Got a new Coral Beauty Friday evening and I broke every cardinal new fish rule that reefers follow and I’ve learned my lesson.
Idiot mistake #1 - Fish had just been received the day prior and I asked to see it feed. They put some mysis in and the CB went after it with gusto but immediately spit every piece out - clearly was not his normal diet. LFS that will remain nameless gave me the spiel about how he’d gotten a dozen in and they were mostly gone in 24 hours. I know CB is an easily attainable fish but I fell for the FOMO like an idiot and bought the fish.
Idiot mistake #2 - I am still relatively new to reefing (a little over a year) and have not purchased many fish yet. I have never quarantined (go ahead, I deserve a bashing) but have always been lucky enough to never have any real problems. Until now...
I added the CB to my 60 gallon long that houses 2 clowns, 3 YT damsels and one Tomini Tang, all of whom get along swimmingly. At first the Tang was just curious but then it got adversarial pretty quick. The CB was doing a good job of ducking and weaving and I turned the lights out and hoped peace would be found by the next day. I was wrong.
Tang continues to pursue CB aggressively and I realize one of them has to come out. By the time I can set up a quick QT tank and catch the CB the Tang had gotten a pretty good nip out of his side. The CB has been in his own 10 gal QT since Sunday but still will not eat. His nip actually looks good and has begun healing well. His color is still good and he's still swimming with ease but he stays in one cave or the other just turning slow circles and going through some repetitive motions, poking his head of a hole then pulling it back in repeatedly.
I have tried frozen mysis (again), nori, LRS and yesterday and today live black worms and masstick. Zero interest whatsoever. I'm starting to accept that it's looking pretty bleak for him unless anyone out there has other suggestions?? I'm willing to do whatever can give him a chance, I feel I did not do right by him with my hasty purchase and subjecting him to injury in an inhospitable environment.
Idiot mistake #1 - Fish had just been received the day prior and I asked to see it feed. They put some mysis in and the CB went after it with gusto but immediately spit every piece out - clearly was not his normal diet. LFS that will remain nameless gave me the spiel about how he’d gotten a dozen in and they were mostly gone in 24 hours. I know CB is an easily attainable fish but I fell for the FOMO like an idiot and bought the fish.
Idiot mistake #2 - I am still relatively new to reefing (a little over a year) and have not purchased many fish yet. I have never quarantined (go ahead, I deserve a bashing) but have always been lucky enough to never have any real problems. Until now...
I added the CB to my 60 gallon long that houses 2 clowns, 3 YT damsels and one Tomini Tang, all of whom get along swimmingly. At first the Tang was just curious but then it got adversarial pretty quick. The CB was doing a good job of ducking and weaving and I turned the lights out and hoped peace would be found by the next day. I was wrong.
Tang continues to pursue CB aggressively and I realize one of them has to come out. By the time I can set up a quick QT tank and catch the CB the Tang had gotten a pretty good nip out of his side. The CB has been in his own 10 gal QT since Sunday but still will not eat. His nip actually looks good and has begun healing well. His color is still good and he's still swimming with ease but he stays in one cave or the other just turning slow circles and going through some repetitive motions, poking his head of a hole then pulling it back in repeatedly.
I have tried frozen mysis (again), nori, LRS and yesterday and today live black worms and masstick. Zero interest whatsoever. I'm starting to accept that it's looking pretty bleak for him unless anyone out there has other suggestions?? I'm willing to do whatever can give him a chance, I feel I did not do right by him with my hasty purchase and subjecting him to injury in an inhospitable environment.
