Welcome to BAR - the Bay Area's premier saltwater hobbyists hub!

Internal parasites, or just a stringy poop?

Guest
Joined
Aug 8, 2016
Messages
1,611
Thoughts?
20201028_175327.jpg

20201028_175350.jpg

20201028_175425.jpg
 
Supporting Member
Joined
Jul 14, 2019
Messages
772
I cant tell too well from the pics but is it white or clear? I see some brown bits, I think.

Generally white + stringy is going to indicate intestinal flagellates or worms. Course of action there is 1 tblsp of food + 1 scoop of focus + 1 scoop general cure (focus should make it reef safe)
 
Last edited:
Guest
Joined
Aug 8, 2016
Messages
1,611
I cant tell too well from the pics but is it white or clear? I see some brown bits, I think.

Generally white + stringy is going to indicate intestinal flagellates or worms. Course of action there is 1 tblsp of food + 1 scoop of focus + 1 scoop general cure (focus should make it reef safe)
It's brown at the end of a thin white or clear thread
 
Supporting Member
Joined
Jun 11, 2006
Messages
969
I know less than anyone about fish parasites

I have moved a clown fish a few times when changing homes. After the move, the clown would sometimes go a day or two or three (always scary) before eating what I feed. I would sometimes see similar poop, that your pic shows, shortly after he began eating again. It always catches my eye because over so many years i had rarely ever seen him poop. I figured, in my clowns case, it might be because of the days of not eating, then booting back up.

I know anthias eat a ton and not sure if this could even be food related. Not sure if an anthia could go a couple few days without eating and survive like a clown could.
 
Guest
Joined
Aug 8, 2016
Messages
1,611
I know less than anyone about fish parasites

I have moved a clown fish a few times when changing homes. After the move, the clown would sometimes go a day or two or three (always scary) before eating what I feed. I would sometimes see similar poop, that your pic shows, shortly after he began eating again. It always catches my eye because over so many years i had rarely ever seen him poop. I figured, in my clowns case, it might be because of the days of not eating, then booting back up.

I know anthias eat a ton and not sure if this could even be food related. Not sure if an anthia could go a couple few days without eating and survive like a clown could.
Fathead/Sunburst anthias are generally less active than most, so they don't eat quite as much. This one definitely went a couple days not eating much, if anything, so it's possible it's the same as what you saw with your clownfish.
 
Guest
Joined
Oct 28, 2019
Messages
1,915
Ex-lax?

now that I got my shitty sense of humor out of the way, maybe soak it’s food in selcon as a preventative measure? It could be good to boost the nutrition while it adjusts to pellets, it looks like it’s in QT so I’m guessing this is new?
 
Supporting Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2020
Messages
592
.

Here is an article I referenced for a similar question I had, it seems that when they haven't eaten they can just have white poop from time to time without it being a sign of disease, I noticed it on a kole tang once right after I bought it before it had eaten much. Went away really fast after I fed often
 
Guest
Joined
Aug 8, 2016
Messages
1,611
.

Here is an article I referenced for a similar question I had, it seems that when they haven't eaten they can just have white poop from time to time without it being a sign of disease, I noticed it on a kole tang once right after I bought it before it had eaten much. Went away really fast after I fed often
Thanks, this seems like the issue, especially because there was some brown in it.
 
Top