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white spot on clown



 
 
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  #1  
Old March 9th 05, 09:52 PM
George Patterson
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Chris Gentry wrote:

Hi,
I have a false percula clownfish that I bought about a week ago. It
appears to be doing fine, and is very active, but just after I bought it, I
noticed a large white spot on its side. It looks like a large grain of
sugar. I've watched it really close, and it hasn't seemed to grow, and no
others have appeared, so I didn't know if this was ok? Does anyone know
what this might be? Or if I can try to remove it? Thanks -Chris



Well, since there's only one of them, it can't be white spot disease. It's
probably something akin to lymphocystis, which is harmless. Just keep an eye on
it.

George Patterson
I prefer Heaven for climate but Hell for company.
  #2  
Old March 10th 05, 05:19 PM
Mr Dad
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George some of the initial outbreaks have to start somewhere. I have seen
it as a single grain. Or at least that is all that is sometimes noticed. If
the fish do not fight it off it could be more.

Again since it is common that is why I pointed in that direction.

Good luck




"George Patterson" wrote in message
...


Chris Gentry wrote:

Hi,
I have a false percula clownfish that I bought about a week ago. It
appears to be doing fine, and is very active, but just after I bought

it, I
noticed a large white spot on its side. It looks like a large grain of
sugar. I've watched it really close, and it hasn't seemed to grow, and

no
others have appeared, so I didn't know if this was ok? Does anyone know
what this might be? Or if I can try to remove it? Thanks -Chris



Well, since there's only one of them, it can't be white spot disease. It's
probably something akin to lymphocystis, which is harmless. Just keep an

eye on
it.

George Patterson
I prefer Heaven for climate but Hell for company.



  #3  
Old March 10th 05, 05:43 PM
George Patterson
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Mr Dad wrote:

George some of the initial outbreaks have to start somewhere. I have seen
it as a single grain. Or at least that is all that is sometimes noticed. If
the fish do not fight it off it could be more.


Yes, but it's been there for a week and no more have developed. White spot
would've spread fairly rapidly.

George Patterson
I prefer Heaven for climate but Hell for company.
  #4  
Old March 10th 05, 05:53 PM
RicSeyler
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It could also be an injury. Maybe the little guy bumped into a jagged
rock or something.
I've seen an injury that can somewhat look like a "Ich Grain".

George Patterson wrote:

Mr Dad wrote:


George some of the initial outbreaks have to start somewhere. I have seen
it as a single grain. Or at least that is all that is sometimes noticed. If
the fish do not fight it off it could be more.



Yes, but it's been there for a week and no more have developed. White spot
would've spread fairly rapidly.

George Patterson
I prefer Heaven for climate but Hell for company.



--
Ric Seyler



  #5  
Old March 10th 05, 06:55 PM
Mr Dad
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I missed that it has been there for a week. If it did not spread it should have at least fallen off.

R






"RicSeyler" wrote in message ...
It could also be an injury. Maybe the little guy bumped into a jagged rock or something.
I've seen an injury that can somewhat look like a "Ich Grain".

George Patterson wrote:

Mr Dad wrote:
George some of the initial outbreaks have to start somewhere. I have seen
it as a single grain. Or at least that is all that is sometimes noticed. If
the fish do not fight it off it could be more.

Yes, but it's been there for a week and no more have developed. White spot
would've spread fairly rapidly.

George Patterson
I prefer Heaven for climate but Hell for company.


--
Ric Seyler


  #6  
Old March 10th 05, 08:50 PM
larap
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Follow-up question.
after treating the fish with cooper/formalin/freshwater bath how long should
it be quarintined? How long does the infected tank need to be fish free
before they can be reintroduced? thanks.
"Mr Dad" wrote in message
...
I missed that it has been there for a week. If it did not spread it should
have at least fallen off.

R






"RicSeyler" wrote in message
...
It could also be an injury. Maybe the little guy bumped into a jagged rock
or something.
I've seen an injury that can somewhat look like a "Ich Grain".

George Patterson wrote:

Mr Dad wrote:

George some of the initial outbreaks have to start somewhere. I have seen
it as a single grain. Or at least that is all that is sometimes noticed. If
the fish do not fight it off it could be more.


Yes, but it's been there for a week and no more have developed. White spot
would've spread fairly rapidly.

George Patterson
I prefer Heaven for climate but Hell for company.



--
Ric Seyler


  #7  
Old March 10th 05, 10:12 PM
George Patterson
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larap wrote:

Follow-up question.
after treating the fish with cooper/formalin/freshwater bath how long should
it be quarintined? How long does the infected tank need to be fish free
before they can be reintroduced?


The complete lifecycle of these parasites runs about a month. If some of them
have just dropped off the fish to lay eggs at the time you remove the fish,
those supposedly will hatch in a week or two and start looking for fish to feed
on. They will eventually starve, so, in theory, you should be able to put the
fish back in in a bit less than a month. In practice, I have heard of
re-infections after longer periods. My guess is that some of the eggs lie
dormant for some time.

George Patterson
I prefer Heaven for climate but Hell for company.
 




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