As many in this community are aware I went through an early catastrophe in my 350g display. To summarize:
1. I was stocking fish weekly after a 2-3 month cycle period.
2. I started with 5 fish and waited two weeks, all parameters remained stable with no Ammonia or nitrites anymore.
3. I waited two weeks for those to get acclimated in their new home. (they did great, didn't lose a single one.)
4. Added 2 bigger fish after 2 weeks.
5. Added a few smaller fish weekly.
6. added a batch of anthias all together bringing my total fish count to 19 by mid April.
7. Started having 2 fish die every 2-3 days (at the same time though)
8. By the 12th fish death, I was panicking, testing everything I could. Nothing was wrong water wise, and corals were growing.
9. Discovered then that heater was culprit. Electrical shock was going through the water column in the display from the sump. - Removed both heaters, bought brand new ones.
10. Remaining 4 fish showed signs of getting better and started eating more. the yellow wrasse jumped out after I did some cleaning a couple weeks ago. So, down to 3 fish. But the remaining three are doing awesome. I've trained the foxface to eat from my hand and all 3 are doing great.
11. Some fish showed lumps under their skin all over (especially a powder blue I had), it looked like a lumpy fish. Probably at least a couple dozen small lumps on both sides of it. LIke it's skin was bubbling. Other fish had signs of bruising around their gills. Some fish had no signs at all of why they died.
12. The strange thing is that through the whole ordeal, I never saw a sign of Ich. I expected that to be the first issue...
All this to summarize.... Given that three fish survived it all and are healthy (as far as I can tell) now:
A. Am I safe to start adding more fish?
B. Anything I can do (antibiotics, something that encourages slime coat, or otherwise) to prep the display for new fish? My only concern is there's something nasty still in there that I can't get rid of. And new fish will be subjected to it. Or am I better off just getting 1-2 test new fish and see what happens in a month or so?
I could QT new fish and then put them in, but, they could be safe and healthy in the QT and die in 24 hours of something in the Display. The last of the algae from the fishpocalypse is dieing off and I'm hand pulling that last remnants of it this weekend and doing another water change. Nitrates are undetectable now. (Got as high as 1 before). And phosphates were testing at .12 according to Red Sea kit. Not sure how accurate that is because the algae I've pulled over the last 2 weeks in the display (piles of it) hasn't grown back at all.
So, thoughts? New fish? Or am I dooming any new fish and the three fish I have are immune to the bubonic plague and they should be extracted for research by the CDC for the cure to the next pandemic?
1. I was stocking fish weekly after a 2-3 month cycle period.
2. I started with 5 fish and waited two weeks, all parameters remained stable with no Ammonia or nitrites anymore.
3. I waited two weeks for those to get acclimated in their new home. (they did great, didn't lose a single one.)
4. Added 2 bigger fish after 2 weeks.
5. Added a few smaller fish weekly.
6. added a batch of anthias all together bringing my total fish count to 19 by mid April.
7. Started having 2 fish die every 2-3 days (at the same time though)
8. By the 12th fish death, I was panicking, testing everything I could. Nothing was wrong water wise, and corals were growing.
9. Discovered then that heater was culprit. Electrical shock was going through the water column in the display from the sump. - Removed both heaters, bought brand new ones.
10. Remaining 4 fish showed signs of getting better and started eating more. the yellow wrasse jumped out after I did some cleaning a couple weeks ago. So, down to 3 fish. But the remaining three are doing awesome. I've trained the foxface to eat from my hand and all 3 are doing great.
11. Some fish showed lumps under their skin all over (especially a powder blue I had), it looked like a lumpy fish. Probably at least a couple dozen small lumps on both sides of it. LIke it's skin was bubbling. Other fish had signs of bruising around their gills. Some fish had no signs at all of why they died.
12. The strange thing is that through the whole ordeal, I never saw a sign of Ich. I expected that to be the first issue...
All this to summarize.... Given that three fish survived it all and are healthy (as far as I can tell) now:
A. Am I safe to start adding more fish?
B. Anything I can do (antibiotics, something that encourages slime coat, or otherwise) to prep the display for new fish? My only concern is there's something nasty still in there that I can't get rid of. And new fish will be subjected to it. Or am I better off just getting 1-2 test new fish and see what happens in a month or so?
I could QT new fish and then put them in, but, they could be safe and healthy in the QT and die in 24 hours of something in the Display. The last of the algae from the fishpocalypse is dieing off and I'm hand pulling that last remnants of it this weekend and doing another water change. Nitrates are undetectable now. (Got as high as 1 before). And phosphates were testing at .12 according to Red Sea kit. Not sure how accurate that is because the algae I've pulled over the last 2 weeks in the display (piles of it) hasn't grown back at all.
So, thoughts? New fish? Or am I dooming any new fish and the three fish I have are immune to the bubonic plague and they should be extracted for research by the CDC for the cure to the next pandemic?
