 AM
destroy the brain or sever the head! It`s the only way

Duffer2
09-01-2010, 03:44 AM
destroy the brain or sever the head! It`s the only way

LOL... mean but funny.