Symptom-first triage
The workflow starts with visible signs such as gasping, white spots, clamped fins, swelling, flashing, appetite loss, or sudden death.
AquaShelter turns fish symptoms, tank history, water readings, and species context into a practical triage path. It helps users understand what is urgent, what may be water-related, and when treatment needs extra caution.
The workflow starts with visible signs such as gasping, white spots, clamped fins, swelling, flashing, appetite loss, or sudden death.
The app does not treat every case like infection. It checks ammonia, nitrite, oxygen, tank age, feeding, and water-change history where available.
AquaShelter flags sensitive setups such as shrimp, corals, plants, fry, and fragile biofilters before a user chooses a risky product path.
Many hobbyists do not own a test kit. AquaShelter supports measured water readings when available, and uses a risk workflow when they are not.
These guides explain the common patterns behind many diagnosis results.
No. It is a triage assistant. It helps narrow the likely risk and safer next step, but it cannot guarantee a diagnosis.
Yes. If readings are missing, AquaShelter uses risk questions about tank age, feeding, stocking, recent cleaning, and water-change history. The result is practical triage, not a laboratory-confirmed diagnosis.
It is useful for aquarium keepers and aquarium shops that need a clearer first response before choosing treatment.
Try the AquaShelter diagnosis flow and compare symptoms with tank context before choosing a treatment path.
Try the diagnosis flowAquaShelter helps with triage and safer decisions, but it does not replace a qualified aquatic veterinarian.