Mandarin Disease FAQs: Diagnosis
FAQs on Mandarin Disease by Category:
Environmental, Nutritional,
Social, Infectious,
Parasitic (see also:
Mandarins/Blennies/Gobies & Crypt,), Trauma,
Treatment
Related FAQs:
Mandarin Disease/Health 1,
Mandarin Disease 2,
Mandarin Disease 3,
Mandarin Disease 4,
Mandarins/Blennies/Gobies &
Crypt, Psychedelic "Gobies"/Dragonets/Mandarins
& their Relatives 1, Mandarins , Mandarins
3, Mandarin Identification,
Mandarin Behavior, Mandarin Systems, Mandarin Compatibility, Mandarin Selection, Mandarin Feeding, Mandarin Reproduction,
Related Articles: Psychedelic
"Gobies"/Dragonets/Mandarins, real Gobies & their Relatives,
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Kindly request your help. (Marine Fish Disease Mandarin Dragonet - Coral
Beauty) 9/24/15
Dear all,
<Juan>
Thank you for all the information in the website, it is amazing how much I've
learnt and the enjoyable time I've spent reading about marine tanks and species!
<Ahh; deeply gratifying to realize we have been of help to you>
My issues... A mandarin dragonet and coral beauty have something I can't
determine.
<I see these... sores, non-emarginated... in your pix>
8 weeks ago (1 week after buying it) the dragonet had a small bubble on his
right part of the head which became something like a pimple and then exploded
leaving an open gap.
<Mmm>
A few days later the coral beauty had a bit of an injury on side, maybe done by
a rock.
<May be>
I was recommended (lfs) to dip of them in Ro/di as suggested 3 times in a span
of a week.
<Just the freshwater alone? Not of use; and for browsers, DO NOTE that such
water has NO oxygen; needs to be aerated before and likely during dip/bath
procedures>
The injuries seemed to get better however two weeks ago I left for holidays and
came back 10 days later and found them worse. It seems like something is chewing
on the skin.
<Yes; at least bacterial and/or Protozoan involvement likely here>
So I did 10% water changes every day for a week (lfs suggestion) and then
treated the tank with Myxazin for 5 days as the instructions said but it didn't
seem to work, they also told me to apply a bit of directly to the fish's wound
for three straight days which I did however it didn't work as my coral beauty is
dead (RIP). The mandarin is eating and active.
I'd appreciate your help to identify the disease or cause so I can treat them
properly or prevent it from happening again. Maybe both each fish has is a
different case.
Thank you!
Data:
Levels after coming back from holidays: (08/09/2015): salinity 1.026, phos 0,
no2 1, no3 0, ammonia 0, pH 8, kH 6 ....
Levels after Myxazin (21/09/2015); salinity 1.026, phos 0, no2 .5, no3 10!!!,
<Not a worry>
ammonia 0, pH 8, kH 6 ....
My tank: 40 gallon tank, skimmer, phos reactor, wm Jebao rw14 . no sump.
Livestock: frags ( ZOA's, hammer, pulsing Xenia.), small rbta, 2 fire shrimp,
Nassarius and turbo snails, small paired clownfish, mandarin and coral beauty.
Pics attached
<Well; w/o microscopic examination of sampling, possibly culture; one can only
guess in these situations.... Which I REALLY don't like. Were it me/mine, I
might try lacing foods of use for a few day treatment of Metronidazole... but
otherwise would seek to make the environment optimum and stable and hope the
Mandarin comes to stasis.
Bob Fenner>
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Dear Bob,
For the last three years we have owned
a seemingly happy and fat mandarin fish. It was housed in a 110
gal mixed reef tank which was packed with about 75kg of mature
live rock. Along with picking food from the rock it would also
take frozen food at feeding time, and always looked healthy and
alert.
About four months ago we downsized
from that aquarium to a 60 gal bow-front tank. When downsizing we
got rid of the larger fish but also sold around 40kgs of live
rock.
This morning I came down to aquarium
and the mandarin was dead! It did not have a pinched stomach and
was eating frozen food the night before.
I just wanted to ask in your opinion
what could have been a possible reason for this mandarin to die?
There was less live rock for it to browse on, but still more than
enough to support such a small fish?
Thanks
Sam P.
Sorry to read of your loss Sam.
'Mysterious' losses are difficult to discern, but it
might well be that this fish merely perished from 'old
age''¦ Some mandarins are known (in captivity) to
have lived a few more years than this, but like Betta splendens
longevities, they're rare. I do think that some
Callionymids/oids, the group that includes 'scooters' and
psychedelic 'gobies', including mandarins do at times
pass from eating something they shouldn't have, and this is
another possibility. Additionally, I would state that in the
higher plausibilities 'cumulative stress' may well have
played a role here. Lastly, I'd
make the comment that folks really should replenish a bit of
their olde live rock every year or so, particularly if keeping
organisms that rely on forage from such like mandarins, many
butterflyfishes'¦ By adding or replacing ten-twenty
percent of the live rock with fresh.
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Green Mandarin.
5/30/15
Hi Dr. I was wondering if you knew what would cause a green mandarin to
get small bubbles/blisters under their skin and have trouble breathing.
<Mmm; yes: Exposure to stinging life, adverse chemical/physical conditions in
the water, or too much dissolved gas (emphysematosis) from air entrainment...
air mixing with water under pressure... as in an air leak around a volute>
I have lost 2 mandarins to these symptoms and cant find much
info on it. Both fish were new additions and appeared very fat and healthy in
the store.
<Look at your mechanicals, check your water quality, send along a list of
livestock. Bob Fenner>
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Re: Green Mandarin.
6/1/15
75 gallon tank 6 months old 80lbs live rock 165w led x2. Ammonia nitrate and
nitrite are 0. Sg is 1.025 checked with refractometer. Im running a 18w uv
sterilizer ,PhosBan reactor
<Ditch this>
a sca 150 skimmer 20 gallon refugium with 4 inch dsb with macro algae. Jebo 25
wave maker 800gph return. I use 0 tds
rodi water instant ocean reef crystals i feed Larry's reef frenzy every other
day. Inhabitants are 2 occeralis clowns 1 fire fish goby 1 Tomini tang 1
lawnmower blenny lots of blue led red leg and left handed hermits lots of Cerith
Astrea and Nassarius snails a feather duster frogs spawn Zoas Palys
<These last two could be culprits>
Montipora chalices and hairy mushrooms. I do a 25% water change every other
week. Sorry for the poor grammar structure typing from my phone and trying to
list all i can. But i have tried 2 mandarins both from same store they looked
great in the store no pinched stomach or anything. I drip acclimate for 45
minutes and within 3 days they get what looks like bubbles
or blister under their skin. Im at a loss to whats causing it and so is my lfs
who is usually pretty good you may know the owner Dexter hill at triad reef
critters.
<Mmm; doesn't ring... BobF>
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My Mandarin keeps floating to the surface 3/26/13
Hi!
Your site is great! I have a question about the health of my Mandarin
Dragonette. I am very nervous as I am afraid his end is near. My water
parameters are all perfect with my PH at 8.3 and my salinity is at
2.3/2.4.
<I understand... but density is stated otherwise... 1.023... a bit lower
than natural here. I would raise. See WWM re>
I purchased him a week ago the day he arrived to the LFS. I properly
acclimated him and then released him into my tank. My tank is literally
crawling with pods, they cover the glass even with the lights on but I
have never seen him eat.
<Might well be species of copepods, other crustaceans here that are
unpalatable to this fish/species>
I have never even seem him peck at the rocks. Lately his is not moving, he
keeps pinning himself between coral and rocks, If he doesn't he floats
to the surface.
<Mmm, a bad sign... esp. w/ Callionymids... what does this portend? Some
sort of injury (most Dragonettes are "harpooned" w/ a small dart...
yours may have been poked inside, decomposition internally?)>
The fish tries in vain to keep swimming to the bottom of the tank but just
keeps floating back up like he is wearing a life jacket! He looks
to be in good health, good color, eyes are very active... but I know he
is starving to death!!
<Mmm, the only real course of action is patience here. Nothing can be
done by you... and the fish won't "spread something" to your other
stock>
I don't know what is wrong or if I should remove him from the tank and
maybe bring him back to the LFS to see if he will survive. I heard it
could be a swim bladder issue which relates to bad water conditions/over
feeding.
He hasn't eaten anything in over a week so it cant be that... The
holding tank he was in at the LFS was filthy and he was sitting at the
bottom covered in the gunk, could that be the cause? What do you
think?
<Am sticking w/ my best guess, above... this specimen was "needled" in
capture... will hopefully recover spontaneously. Keep the faith. Bob
Fenner>
Thank you,
Dustin
Mandarin Issues, hlth. 12/7/12
Hey crew got another question for you guys. So I've got a 40 breeder
with 80 pounds of live rock and 40 pounds of sand. I also have a 6
gallon H.O.B. Refugium with a ton of Chaeto, feather Caulerpa, and grape
Caulerpa I mean this thing is packed I also but pods once a month
online. Now here's the problem I have a male and female target mandarin
pair the females extremely fat but the males really scrawny they used to
spawn daily but that was when they were both fat. Now the male has been
hanging around on the bottom I was thinking the female was keeping the
from eating but they still hang out a lot I was thinking of taking him
to the fish store where work and putting him and putting him in a coral
flat. But I was thinking was that maybe it more than that like an
internal parasite. Any tips or info?
<Could be both, either of the general "causes" you mention here... I
would definitely take out about half the rock to make more room, and add
a good deal of branching (e.g. Acroporid, Pocilloporid...) stony coral
skeleton to provide more habitat and water volume. I might also try
adding a combination Anthelminthic (see WWM re) and Metronidazole to
foods they accept... and add Spectrum pellets to this mix (highly
nutritious, palatable).>
Thanks,
Jack
<Welcome. Bob Fenner>
dragonet, hlth. 2/10/11
I'm not sure if this is were I ask questions,
<Tis>
its my first time, but have read many of your posts and it was saved my
fish more then once so I thank you for that. but the reason I'm
writing is because I have a 55 gallon tank that I personally tested and
then had my LFS double check my tests and although I don't know the
exact numbers off the top of my head the nitrate was near perfect and
most everything else was satisfactory, to above average. I have a pair
of fudge clown fish, 2 peppermint shrimp, a skunk shrimp, a reef safe
short spine urchin, and about a week ago got a small striped mandarin
dragonet, for the first 3-4 days he got fat and healthy and came out of
hiding to eat the abundance of pods coming from my refugium, but in the
last couple of days I have noticed he has stopped coming out and when
we do see him he has started to get thinner and seems to have stopped
eating, he also lost his color drastically compared to when we got him.
he also has what looks like short, white hair algae hanging from his
sides.
<Mmm, reads like this fish may have gotten stung (a Bristleworm,
Cnidarian...) or ate something that didn't agree with it.
Happens>
I'm extremely worried I got into salt water fish because I saw a
mandarin about a year and a half ago and its breaking my heart to see
such a beautiful fish in possible pain! I hope you can tell me
what's happening and if there's is anything I can do to stop
it.
<Mmm, no, unfortunately not. As you relate good water conditions,
nothing peculiar re the other livestock...>
Sincerely,
Justin Devine
<Just patience here. Bob Fenner>
Another Mandarin Question
1/26/11
Hello WWM crew,
<Nick>
I have been reading through your site about Mandarin Dragonets and have
not had any luck finding my particular situation; I am hoping you can
help. I have a 90 gallon reef tank that has been set up for well over a
year now and prior to that, a 75 gallon reef that housed a Green
Mandarin (he was moved to the 90 gallon about 6 months ago). The
Mandarin is VERY fat (healthy) and he has been with me for at least a
year with no apparent problems. He is housed with a red fire fish,
<Social animals; live "in twos">
1 Regal Tang (aprox. 3"), 2 green Chromis, 2 blue Chromis, 1 Royal
Gramma, 1 Watchman Goby w/ Pistol Shrimp, 2 Skunk Cleaner Shrimp, a
variety of thriving coral, a green bubble tip (aprox 2") and 1 red
bubble tip anemone (aprox 5-6");
<Mmm, I should mention that anemones can/do consume
Callionymoids>
both eating and healthy in appearance. My water parameters are: Calcium
490,
<Mmm, a bit high... your Alk., Mg conc.?>
PH 8.5, Salinity 1.025, Nitrates < 12ppm, Nitrites 0, Phosphates 0,
<Some is necessary for chemoautotrophs>
Oxygen is fine (forget exact number), Ammonia 0. I regularly supplement
Calcium, Strontium (despite a lack of concrete research), and Iodide no
more than twice per week. The tank has nearly 120 pounds of live rock,
100 pounds of live sand, a 6-bulb HO T-5 (3 white and 3 actinic)
<I'd replace two of the actinics w/ more
"white">
@ 324 watts. SO...back to the fish in question. The past two days, I
have noticed my Dragonet has been perching the entire day in one
place.
This is not typical of him, as he tends to swim the entire system
pecking at the rocks, eating the abundance of Copepods. Additionally, I
have noticed that his tail has been covered in slime (I know the
release a slime coat when stressed, but this is constantly visible the
past 2 days). The only new addition to the tank is a small (2-3")
Tiger Serpent Star who naturally, bothers no one.
<Maybe>
The fish does not appear to be losing weight and I still see plenty of
Copepods all over my glass. Any advice? I'm worried about
him....
Thank you,
Nick
<Could be a sting of some sort, or summat he ate... these are the
two most likely causes. Not much to do re either/both, other than
separate. Bob Fenner>
Dead mandarins....can't find
the culprit 1/15/11
Hi guys I want to start by saying thank you for all the great info and
your hard work.
I have a 125G saltwater fish tank, 3 years old, it has plenty of
copepods and amphipods, about 6 inches sand on the bottom and about 80
pounds or more live rock. The parameters:
Salinity 1.024
Nitrites, phosphates, ammonia 0
<Mmm, why 0.0 HPO4?>
Nitrates about 20 now but varies between 0 and 20 (we use a
denitrifier)
<Of what kind? What sort of feeder stock?>
I add iodine, essential elements
<How?>
and liquid calcium once a week.
I had a pair of mandarin gobies that were big and fat eating frozen
food and picking stuff of the rocks all day. They never showed signs of
distress or sickness. Yesterday they were swimming and acting normal
and this morning the male was dead and it seemed like his top fin and
tail were damaged (probably a crab got him after he died). The female
was on the opposite side of the tank breathing heavily and not swimming
at all. Other than that she seemed ok, no damage on the fins or the
body. I removed her from the tank and placed her in a specimen holder
and she died 10 minutes later. The male seemed to have a large white
spot on the side of his body but I am not sure if that was from a coral
stink or something trying to eat him after he died.
The other inhabitants are:
2 Banggai cardinals (pair)
a pair of ocellaris clowns
a male and female McCosker's wrasse
1 diamond goby
a pair of lyretail Anthias
1 blue hippo tang
2 garden eels (who seem to eat anything from frozen to flakes)
<Wow!>
1 royal gramma (who seems to have some whitish discolorations
<A clue>
on her head that I noticed about 2 months ago but she eats and swims
ok- could it be some bacterial infection?)
<Not likely primary>
3 skunk cleaner shrimp
1 coral banded shrimp
1 sally
2 green emeralds
about 20 Nassarius snails
bumble bee snails(6), margaritas(10), turbo(2), Trochus(5)
Corals: 1 elegance coral, 1 hammer coral, 1 frogspawn, 1 green star
polyps, xenias (3), 2 toadstool leather corals, many yellow sun polyps,
brown polyps, zoos, 1 candy cane and a couple of think<g>s I
still have to ID.
I had a green Nephthea that did great for a while but I think he grew
and became to big so it started to die off (all the little ones are
still doing ok). I noticed the yellow polyps quit opening and they
shriveled up so I came to the conclusion it must be the dying Nephthea
that's putting some toxins in the water. I removed the Nephthea,
put some activated carbon in my refugium and now 3 days later my yellow
polyps are back to normal. Could it be possible that the toxins from
the Nephthea affected my mandarins?
<Mmm, yes>
Or you think my elegance coral stung them?
<Both? Not likely>
(if so I think it's very weird it got both of them over night and
couldn't see any signs on their skin). Should I be afraid that all
my fish will have the same faith <fate>? Thanks
Alex
<Well... the two most likely categories of probable cause that occur
to me are either the supplementation/chemical treatment, including
chemical filtrant use, and/or an allelopathogenic effect w/ your
Cnidarians as you speculate... No treatment called for... I'd
review your maintenance procedures. Bob Fenner>
Sick Mandarin fish? 3/21/10
Thanks for the awesome site. I am constantly checking for all of your
great advice. I am concerned that my mandarin fish may be sick. It is a
female target mandarin that I purchased a week ago. She was young and
thin, but
very active and was only in the shop for about 3 days. I put her in my
tank where she stayed in a breeder net for the first 2 days with a
piece of live rock. Then I let her go, and she went on a feeding frenzy
in the tank. She
has filled out a bit this past week. However, the past couple days, she
has started opening and closing her mouth very quickly, with her gills
flaring.
It is extremely fast. She is still moving and feeding, but not nearly
as much. She is spending the majority of the time sitting on the sand
in front of the reef. I have also caught her twitching on the sand
substrate. It reminds of flicking due to ammonia, but there is no trace
of ammonia, nitrate, or nitrite in the tank. All of the other
inhabitants are
thriving:
Pair of False Percs
Peppermint Shrimp
Numerous Zoas, Shrooms, and xenia
1 large finger leather, candy coral, and a bubble coral
Reef contains red algae and a ton of Chaetomorpha
My reef is in a 55 gallon tank with an 8 gallon sump, and is over a
year old. I will be attaching a 6 gallon algae refugium soon.
Here are my params:
Ammonia, Nitrate, Nitrite - 0
pH - 8.1
KH - 180 mg/L
Thank you very much for the help.
- Jason
<Mmm, well, all this could be "normal behavior"... or this
fish may have eaten something that didn't agree with it... or it
might have been poisoned a bit by the Zoanthids, stung by some other
animal here... Nothing really to do but stay observant, be patient. Bob
Fenner>
Re: Sick Mandarin fish?
3/21/10
I do have a colony of Zoanthids that are brown and about 1.5-2 inches
tall.
The polyps have little hairs coming off the sides. This colony has
flatworms on it. Could she be trying to eat the flatworms off of
it?
<Yes>
I am willing to remove this colony. As far as an animal stinging her,
are you thinking the bubble coral may have done it?
<The most likely candidate here>
I have tried 3 other mandarins in the past, dating back to about 6
months ago. They have each died after about 2 days.
I blamed the first one on a lack of food, since the tank was only 6
months old at the time. The other 2 had plenty of pods available. I can
see them crawling on the rocks and in the Chaetomorpha. If this one
dies, I may be out of the mandarin hobby. I always thought feeding was
the tough part, but this is strange.
Thanks Again,
Jason
<And you, BobF>
Re: Sick Mandarin fish? 3/21/10
I just checked on her this morning and she was dead. There is no sign
of trauma, so I don't think she was attacked. I think I'm going
to cool it on the mandarins and stick to my coral and clownfish.
Thanks,
Jason
<This does sound best. Cheers, BobF>
Mandarin... hlth., poss. chewing by Isopods
2/20/2010
Hello all you fine folks at WWM.
<Salud Frank>
I have an issue with my green mandarin that I'd like to get your
thoughts on. The mandarin has been my favorite fish for about 10 months
now. I originally had him in my 75 but my girlfriend is moving in so in
order to save a little space I downsized to a RedSea max 130d (34
gallon total volume I believe) all in one setup. I kept a few pieces of
my live rock and about 2 cups of the live sand for this setup to which
I added some new live rock (smaller pieces for smaller tank) and a new
bag of CaribSea live sand (the black variety). All my water parameters
check in at desirable levels.
PH = 8.3
Amm = 0
Nit = 0
Nitrate = 5-10
salinity = 1.025
cal = 420
Anyhow my problem is that since adding the new live rock I have noticed
some little critters that resemble rolypolys only smaller.
<Mmm, could be real trouble... most (if this is what they are)
Isopods are predaceous... Read here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/isopodid.htm>
I dropped in a few shrimp pellets for the mystery wrasse and scarlet
cleaner shrimp who made the move to the smaller tank along with the
mandarin and as the pellets disintegrated on the bottom these little
bugs were foraging thru it and presumably having a meal. I have read
about the dreaded isopods on your site and made the assumption that I
must have the scavenging type since I have never seen them on any of
the livestock.
<Oh! Thus far...>
Well a couple of days ago I noticed my mandarin's lip looked odd
and tried to get a better look at it and in doing so noticed that his
tale had apparently been nibbled on as well as having a smooth looking
tear in it as well as a tear in his dorsal fin. I am wondering if this
is due to a parasitic isopod and curious if one has latched on inside
his lower jaw causing him to look like he has a fat lower lip.
<Mmm, maybe. This or something else>
I cant get a good look and he is very shy so I couldn't get a
picture for reference but he is still swimming around and hunting for
food on the live rock as well as chowing down on frozen Mysis and brine
shrimp as well as blood worms all soaked in Selcon. He has always been
a good eater but almost seems to be eating more. The thought also
crossed my mind that he could have been stung by one of my coral frags
(sun coral frag, green button polyp frag, and Sarcophyton?)
<Possibly>
or a small Aiptasia or some sort of anemone that came in on the new
live rock that is clear but don't look like Aiptasia. Anyhow sorry for
the long read but I was wondering if you might be able to offer some
advice. Any
would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks a lot, Frank
<You've about covered the most promising possibilities. Keep
your eyes open here. Bob Fenner>
Re Mandarin hlth., was fat lip, now swollen
pooter 3/10/10
Hello again. I wrote to you all concerning my mandarin a few weeks ago.
He appeared to have a fat lower lip at the time and I was fearing the
isopod was the culprit at the time but also wondered if he might have
been stung by something. Well after a couple of weeks his lip appears
to be healed of whatever caused his problem but he now has another
issue. Related or not remains to be seen. I noticed the other day that
his anus appears to be swollen. Almost bulging as if he needs to poo
but to no avail. Could this be related to his last ailment and could it
be some sort of parasite/worm or bacterial infection?
<Might be something that "stung" its mouth that now
it's having a hard time passing... could be parasitic (if this
animal perishes, do save the body for necropsy)>
What do you recommend I try to do to help the little guy? Thanks again
for your help,
Frank
<Nothing other than providing foods, good conditions. Bob
Fenner>
Mandarin/Gas Bubble q -- 11/23/2009
Hi Folks,
<Hey Rebecca! JustinN here!>
I have been searching the net as well as your site since last
night and into this morning. I am under the impression from my
research that my new mandarin has GBD. I had started him out in
my 20 gallon quarantine. It was not topped up and the hang on
filter was dropping the water about 3 inches to the water
surface. I thought nothing of it at the time as I was more
concerned about the fish not feeding while in quarantine.
<A valid concern -- many bypass a quarantine altogether with
this fish for this reason (though I am of the mindset that if you
are going to attempt a mandarin, quarantine is the best place to
attempt to wean them onto prepared foods... if it works at
all.)>
Aware of their resistance to ich (I know that they are not
immune), I decided to get him into the display where he could
eat. He did great at first, making himself a little cubby to hang
out in and eating off of the live rock. Later in the day I
noticed bumps under the skin, not white. I am familiar with ich
and did not think that it was ich but panicked and put him back
into the quarantine system and corrected the set up flaws. Now I
am wondering if he would be better off in the main display?
<Likely>
It has been set up for 2 years now with a refugium in
anticipation of this particular fish and houses one yellow tang
as well as some corals. 55 gallon with deep sand bed, full of
live rock (forgot the actual poundage), 20 gallon sump style
refugium with remora skimmer
Rebecca Bray
<A 55 gallon is not optimal for a Yellow Tang, but being that
it is the only fish in the tank, it should be ok. Continued
correspondence is below...>
Re: Mandarin/Gas Bubble q -- 11/23/2009
Just called the LFS. The remaining mandarin that came in with
mine has the same bubbles under the skin. Theirs is listing to
one side.
Rebecca Bray
<Sounds like a problem from the get-go -- I would remove this
fish before it becomes a major problem or causes issues for your
other pet-fish.>
Re: Mandarin/Gas Bubble q -- 11/23/2009
Close inspection of the bubbles with a light and magnifying glass
show that there are 3-4 distinct white spheres in each bubble.
Snail eggs?
Is that possible?
Rebecca Bray
<Mmm, not real likely, though I don't know a specific
identification for you here. I would remove/return this fish to
the LFS -- since they are seeing problems on the one in their
care, I would be surprised if they tried to argue against this.
Good luck! -JustinN>
Re Mandarin with bubbles -- 11/23/09
I was able to get a close up of the "bubbles" early
this morning.
( Notice along the edges.) His color darkened up after the light
was on awhile. He is still eating and is alert and active. I
could return him to the LFS but I am afraid he will just perish
there.
<Rebecca, I will send this msg. on for response, but are you
able to make a side view image of this fish? Bob Fenner>
Mandarin with bubbles
These are the closest I have to a side view for now. He has
become apprehensive of me. let me know if you need better
shots.
Rebecca Bray
<Mmm, can't make out much more... because both specimens
(yours, the stores) are exhibiting the same symptom, I suspect
there is some commonality in how they've been handled... is
the raised area part of the
lateralis system e.g.? About all that can be done now is provide
good care (water quality, nutrition mostly) and wait and hope.
These (Callionymids) are tough little fishes, though they appear
not to be. Bob Fenner, whose friend Rob Bray owns House of Fins
in Greenwich, CT>
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Mandarin with bubbles 11/24/09
Thanks Bob. The bubbles are not directly related with the
lateralis system. They are scattered about randomly. I am taking
a skin scrape with me to Mystic today along with enlarged photos
to see if I can
figure anything out with the Quarantine specialist. No relation
to Rob Bray but I did have a former intern go to work for House
of Fins.
Rebecca Bray
<Ahh... these don't appear to be resultant from gas
embolism, and this family of fishes have very reduced gas
bladders, so, not likely a matter of too-rapid ascent from
collection (this and the other common Psychedelic Gobies are
gathered in pretty shallow water... and with little
"spears", not chemicals generally...). Bob Fenner>
More re: Mandarin with bubbles 11/24/09
Hi Bob,
<Good morrow (here) Neale!>
> For what it's worth, my guess would be a
thicker-than-normal mucous layer collecting bubbles from the
water and perhaps silt from the substrate. The question is why is
this dragonet reacting thus, and given its behaviour has changed
as well, some investigation of environmental conditions,
tankmates, diet, etc. may be in order.
<Is a good guess in my estimation... as this group of fishes
is remarkably
"slimy"... but having enlarged the original pix as much
as I can, these "bubbles" look almost granular in
detail... not like a gas at all. If they weren't so
apparently transparent, my guess might be that they were
"sand grains" attached with mucus.>
Have seen similar with pufferfish (which also have very small
scales and thick mucous layers) after doing things like changing
out all the substrate in the aquarium. Puffers recover within a
day or two, but then they're hardy, adaptable fish that think
with their stomachs. May be different with species only
marginally tolerant of captive conditions and less inclined to
eat adequately.
> Cheers, Neale
<I'll send on this corr. to Ms. Bray. Cheers! BobF>
Re: More re: Mandarin with bubbles
11/24/09
Thanks for the input from Neale. I did a skin scrape today and
took it along with my pics to Mystic. They are stumped as well. I
did not get a good enough scrape to see anything under the scope
(first experience). When I did the scrape however I went over the
bumps on the one side and it did not affect them at all so I
can't imagine they were collected from the water. (There is
silt on occasion.) None of them ruptured. The other mandarin that
was delivered to the LFS with mine still has the same symptoms.
They came in with whatever this is. He is still alert and very
active and eating away at the live brine, Arcti pods, and pods
from the main display that I am importing to the quarantine.
<I can't pretend to be an expert on dragonets, so
Bob'll want to comment in detail on your observations I'm
sure. But if multiple specimens are showing thicker than normal
mucous layers, it might be a result of shipping stress; exposure
to some noxious chemical somewhere along the line; or else a
contagious infection of some sort (what in freshwater fishkeeping
tends to get called "Slime Disease"). This latter
appears to be some type of protozoan infection (Costia) analogous
to Whitespot/Ick, but different, and somehow triggers excessive
mucous production that appears as slimy grey patches on the body.
The last time I dealt with Slime Disease on freshwater (on a pair
of newly purchased Carinotetraodon irrubesco) I performed two
seawater dips a day apart on each fish, and treated the tank with
a product called eSHa 2000, which treats against various external
microbial infections (Finrot, Fungus, etc.) more because
that's what I had to hand than anything else. Both puffers
got better very quickly; indeed, the seawater dips seem to shift
the excess mucous within hours of treatment.
After a few days, both puffers were completely healthy, and while
an accident on my part killed the male, the female is still
happily swimming about the tank now, three years later. Because
freshwater puffers have an extremely high tolerance for salinity,
I dipped them for 20 minutes, and this may also have helped
dehydrate any external protozoan parasites. In any case, Bob may
be able to say whether freshwater dips would be helpful in this
case. While I don't imagine a 20 minute freshwater dip would
be safe for Synchiropus, some shorter period of time may well be.
Cheers, Neale.>
Re: More re: Mandarin with bubbles
11/25/09
Thanks Neale. I've been considering a freshwater dip as well
although I know how dangerous they can be for mandarins. I will
be interested in Bob's opinion.
<Mmm, not dangerous, but not generally useful for these sorts
of complaints>
The only form of "safe" treatment that we could come up
with yesterday was elevated temperature and hyposalinity.
<I wouldn't do this either... just time going by, good
care... will hopefully see these apparent pinocytic cysts
resolve>
I currently have the quarantine at 80 degrees F and I lowered the
specific gravity to 1.017 last night. I do believe that I am
seeing an improvement this morning. The most noticeable bumps are
smaller. He was sloughing off a lot of slime coat this morning
but is still as active as ever. I appreciate the continued
support from everyone on the site. It's great to have the
resource.
Rebecca Bray
<Welcome. BobF>
Re: More re: Mandarin with bubbles
11/26/09
Thanks Neale. I've been considering a freshwater dip as well
although I know how dangerous they can be for mandarins. I will
be interested in Bob's opinion.
<Mmm, not dangerous, but not generally useful for these sorts
of complaints>
<<Thanks for this Bob. I did wonder if the saltwater dips
were purely cosmetic, shifting the mucous, and the Puffers
recovered under their own steam. Always difficult to know whether
it's time or the treatment that
worked! Cheers, Neale.>>
<<In this case the former. BobF>>
Re: More re: Mandarin with bubbles
11/26/09
That sounds like good news. Can I put him back in the main
display or may this be parasitic?
<Highly unlikely to be parasitic. I would place this fish in
the main display. B>
Re: More re: Mandarin with bubbles
11/29/09
Hi Bob, Well the mandarin went into the main display on
Thanksgiving and today we have a full blown ich infestation. It
is most apparent on the tang it just didn't present as ich on
the mandarin. Shall I quarantine the 2 and let the main go
fallow?
<... all need to be moved to treatment>
I seem to have trouble keeping my ammonia under control in the
quarantine. Any suggestions?
Rebecca Bray
>Reading. B<
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Sudden Mandarinfish death 07/20/09
Dear WWM Crew,
As always, thank you for your great site. Over the 4 years that
we have had our reef tank your help and advice has been
invaluable!
<Thanks for the kind words.>
I am writing you because our Mandarinfish (Synchiropus
splendidus), that had been thriving in our tank for almost 3
years, suddenly died yesterday.
I am not sure how old he was when acquired, but he never really
grew any bigger during the time in our tank. This fish was eating
and behaving normally yesterday morning, was missing from sight
in the afternoon and showed up dead this morning. Over the years,
this Mandarinfish had been a good eater. Not only constantly
grazing the live rock, but also taking the brine shrimp
that was part of the regular food for the other livestock in the
tank. In fact, I often feed him directly from a pipette when I
was cleaning the tank. This fish did not starve to death. If
anything, he was fat.
<I agree. The fish does not look starved...>
Is it normal for these fish to die with no warning signs or
symptoms?
Could he have choked on something? Old age? Is there something
that I'm missing here?
<I honestly couldn't tell you anything you probably
haven't already thought about. Have you added any few fish to
the tank, change any parameters? Did the temp drop over night?
The problem with these explanations is that you'd think other
fish would be affected.>
Our tank setup is as follows:
* 75 G Oceanic reef ready bow front with a 20 G Eco Systems
refugium
* Water quality: 1.025 SG, 8.3 pH, 10 ppm Nitrate, 0 ppm Ammonia
& Nitrite, 420 ppm Ca, 1470 ppm Mg
* 15% water change every Friday
* 3 feedings per day. Mixture of liquid, frozen & dry
foods.
* Livestock: 2 Amphiprion ocellaris clownfish, 1 Zebrasoma
flavescens Yellow Tang, 4 Chromis viridis Blue-Green Chromis, 3
Lysmata wurdemanni Peppermint Shrimp, 2 Lysmata amboinensis
Cleaner Shrimp and 2 Lysmata debelius Fire Cleaner Shrimp, some
blue legged hermit crabs and various corals.
Thanks for your thoughts!!
<I wish I could give you an explanation, but sometimes we just
don't know why fish die. This fish might have had some type
of illness or parasite that you just couldn't see.>
Jan
<Cheers,
Sara M.>
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Target mandarin, hlth. 6/10/08 Hi, <Hello>
I have had a target mandarin for about 8 months now. Recently it seemed
to have become less active. It spent about a third of the day lying in
the sandbed, and it seemed to have trouble breathing. <Was this fish
eating?> This continued for almost a week until last night I noticed
it had lost color in its head, it was now white with light orange spots
from the gills up. His head was also kind of shriveled up, like it was
slowly shrinking or something. He died last night, and when I found him
this morning his body was fully in tact except for his head, which
looked like it had deteriorated. What was wrong with my mandarin? Was
there something I could have done for him? <Without knowing tank
size, water parameters and tankmates it is difficult to say why this
fish died, however about 8 months to a year is about how long it often
takes for these fish to succumb to starvation is captivity so that
would be my first guess.> <Chris>
Mandarin dragonet Fin bleached... comp. f'
2/6/08 Hello, I have a problem with my Mandarin. On his front
fins he is beginning to get a bleached out look. <I see this>
He still seems to move around the aquarium and do his thing but his
fins look horrible. It is as if they are rotting, but all of my
searches that do with mandarins and fin rot turn up nothing similar
to what my pictures portray. Do you know what this is and how to
treat it? <Have seen... likely a decolorizing trend due to
stress, nutritional deficiency...> I have hat him for one month
now. I have had my aquarium set up for four months. I do not think
it is out of food because I can still see copods jumping on the
rocks. <These copepods may not "have nutritional
value" here> It is a 90 gallon reef. With the Mandarin I
have a yellow head pearly jaw fish, five blue green Chromis, a
yellow tang, two false percula clown fish and two cleaner shrimp. I
also have a lot of snails and three hermit crabs (only three
because those are the three I am not able to catch.... yet). For
corals I have a frogspawn and an Acropora. <Oh! The Euphyllia
may have "stung" this fish...> I also have a bubble
tip anemone. <Or this... may consume this Callionymid one
night> Last week (1/25) I got the clowns and the anemone. That
is when I noticed the problem with the fins. Sat (2/5) I did a 15
gallon water change. I have a SeaChem test and it reads 0 ammonia,
0 nitrite 0 nitrate. The salinity is 1.025. Temp is 79-80. Ph is
between 8.2 and 8.3. I hope I have given you enough information to
help me with this. Attached are a few pictures to help illustrate
the problem. Thank you, David <The greater possibility is that
this Dragonet was stung... will likely heal (or be consumed)... I
would move either the two stinging celled animals or the
Psychedelic "Goby"... Bob Fenner> |
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Dragonet Mandarin, Mandarin Care 12/19/07
Hi, <Hello> I seem to have problems keeping my mandarins
alive. The dragonet is acting the same way my spotted mandarin
did. He just lies in the bottom of the tank without moving. He is
breathing but seems to have problems moving. He shows no sign of
damage. We have a 110 gallon tank, with a yellow tang, fox face,
2 clowns, yellow goby, blue damsel. star fish, shrimp, hermit,
and snails. All are doing fine. The water is perfectly balanced,
calcium and all is good. <Numbers here, "perfectly
balanced" means nothing to me.> we do a 10 gallon change
of water every week. Do I have to buy special food for the
mandarin? <Not realistic to buy what it needs to eat, needs
lots of Live Rock to produce the pods that it eats.> Everyone
seems to think so. <They are very difficult to feed.> We
have had the mandarin for 2 weeks now and it is still quite
plump. Thank you for your help Isabel <Need more information,
how much live rock do you have, how long has the tank been
established, water parameters. Many possibilities here.>
<Chris>
Re: Dragonet Mandarin, Mandarin Care
12/20/07 Chris, <Hello> 1. The ph, alk are in the norm
according to the color on the paper. (I cant give you numbers).
<Ditch the dipstick style tests, they are so inaccurate they
are almost worthless, get some dry reactant type tests, they are
much better.> I have no nitrates. We did have phosphate but it
is now under control. We took the water to a specialized store,
and he checked for copper (none) we make our own water using the
osmosis thing., calcium (good ). <Ok> 2. I went and bought
some baby shrimp which I gave to him right where he was laying, I
did it twice so far. <Did he eat this?> 3. I have 95lbs of
live rock in my 110 gal tank. We had a 45 gal; for over one year.
About 4 months ago we replaced it with the 110. We did keep the
same water and live rock from the 45 gal. Thanks, Isa <How
long did the first mandarin last? Did you buy them in the same
place? Have you seen any of your other fish being aggressive
towards it?> <Chris>
Re: Dragonet Mandarin, Mandarin Care
12/24/07 Chris, <Hello> 1. They are not dip sticks, I
put water in a little cavity and then I check the color on the
identification card that comes with it, <Ah, ok but if they do
not give you number values I would switch to a different
test.> 2. The little one didn't seem to eat, he just laid
there...but he did change places at one point, that actually made
me happy. <Not a good sign.> 3. I bought him at a store for
the first time. And the other guys in the tank did not attack
him. Unless they do it at night when the lights are out. The
little one died, so I told my husband that we better wait for 6
months before getting another one, they are fragile. Thanks and
if u have any suggestions, pls let me know for future reference
Isabel <Best bet is to give the tank some time to mature, and
set up a refugium to culture amphipods and copepods which are
their natural food.> <Chris>
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Mandarin acting oddly 5/13/07 Hi there,
<Carrie> After waiting about 1 1/2 years, I purchased a large
mandarin male about 3 months ago for my 150 gallon reef/fish
aquarium. I had tons of copepods (big fat ones) and a fishless
refugium going, so food is not really an issue! I noticed sometime
last week, he was not "hunting", but still. I foolishly
thought, wow, he must be full, besides he is not thin and was
fatter than when I got him! So after another day went by, I was a
little concerned as it was just after lights out (timer on tank) he
was in his "lightened" phase of sleep colors, but would
go up and backwards (kind of like he thought someone was following
him if that makes sense) and acting odd. Today, I looked over at my
tank and noticed he was at the top of the tank spitting water. I
took some pictures to help you out. Behind his eyes are swollen. Do
you have ANY clue what this could be? <This fish appears to be
"burned", stung by something... likely biological...
could be from a bunch of possibilities... Fireworms (come in all
sizes), jellies of various sorts... a blundering into a
stinging-celled animal...> I put him into the refugium, even
though no one was bothering him, just so he could
"chill." <Good move> Thanks!
Carrie :)
<I do hope he recovers. Bob Fenner> |
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Green Mandarin tail Problem 6/20/06 First of all my husband and
I have found your site very useful. Thanks for all of the topics and
threads. <Glad you've found them... useful> I'm writing
because I've had two green Mandarins back to back that have
developed something with their back fin or tail. It looks like it was
glued together. It would not spread at all. The mandarins could not
swim and therefore could not hunt. I lost them both. My husband is part
of RASOC <http://www.rasoc.org/> and while at the
RASOC/C-MAC Picnic we asked around and could not get any ideas what may
have caused this. We have one of Bob's books now and have searched
through Wet web as well. I have not been able to get a good idea of
what may be causing this. <Mmm, me neither> They are such
beautiful animals and so hard to care for correctly. I don't want
to purchase another one until I get down to the mystery. We have a 20
gallon refugium loaded with pods attached to our 120 gallon . I'm
sorry I have no idea how much live rock we have. I believe we have more
than enough.:) Also many people at the picnic are very excited to be
hearing Bob speak in February of next year Columbia, S.C. <Oh yes...
As stated, don't know what the root cause of this issue is
actually... Other than trying your best to pick out specimens that
don't exhibit this trait I'm at a loss here. Perhaps someone
will "chime in" here with more. Bob Fenner>
Mandarin hiding - 7/7/05 We have a 44 gallon well established
tank with a Mandarin dragonette(2 in), 2 false Percs(1 in), a lawnmower
blenny(2in), and a longhorn cowfish (2 in, and yes we know he's
poisonous, and he will be moving to the 160 gallon when it finishes
cycling). <Actually I was thinking this was a very stocked aquarium.
No worries though> The mandarin eats frozen food, shrimp pellets,
and the copepods, he has been a steady and healthy tank mate for 8
months. <LUCKY. These are very hard to keep in small confines. I
would attribute your luck with keeping this animal to the fact that he
does eat frozen and pelleted food> Recently when we did a water
change we rearranged the rockwork and moved a banded goby to another
tank. After the changes (none of which are new, we rearrange fish and
rocks often) <Me too.>, the mandarin started spending lots of
time hiding under a piece of coral, which is odd behavior for him.
<Hmm> He usually is cruising around the tank hunting ignoring all
the other fish (and they ignore him also). Is this new behavior
something we need to be concerned about? <So very hard to say. I can
tell you though, through my observations in the wild, this is not
abnormal for mandarin to hide in and around a territory be it rock or
coral> All chemicals are good: ammonia 0, nitrite 0, nitrate 30, and
pH 8.2. Any ideas? <Unfortunately, there is little I can offer here.
As long as he comes out to eat, you keep water chemistry, and other
inhabitants don't bother with him, then I would say he is just in
an adjusting period.> Thanks for all your great advice. Casey &
Lisa <~Paul>
Mandarin Death Hello, <Hi Martin> I
have a 50 gallon marine tank which is 2 years old and the love of my
life! I have soft corals, gorgonians and some small fish inc neon
gobies, clowns, a blenny and starfish. I carry out regular water
changes of 20% every 2 weeks with RO water. I test my water regularly
and have no problems. Everything seems healthy, however, yesterday, I
found my mandarin dead. He had no signs of injury and looked plump and
well. I was shocked at his death. He has lived seemingly happy in the
tank for just over a year. I am puzzled as all of my other fish and
inverts seem absolutely fine. Our electric had to be off for most of
the day the day before he died, which the corals didn't like a lot.
Could this have caused him to die? I just think it's strange that
everything else looks ok. I am very upset as he was my favourite fish,
please help! Thank you, Martin. <I wouldn't think a slow drop in
temperature would kill it unless it fell below 70. Possible the system
ran out of goodies for him to eat. Was it acclimated to frozen food
etc. Search Google on the Wet Web, keyword "mandarins". You
may find someone else who has had a similar problem. James (Salty
Dog)>
Mandarin Goby appearance concerns First, I just wanted to
thank you guys for a great informative site. I've read so much
lately, but haven't been able to find what the problem is with my
mandarin goby. Although, I have quite a few copepods visible in my tank
already after only a month of setting up, I've noticed that my
mandarin's skin is a bit irregular. I'm not sure if I got him
that way, I didn't really pay attention. But after looking at him
for a week now, I noticed he has some weird spots on him and also some
bubbles on his skin. The bubbles seem like bumps. I can't quite
figure out if this is ich, some other disease, or maybe it's
normal. I've done quite a bit of reading and it doesn't seem
like ich, because I don't see white spots that look like sand, but
more like his skin is being rubbed against the rocks and maybe
that's what's going on since I have a small tank for a
mandarin. He's swimming fine and seems quite active grazing over
rocks frequently, breathing fine, and eating I assume since I have
ample copepods. I have a 24G nano cube, 30 lbs live rock, 20 lbs live
sand, 30 or so hermit crabs, 15 or so snails... <This is way too
many hermits and snails... I would remove about two-thirds of both...
trade them in?> ...1 peppermint shrimp, serpent starfish, 2
yellowtail damsels (used to cycle tank), mandarin goby, and 1
clownfish. All parameters are normal, water changes done every week. Is
this something I should be concerned about? Should I take the mandarin
out ASAP? The bubbles are noticeable on the top of its head, side, and
bottom. Thanks so much for the help. Perry. <I would not panic... or
"do" anything re this fish at this point. Likely will
"fix" itself. Bob Fenner>
Scooters Not Scooting! Dear WWM crew, <Scott F. with you today!> My
scooter blennies have stopped moving, although they are still breathing and
eating food given to them by pipette, they aren't swimming around. They don't
seem able to move their tails to move around, but can use their fins. My blue
cheek goby was like this 2 days ago, but seems to have fully recovered and is
sifting again. I have a180litre (48 U.S gal) tank with a UV, skimmer, LR, and
15x turnover. I have checked my parameters and the water is fine. At the weekend
I added a pom-pom crab, making sure not to put any bag water in, and using
Myxazin whilst acclimatizing. What could this be? Will my blennies recover like
the goby? Could this be a 24hr bug? Thanks in advance, James <Well, James, it's
tough to say what it might be. The fact that the fishes are eating is a very
good sign, IMO. I'd run some basic water parameter tests, and make sure that
there has not been any sudden shift or decline in water quality. These fishes do
not take well to rapid environmental changes, so investigate this possibility.
It is a bit unusual for these rather active fishes to stop moving around, but I
have witnessed this same phenomenon before, and the fishes seemed to "perk up"
after a few days and recovered without any complications. I'd keep observing the
fishes carefully, make sure that they eat, and monitor water conditions
carefully. It may not be a 24 hour "bug", but it could just be a reaction to
some minor change in environment....If some sort of symptoms do manifest, take
required action. Other than that- just wait it out for a bit and see how they
do...Good luck! Regards, Scott F>
What the heck? When arriving home tonight with my new
mandarin goby, <study hard to care for that mandarin> I noticed
that my yellow tang had a red splinter looking thing hanging off his
nose!!! With this I have two questions What should I do about this
(parasite??) thing? <unlikely a parasite> And after giving a
perfectly healthy goby a hypo saline bath <a scaleless fish...not
the best idea> with dip away I noticed white spots on the goby!!
Could this be ich or just stress from the move? <if appeared
suddenly, bubbles to particles stuck to the excess mucous of an
ill-advised hypo saline/freshwater dip (for the record, I love
Freshwater dips with tolerant species)> I don't have a Q-tank
(slap on the wrist). <with a ruler> But I do have multiple
cleaners <cannot effect a cure on full-on infections in captive
systems unassisted...just stimulating> (peppermint shrimp, fire
shrimp and cleaner wrasse (been alive in tank for 13 months). <put
up the peacock feathers when it is five years old. In the meantime,
fire whoever has been giving you fish selection advice... some of your
choices are a tree-huggers nightmare...hehe> I also run UV on the
tank. How long, if it is ich, till my other fish show symptoms. Thank
you for your time!!! Jeremy <eh, don't count your tomites before
they are hatched...ha! What an opportunity for pathogenic them humor.
Unfortunately, it isn't that funny <smile>. Not clear if it
is even Ich yet. Maintain stable temperature... feed medicated food
(full 7-11 days) and let's go slow...no need to knee-jerk or
overmedicate unless it is symptomatically warranted. And look on the
bright side...if some fish die because of a lack of quarantine, you
will have a hard lesson to learn from ?!? Kind regards,
Anthony>
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