Parasitic·Marine·Contagious

Brooklynella hostilis

Brooklynella, Clownfish Disease

Causative agent: Brooklynella hostilis — ciliate protozoan

Brooklynella hostilis is a parasitic disease that holds a special concern for Australian clownfish enthusiasts — this ciliate has a strong preference for clownfish and can devastate a pair within just a few days. The disease causes excessive mucus production, skin sloughing, and rapid breathing, and is often brought into a tank on newly purchased wild-caught clownfish. Brooklynella acts fast and is frequently fatal without prompt treatment. A freshwater dip, where the affected fish is transferred briefly into pH and temperature-matched freshwater, can provide immediate relief by causing the parasites to burst from the osmotic shock. This is then followed by a course of formalin-based medication in a hospital tank. In Australia, Seachem ParaGuard is the most accessible over-the-counter treatment. The best defence against Brooklynella remains a strict quarantine protocol for all new clownfish, ideally for four to six weeks in a separate system before introduction to the main display.

Symptoms

  • Excess mucus on skin
  • skin sloughing or peeling
  • labored breathing
  • loss of appetite
  • fish hangs near water surface
  • similar appearance to marine velvet

Treatment

  • Freshwater dip (5–10 minutes)
  • formalin-based treatments
  • Seachem ParaGuard
  • Aquarium Solutions ICH-X
  • remove to hospital tank

Australian Medications

  • Seachem ParaGuard (available in Australia)
  • formalin baths via aquarium suppliers

Commonly Affected Fish

  • Clownfish primarily
  • other marine fish can also be affected

Important Notes

Particularly dangerous to clownfish. Acts rapidly — treat same day symptoms are observed.

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