As I have been chronicling in my other thread, I am setting up a 20 nano. Right now I am about two months into the setup and have my live rock, clean up crew and two clown fish. Since yesterday, the clowns have been cowering in the upper corner of the tank. Yesterday, they only ate one tiny bit of dry food each and today they totally ignored the frozen reef mix I gave them.
I assume that ick on marine fish looks the same as freshwater, and I don't see any white spots. I don't see any outward signs of distress (except the cowering and lack of eating). Have they just bonded with my heater and don't want to leave its side? They have crammed themselves into a limited little space between the heater and filter return and don't seem to want to leave.
Is this normal?
Should I move the heater so they are forced to be someplace else in the tank?
The only thing I can think of is that I added a surface skimmer to my canister filter. I think it is allowing air to get into the system and micro bubbles are flowing in through the filter return. I don't like it aesthetically, and turned it off tonight to see if my theory is correct. Maybe the bubbles are bugging the fish out?
Thanks for any help or ideas.
Steven
I assume that ick on marine fish looks the same as freshwater, and I don't see any white spots. I don't see any outward signs of distress (except the cowering and lack of eating). Have they just bonded with my heater and don't want to leave its side? They have crammed themselves into a limited little space between the heater and filter return and don't seem to want to leave.
Is this normal?
Should I move the heater so they are forced to be someplace else in the tank?
The only thing I can think of is that I added a surface skimmer to my canister filter. I think it is allowing air to get into the system and micro bubbles are flowing in through the filter return. I don't like it aesthetically, and turned it off tonight to see if my theory is correct. Maybe the bubbles are bugging the fish out?
Thanks for any help or ideas.
Steven