Any advice on this lesion on the side and head of my male lyretail anthias? Still eating but definitely scratching on rocks and wavemakers.
Better video under white light:
Better video under white light:
Last edited:
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Have had the fish for approximately three months.tmhickey2023 Welcome to the Fish Disease Treatment and Diagnosis Forum!
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- Brief description of the issue you are observing and answers to the following questions:
- How long have you had the fish with the condition?
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- Current water quality measurements
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This fish is thin and is a lyretail anthias, not wrasse. Additionally needs a supply of food throughout the day and is displaying odd swim behavior. Need another video but Under bright white lighting as this fish is susceptible to both skin irritation and uronema. Hard to see skin under the current lighting. Also need more video length as fish moves a lot which is typicalHave had the fish for approximately three months.
He has been behaving normally up until yesterday. Some scratching noted. He is still eating well.
I did not quarantine as I do not have a suitable QT yet.
No treatment done as of yet.
Tank is RedSea 350; so 90 gallon volume. 10% Water change completed last week.
Water parameters:
Ammonia and Nitrite zero;
Salinity 1.025
Nitrate: 0.0 ppm
Alk: 8.4
Calcium: 400 ppm
Phosphate: 0.02 ppm
Magnesium: 1375 ppm
Posted videos that I hope are clear enough.
Thank you!
Videos are a bit blue to see clearly, but the fish looks a bit thin and tattered. Combined with the scratching you’ve seen, skin flukes would be a good possibility. You can treat that with Prazipro, dosed twice, 8 days apart with good aeration (an air stone). Run any skimmers, but don’t collect the skimmate. Remove any carbon from the filter during treatment.Have had the fish for approximately three months.
He has been behaving normally up until yesterday. Some scratching noted. He is still eating well.
I did not quarantine as I do not have a suitable QT yet.
No treatment done as of yet.
Tank is RedSea 350; so 90 gallon volume. 10% Water change completed last week.
Water parameters:
Ammonia and Nitrite zero;
Salinity 1.025
Nitrate: 0.0 ppm
Alk: 8.4
Calcium: 400 ppm
Phosphate: 0.02 ppm
Magnesium: 1375 ppm
Posted videos that I hope are clear enough.
Thank you!
Yes sorry about the title. I stated it correctly in the body just typed wrong name in title.This fish is thin and is a lyretail anthias, not wrasse. Additionally needs a supply of food throughout the day and is displaying odd swim behavior. Need another video but Under bright white lighting as this fish is susceptible to both skin irritation and uronema. Hard to see skin under the current lighting. Also need more video length as fish moves a lot which is typical
Thanks. That was what I was thinking so I’ll try that as well as get another better video.Videos are a bit blue to see clearly, but the fish looks a bit thin and tattered. Combined with the scratching you’ve seen, skin flukes would be a good possibility. You can treat that with Prazipro, dosed twice, 8 days apart with good aeration (an air stone). Run any skimmers, but don’t collect the skimmate. Remove any carbon from the filter during treatment.
Add to diet:Yes sorry about the title. I stated it correctly in the body just typed wrong name in title.
He does get 3 feedings daily from plank auto feeder as well as a supplemental feeding where I alternate artemia and some phytoplankton which I soak in various supplements.
I’ll try to get a new video with just white light.
Thanks for the input!
Added prazipro today at 85% of recommended dose and placed air stone in sump. Definitely noticed one nem and a couple lps close up a bit.Videos are a bit blue to see clearly, but the fish looks a bit thin and tattered. Combined with the scratching you’ve seen, skin flukes would be a good possibility. You can treat that with Prazipro, dosed twice, 8 days apart with good aeration (an air stone). Run any skimmers, but don’t collect the skimmate. Remove any carbon from the filter during treatment
Added prazipro today at 85% of recommended dose and placed air stone in sump. Definitely noticed one nem and a couple lps close up a bit.
New Video:
Yes that’s what I thought. I wasn’t certain of volume so I used the 85% estimate.Just to be clear - Prazipro needs to be dosed at 100% of the dose on the bottle, for the net volume of water in the tank. The 15% lower is just if you don’t know the actual net water volume, 15% is just a common amount of water displaced by the rock in the tank.
Yes that’s what I thought. I wasn’t certain of volume so I used the 85% estimate.
Was the new white light video better?