sepulatian
Moderator
Originally Posted by joker3762
My Blue tang just died
Those spots i was referring to at the end covered the whole underside of his body, It was a light blue color and was only on the bottom. Could he have died from ich and could my flame angel have died due to ich.
Let me know what you think
I don't know what your flame looked like to determine the death. Was he completely covered in ich? Ich is a parasite and a fish is usually COVERED before they succumb to it unless the fish has a very weak immune system. As far as the spots on your tang. Ich spots are not light blue. They are small and white. I am so sorry to say that I realy think these deaths were due to the ph shock that went on yesterday into today. Test your RO water, it has a low ph and it wet into a tank that had a high ph. What many people don't know about ph is that it is calculated logarithmic. Meaning that between the points 7.9 to 8.0 there is a 10 point difference. This means that 7.9 is 10 times more acidic than 8.0 So if your RO water was 7.2 and your tank water was 8.2 that is 100X more acidic water that went into a tank that needs a stable environment. Salt fish can't take a flucuation of 8.0-8.2 too quickly. It isn't your fault, you didn't know.
My Blue tang just died
Those spots i was referring to at the end covered the whole underside of his body, It was a light blue color and was only on the bottom. Could he have died from ich and could my flame angel have died due to ich.
Let me know what you think
I don't know what your flame looked like to determine the death. Was he completely covered in ich? Ich is a parasite and a fish is usually COVERED before they succumb to it unless the fish has a very weak immune system. As far as the spots on your tang. Ich spots are not light blue. They are small and white. I am so sorry to say that I realy think these deaths were due to the ph shock that went on yesterday into today. Test your RO water, it has a low ph and it wet into a tank that had a high ph. What many people don't know about ph is that it is calculated logarithmic. Meaning that between the points 7.9 to 8.0 there is a 10 point difference. This means that 7.9 is 10 times more acidic than 8.0 So if your RO water was 7.2 and your tank water was 8.2 that is 100X more acidic water that went into a tank that needs a stable environment. Salt fish can't take a flucuation of 8.0-8.2 too quickly. It isn't your fault, you didn't know.