Bump up your shutter speed and go up one F stop.
Yup.
Cool, thanks man : I got my iso set to 400, you think thats a good starting spot?
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Bump up your shutter speed and go up one F stop.
Yup.
Depends what camera you're shooting, but yes. You can bump it up if things get too dark, but if you're editing in lightroom you may not need to.Cool, thanks man : I got my iso set to 400, you think thats a good starting spot?
What F stop are you shooting at? Something around an 8 will give you a lot more depth of field.
I watch it alot and I don't see it rubbing anywhere.Looks like stress from rubbing against something course , my yellow canary wrasse always has them.
I was wondering if I need to be concerned with the white blotches on the side of this wrasse?
Unless stressed or having a compromised immune system in some other way, wrasses are pretty ich resistant. It's possible it won't ever manifest as an issue needing intervention if the peace is kept and good nutrition is provided.So, my Katherine wrasse is showing ich. I have ~18 fish in my 120 and been battling high nitrates (25 ppm via salifert), so i really stirred the sand bed and the next day he was showing ~ a dozen grains. So far no other fish is showing it, it must of came in on my Kole that I QT for 4 weeks with no sign of disease; He died a week later in my Dt, not showing Ich at all. Either way, I know you can't kill it with out going fallow ect, but cost benefit to me, setting up a 6 20gal qt, stressing my wrasse (6 leopards) and dealing with tank transfer or copper or hypo while keep ph stable is only going to end up with half my fish dead anyways, in addition to stressing me out, and end up with still having ich. I know there are alot of super purists that will hate on me, but at the end of the day its my life. That being said:
How can I manage or treat my fish to overcome this while I get my parameters straight?
And +1 to this; are you certain on the ID?If you just stirred your sandbed it might just be specks of sand stuck to the mucous coat of your Katherine wrasse and not ich
25 ppm nitrates are not really an issue. Many people run that or higher all the time. But if it is ich try treating with Dr. G's anti-parasitic food.So, my Katherine wrasse is showing ich. I have ~18 fish in my 120 and been battling high nitrates (25 ppm via salifert), so i really stirred the sand bed and the next day he was showing ~ a dozen grains. So far no other fish is showing it, it must of came in on my Kole that I QT for 4 weeks with no sign of disease; He died a week later in my Dt, not showing Ich at all. Either way, I know you can't kill it with out going fallow ect, but cost benefit to me, setting up a 6 20gal qt, stressing my wrasse (6 leopards) and dealing with tank transfer or copper or hypo while keep ph stable is only going to end up with half my fish dead anyways, in addition to stressing me out, and end up with still having ich. I know there are alot of super purists that will hate on me, but at the end of the day its my life. That being said:
How can I manage or treat my fish to overcome this while I get my parameters straight?
I was wondering if I need to be concerned with the white blotches on the side of this wrasse?