sac10918
Member
Okay...
Yesterday I noticed that my bicolor blenny was rubbing himself constantly, and then I noticed that my female black clown had a lot of teeny tiny white dots on her face. I am assuming the blenny had them too but his color was too light to really see them. THe male clown looks okay. Of course, my parents don't believe me that they have some sort of disease because they think I am always obsessing about the fish and their eyes can't see quite as well as mine. So, they think that I am over reacting and that we shoud just leave the fish alone. This morning I woke up and now my male clownfish has these really tiny white dots around his face also. The blenny and the female are still hiding in the rockwork but I have a feeling that they are not any better. My problem is that I cannot tell if this looks like ICH or broklynella. When looking at the female yesterday, I noticed that one of her middle black stripes looked like it had some dry looking scales on it.
Here are my parameters:
12 gallon aquapod
Tests as of yesterday...
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 0
Nitrate 0-10
Copper 0
Temperature 80 F
Alkalinity 9dkH
pH 8 (usually at 8.2 but i think my RO top off water lowers it)
Phosphates 0
I can try to get a pic but like I said, the markings are so small that my family doesn't even believe they need treatment! Of course, this appears 2 weeks after I added my unquarantined bicolor. Please help me! The fish dont really look necessarily like ICH or broklynella. Do I need to wait for this disease to progress before I can really tell what it is?
THanks
Yesterday I noticed that my bicolor blenny was rubbing himself constantly, and then I noticed that my female black clown had a lot of teeny tiny white dots on her face. I am assuming the blenny had them too but his color was too light to really see them. THe male clown looks okay. Of course, my parents don't believe me that they have some sort of disease because they think I am always obsessing about the fish and their eyes can't see quite as well as mine. So, they think that I am over reacting and that we shoud just leave the fish alone. This morning I woke up and now my male clownfish has these really tiny white dots around his face also. The blenny and the female are still hiding in the rockwork but I have a feeling that they are not any better. My problem is that I cannot tell if this looks like ICH or broklynella. When looking at the female yesterday, I noticed that one of her middle black stripes looked like it had some dry looking scales on it.
Here are my parameters:
12 gallon aquapod
Tests as of yesterday...
Ammonia 0
Nitrite 0
Nitrate 0-10
Copper 0
Temperature 80 F
Alkalinity 9dkH
pH 8 (usually at 8.2 but i think my RO top off water lowers it)
Phosphates 0
I can try to get a pic but like I said, the markings are so small that my family doesn't even believe they need treatment! Of course, this appears 2 weeks after I added my unquarantined bicolor. Please help me! The fish dont really look necessarily like ICH or broklynella. Do I need to wait for this disease to progress before I can really tell what it is?
THanks