Help! What's wrong with my chromis?

Da_Lil_Fishie

New Member
View Badges
Joined
Jun 5, 2020
Messages
7
Reaction score
1
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
My blue-green chromis isn't looking so good. Just yesterday he started to hide away, and lost his appetite and is hyperventilating. He has a patch on the side of his head that's a bit darker than the rest of his body. Could he have been stung by a coral or bruised somehow? He's in a 30 gallon tank with plenty of live rock, so he might have been spooked in the night and hit his head? The other fish in the tank are a sixline wrasse and banggai cardinalfish, never had any aggression issues with them.
I'm not sure if this is the right place to post this, I also posted it in the saltwater fish forum.
 
Very possible he has an injury. What are parameters? Always post this as it will def be the first question when asking for help.

Patches, some swollen, some discoloration, can be a coral sting. Breathing heavy could mean complications or something else going on. Parameters help solve.

If you can snag a pic that’s also very helpful.

Welcome to R2R btw! Great place for advice!!!
 
Last edited:
Hey @Da_Lil_Fishie...

Unfortunately that sounds like the early stages of Uronima. Its a nasty disease that is extremely common in Chromis and has seemed to gotten much worse in the last years. A lot of what we are seeing now are dark spots show up, the next stage will be the spot opens up and after that not much you can do to save the fish.

I have been working on trying to find the solution to this disease as it seems to be working its way from the inside of the fish outwards now. The old way of treating this was with Formalin, but now it doesnt seem to be doing the job.

Do a quick search for Uronima and compare what you are seeing to that. I'm sorry you have to deal with this. If there is any good news to this is that most fish seem to be unaffected buy this terrible disease so your Wrasse and Cardnalfish should be okay if they are healthy.

Also, pictures always help, we know it can be difficult to get them sometimes but they are awfully helpful if you can!
 
That does sound like Uronema. Whenever I hear, "my chromis has a bruise" it always turns out to be that - sorry, it is very difficult to treat. How long have you had the fish? Here is an excerpt from my upcoming fish disease book on the topic:

Uronema marinum (Red band disease)

Cause

Uronema is an elongate, oval, ciliated, motile protozoan, up to 40 um in length, that can become an opportunistic pathogen in marine aquariums. Because it is so generic-looking, identification in the field is always provisional. Most professional aquarists actually mean “Uronema-like” when they say “Uronema.”

Uronema infections have been seen in six families of fishes (in roughly descending order of frequency): Pomacentridae (damselfishes, specifically of the genus Chromis); Serranidae (subfamily Anthiinae the Anthias); Syngnathidae (seahorses and seadragons); Labridae (the wrasses); Chaetodontidae (the butterflyfishes); and, occasionally, Pomacanthidae (the angelfishes). There are, no doubt, other species of fish that can be infected.

Symptoms
This moderately common protozoan disease has symptoms that include the rapid development of a red mark in the hypodermis (fat and muscle) region of the fish, often following rows of scales so that the lesion is typically elongate and angled downward as it progresses front to back along the flank of the fish. Within a day or two of the development of the primary lesion, the fish will become lethargic and stop feeding and its respiration rate will increase. Scales above the lesion can be dislodged easily due to the massive trauma to the underlying tissue. Death follows rapidly, with few fish surviving beyond three days after the primary lesion develops.
Almost universally, aquarists who do not have access to a microscope will identify this disease as a “secondary bacterial infection resulting from some injury.” In fact, “capture damage” is often cited as the original cause due to the often-linear nature of the lesion, which looks much like a bruise from being hit with a net frame, for example. The rapid onset of the lesion (often many days after capture) and the fact that it develops internally and then erupts externally both point to another cause.


Treatment
A variety of treatments have been suggested for Uronema infections, but full control is rarely seen following most of these treatments. Part of the issue seems to be that Uronema is ubiquitous (naturally occurring in marine aquariums) and re-infection is commonplace.

Bath treatments may fail because the medication used does not target the intercellular protozoans, only those living externally on the skin of the fish. Copper treatments may reduce the numbers of these ciliates, but good control is not seen until ionic copper levels reach 0.23 ppm, and this is too close to the lethal limit for many species of fish. Formalin baths of various concentrations and durations have been proposed, but this treatment is also mostly effective against external protozoans.

The most commonly used treatment is chloroquine at 15 ppm for 30 days.

Hyposalinity and Uronema
A suspiciously high occurrence of Uronema outbreaks is seen in marine fish being kept under hyposalinity (low salinity) to control another protozoan parasite, Cryptocaryon irritans (saltwater ich). It seems that either Uronema prefers low-salinity water or such treatments lower the fish’s resistance to the protozoan.

Jay Hemdal
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 32 45.7%
  • Not yet, but I have one that I want to buy in mind!

    Votes: 9 12.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 26 37.1%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 3 4.3%
Back
Top