Six line Wrasse help

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Hey guys, I posted this on a different forum and was hoping for some input.

First post on this forum too, I apologize in advance if this is not the correct section to post in, if it's not correct please let me know and I will post to the correct section.

When I woke up this morning, my six line wrasse was swimming very oddly, first thing I noticed is that he was swimming in the morning (he is usually sleeping when I leave for work, usually disappears into the rock just after my lights go to sunset mode). He would swim up the corner of the tank, do a little twirl, and go back to the bottom of the tank where he would attempt to hide against a rock, then swim around the outside of the tank, but very slowly and would dart around every so often. Rinse, repeat, just odd behavior. He usually comes and checks me out when I look at the tank, and he didn't respond when I approached the tank. He ate just fine yesterday. He has plenty of places to hide, and always is the life of the tank. Hands down my favorite fish in the tank, he is a blast to watch.

Background: I have had my tank up and running for 5 months total now, with fish for about 1.5 months. It is 40 gallons, with 40lbs of live rock, 2" live sand. My current water parameters are: pH: 8.1, specific gravity 1.022, ammonia 0ppm, Nitrite 0ppm and Nitrate 0ppm. I have a HOB Reef Octopus BH-1000 protein skimmer, AquaClear 70 gal filter, and a powerhead rated for 600gph. I currently have 1 coral beauty, 2 clowns, a six line wrasse, 1 peppermint shrimp, 1 coral banded shrimp, 5 mexican turbo snails, 6 hermit crabs, and 2 emerald crabs. I first put the six line wrasse and 2 clowns in the tank, but my first 2 clowns died of brooklynella about 3 days after purchase (they came from my LFS this way, very unfortunate). I treated the tank for the disease and waited and the new clowns have been in the tank for a week, and look very healthy. The coral beauty and the wrasse were best buds, always swimming around the tank together. One never aggressive towards the other. I always feed frozen cubes, usually a nice mix of the mysis shrimp, "emerald entree" and brine shrimp.

I wish I could have taken a picture before I left but he was hiding behind a rock and couldn't get one. I didn't notice heavy breathing, any color change, or any marks from possibly being attacked. If he was attacked, I would pin it on the coral banded shrimp, he is the only one in the tank that swipes at things when they get too close

Does anybody know what might be the issue? Based upon research I've done prior to my post, I understand that fish die suddenly sometimes for seemingly no reason. Being pretty new to this hobby, I would appreciate any pointers you guys can provide and insight as to what the issue might be.

Thanks in advance, I really appreciate any feedback!
 
Nothing sounds concerning to me. If the sixline is not scratching, lethargic, or showing damaged scales or fins, I wouldn't worry. Just observe and if anything drastic changes let us know.
 
Six Lines are pretty hardy fish imho. To me it sounds like he was "Sleep Swimming". I had my clowns do that before, very concerning feeling. I'd keep an eye out and just monitor him.
 
Nothing sounds concerning to me. If the sixline is not scratching, lethargic, or showing damaged scales or fins, I wouldn't worry. Just observe and if anything drastic changes let us know.

Thank you for the reply. He definitely was acting more lethargic than usual, but I did not notice any scratching or damage. I am still learning things each day, my next step with the tank is to set up a QT so I will better be able to monitor situations like this when they pop up. Hoping he is still ok when I get home.
 
Six Lines are pretty hardy fish imho. To me it sounds like he was "Sleep Swimming". I had my clowns do that before, very concerning feeling. I'd keep an eye out and just monitor him.

Thanks, that does make me feel a little better. He was always the most active in the tank and very consistent with his "sleep" schedule, so it was concerning. I'll have to check before going to sleep tonight if he is already hiding or not, that should be a good tell. He usually disappears from about 9pm (sleepy time I'm assuming) to 8am (when my lights come on). It was very surprising because he has by far been the most healthy of all the fish I've had so far! And my water parameters are great.... Is there anything else I should be testing for? I always do 10% water changes each week, always R/O from my LFS.
 
Hey guys,

I got home and the wrasse seems to be acting normal. He ate, came up to me when I approached the tank, etc. Seemed to be back to his normal self.

I attached a crappy picture I took of him just now.

20160203_164141.jpg
 
Good to see. Any updates?

So, I lost power over the weekend for about 48 hours. I was certainly prepared for a 24 hour outage, but it was close to being a complete loss (both tanks got down to 65 degrees at one point). All my fish survived. I lost a few snails and hermit crabs, but everything else survived. I have had my quarantine tank setup now for about a week, all 4 fish are in there. Going to keep them in there for another 3-4 weeks to give the possible chance that Brooklynella is still in the tank a chance to go away. I have read it's about 4-6 weeks of a fishless tank to get rid of brook (am I right on that one...?).

Long story short, all the fish are still living. Thanks for being helpful to a noob on the forum, I really appreciate it.

Once the fish go back in the tank, I'm going to get some coral. I do weekly water changes (5 gallons each week). I've been testing my levels in the meantime, Calcium is at 400ppm, Alkalinity is at 9dKH, all of my other parameters are still the same as in my first post. Do I need to add anything additional in the tank (dosing?) if I do weekly water changes and my levels stay consistent like this? I have not tested for Iodine, but my shrimp all molt regularly so I'm assuming those levels are just fine. Anything else I need to take into account?
 

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