HELP! White cottony substance all over fish?

mccanei

Member
My clown trigger developed some fin rot during a bout with ick. I started hypo almost down to 1.009 except now he seems to have white cottny film covering majority of body. Not sure if it fungal or bacterial infecion, or how to treat. I was thinking melafix pimafix combination? Anyone have better treatments for this kind of disease?
 

scsinet

Active Member
More information needed!
1. List all water parameters... as many as you have test kits for.
2. Is your fish eating?
3. What is his behavior? Active? Listless? Lethargic?
4. What is his breathing rate?
5. Can you post a photo?
 

mccanei

Member
Originally Posted by SCSInet
More information needed!
1. List all water parameters... as many as you have test kits for.
AM: 0
Ni: 0
Na: 40
PH: 8.2
2. Is your fish eating?
Yes- Pellets, shrimp from grocer, clam from LFS
3. What is his behavior? Active? Listless? Lethargic?
He is still pretty active
4. What is his breathing rate?
Normal
5. Can you post a photo?
Working on attachng some images


 

scsinet

Active Member
This looks like environmental stress. It looks a little like velvet but your fish wouldn't be active, eating, or breathing normally if velvet was that established on the body.
Your nitrates are way too high.
Do a big water change... 20%-30%.
You can also use a chemical treatment like Prime to knock down the nitrates quick, but I'd try the water change first. You'll probably see a very quick improvement (in an hour or less) if you address that nitrate issue.
I'm curious why it got so high...
What is your water change regimen?
Tell us about your filtration.
How many fish are in the tank and how many gallons is it?
Are you skimming?
 

mccanei

Member
Originally Posted by SCSInet
This looks like environmental stress. It looks a little like velvet but your fish wouldn't be active, eating, or breathing normally if velvet was that established on the body.
Your nitrates are way too high.
Do a big water change... 20%-30%.
You can also use a chemical treatment like Prime to knock down the nitrates quick, but I'd try the water change first. You'll probably see a very quick improvement (in an hour or less) if you address that nitrate issue.
I'm curious why it got so high...
What is your water change regimen?
Tell us about your filtration.
How many fish are in the tank and how many gallons is it?
Are you skimming?

I am guessing it got high becasue I removed all live rock to hypo tank. The tank is 145 FOWLR. 3 fish: 4" clown trigger, 6" por puffer, 7" surge wrasse. I believe these fish are under environmental stress from partitioning the aquarium with a piece of plexiglass. I did this upon the introduction of the wrasse. I used to do this in freshwater with great success, maybe it does not work so well with saltwater fish. I am running a wetdry system recirculating water 6x an hour. My skimmer is the reef devil deluxe, and it had been not been running for a couple of weeks prior to last week ( I treated my fish w melafix last month for fin rot and had trouble getting it running). Since I have been hypoing I have been making plenty of water changes, so I am little puzzled as to why my nitrates wer so high. So I guess my big question is whether to pull my partition out and see if the fish get along or get more stressed out?
 

mccanei

Member
upon furhter observation the clown is still eating, and active but the white cottony substance is slightly stringy in places andthe fish is scraping on objects. Is there a chance it is brooklynella?
 

mccanei

Member
Today he has accelerated breathing approx 120/minute. Is it posssible for hardier species like triggers to be slowly affcted by velvet or brooklynella? Anyone?
 

scsinet

Active Member
This sounds like one of those two now that the breathing has increased.
I'd do a PH adjusted FW dip for 5 minutes as quickly as possible. You need to get the infection off the gills.
I don't know much about brooklynella, but once velvet affects the breathing, you don't have much time left.
 
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