Help please! Can anyone tell me what this is on my anthia? Wasn't there a few hours ago and no sign of it on any other fish
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I would agree, but I've never seen brook on an Anthias. Poor lil guy.I'm thinking more like brook or possibly something bacterial, but I'll wait on the expert opinions.
Being that it's an anthia I would lean towards bacterial infection. Do you QT your fish/corals/inverts? Are you able to set up a QT?
It would be best if you can put him in a QT and treat with kanaplex or furan2, but you can feed the meds to him by soaking them in the food coupled with focus to bind it and make it a reef safe, if much slower acting, option.
I agree. Good luck!Being that it's an anthia I would lean towards bacterial infection. Do you QT your fish/corals/inverts? Are you able to set up a QT?
It would be best if you can put him in a QT and treat with kanaplex or furan2, but you can feed the meds to him by soaking them in the food coupled with focus to bind it and make it a reef safe, if much slower acting, option.
I would agree, but I've never seen brook on an Anthias. Poor lil guy.
:mad:Anyone think they could be war wounds? I only ask because my firefighters jas suddenly shown up with no tail left so assuming something has attacked him in the night and wondering if this could be the same as on the anthia?
More probably the infection is spreading to other fish and has eaten away that fish's tail
OP said it wasn't there a few hours ago. Can an infection pop up like that so quickly?
+1Gram negative can. Certain strains are fast spreading and can kill within hours. Others take days or even weeks.
A healthy fish's natural immune system is usually able to fend off a gram positive bacterial infection without any assistance. If the fish is unhealthy or if the immune system has already been compromised from battling parasites, it usually takes weeks (or sometimes even months) to eventually succumb to gram positive bacteria.

