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need a closer/clearer pic as this fish may be suffering from skin irritations with possible mucus cones which its susceptible to. Fish is also quite thin for a hepatus tang.
I’m not going back to the LFS I got it from. Pretty ticked at his condition seeing as he’s only about a week old. He was thinner when I got him. What look like big spots are simply just water spots on the tank. This is a better pic of him out of waterneed a closer/clearer pic as this fish may be suffering from skin irritations with possible mucus cones which its susceptible to. Fish is also quite thin for a hepatus tang.
I’m not going back to the LFS I got it from. Pretty ticked at his condition seeing as he’s only about a week old. He was thinner when I got him. What look like big spots are simply just water spots on the tank. This is a better pic of him out of water
makes sense as to why shes not getting bigger faster. shes growing but im only feeding her about a cube of the frozen red phytoplankton twice a day at most. i will up feeding to 3 times a day and see if she starts growing quickerI can sort of see some black spots, it could be the turbellarian worm that causes "black ich", but that isn't super common on blue tangs.
Despite what you'll read, praziquantel is not very effective against this parasite. Luckily, in many cases, the disease just goes away on it sown. Formalin works better, but I wouldn't try that on such a small tang.
With hepatus this small, be sure to feed it LOTS of small plankton items (diced krill, live baby brine shrimp, etc.) Feed it multiple times a day 4x or so.
makes sense as to why shes not getting bigger faster. shes growing but im only feeding her about a cube of the frozen red phytoplankton twice a day at most. i will up feeding to 3 times a day and see if she starts growing quicker