About 1 week ago I bought a female German Blue Ram (GBR) and placed it in a 60 litre quarantine aquarium where it will continue to stay until I'm confident it's a healthy fish with no diseases.
On the 2nd day after being introduced to the aquarium a sore developed on the lip which I chose not to treat because it wasn't an open sore and from experience, such sores heal and don't need require medical intervention. Now the sore has completely disappeared.
Later on, possibly the 5th day of being in the tank, I noticed she was shaking and bumping herself violently on a piece of bog wood after having eat a large bloodworm. She was exhibiting this behaviour straight after eating it and as she was expelling faeces. The faeces are white in colour (resembling a smooth white coloured egg).
So my question is, should the faeces be white and can violent shaking occur if there is some sort of problem that causes faeces to be the wrong colour? From experience, GBR faeces should be black/brown right?
Picture taken of GBR today, with faeces:
Note that the colours of the ram and surroundings don't resemble what it should look like to the eye for some reason.
Water Stats:
PH: 7.4
Ammonia: 0 ppm
Nitrite: 0 ppm
Nitrate: 10 ppm
All fish in the 60 litre have a good appetite.
Mark.
On the 2nd day after being introduced to the aquarium a sore developed on the lip which I chose not to treat because it wasn't an open sore and from experience, such sores heal and don't need require medical intervention. Now the sore has completely disappeared.
Later on, possibly the 5th day of being in the tank, I noticed she was shaking and bumping herself violently on a piece of bog wood after having eat a large bloodworm. She was exhibiting this behaviour straight after eating it and as she was expelling faeces. The faeces are white in colour (resembling a smooth white coloured egg).
So my question is, should the faeces be white and can violent shaking occur if there is some sort of problem that causes faeces to be the wrong colour? From experience, GBR faeces should be black/brown right?
Picture taken of GBR today, with faeces:
Note that the colours of the ram and surroundings don't resemble what it should look like to the eye for some reason.
Water Stats:
PH: 7.4
Ammonia: 0 ppm
Nitrite: 0 ppm
Nitrate: 10 ppm
All fish in the 60 litre have a good appetite.
Mark.