Didn't know if I should start a new thread. New to the forum.
All my three fish died within 48 hours. During the first 24 hours they all stopped eating and then developed cloudy eyes and became a little lethargic. Gills, skin and fins all looked normal. The next morning they were all dead. The fish had been in my tank for over 5 months. Since I don't know the cause, how do I move forward? 20 gallon nano tank is 8 months old, all water parameters are spot on ( pH is 7.9), which I check several times a week with Hanna checkers, even with backup saifert kits. As a note, recently started using light concentration of Kalkwasser to bump up my pH. All parameters normal on day of death. Have a clam and about 20 corals, mostly LPS, one Acropora. All doing very well, some even thriving. The only thing added to the tank recently were a few frags. Without knowing the cause, do I let the tank go fishless for a period of time in hopes that the culprit is self-limiting without a fish host? Or do I treat the tank as if it was bacterial or fungal, which would kill my beneficial bacteria, and then start over with recycling my tank? Of course I have a lot invested in my corals. Any input would be appreciated.
All my three fish died within 48 hours. During the first 24 hours they all stopped eating and then developed cloudy eyes and became a little lethargic. Gills, skin and fins all looked normal. The next morning they were all dead. The fish had been in my tank for over 5 months. Since I don't know the cause, how do I move forward? 20 gallon nano tank is 8 months old, all water parameters are spot on ( pH is 7.9), which I check several times a week with Hanna checkers, even with backup saifert kits. As a note, recently started using light concentration of Kalkwasser to bump up my pH. All parameters normal on day of death. Have a clam and about 20 corals, mostly LPS, one Acropora. All doing very well, some even thriving. The only thing added to the tank recently were a few frags. Without knowing the cause, do I let the tank go fishless for a period of time in hopes that the culprit is self-limiting without a fish host? Or do I treat the tank as if it was bacterial or fungal, which would kill my beneficial bacteria, and then start over with recycling my tank? Of course I have a lot invested in my corals. Any input would be appreciated.