daniella3d |
02-15-2012 02:04 AM |
I don,t think it was velvet then...it would not be cured by a reef safe med.
The only reef safe med that might have a chance against velvet in a reef tank, and that's not guarantee, is peroxyde hydrogen and maybe metronidazole.
Ingredients in protomarin is methylen blue, malachite green, gentian violet and acridine (an antiseptic). Not sure all of these are reef safe and not sure it is efficient against velvet. I have read over and over again that the only med really effective against velvet is copper and chloroquinine. Peroxyde seem promissing and reef safe but dosing is delicate.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tom R
(Post 682359)
About 15 months ago I got what at first I thought was Ich, it was in fact Marine Velvet.
I had not introduced any new fish into my tanks for months prior to this so I am not sure where it came from.
Looking back on this I am still amazed at just how fast it wiped out my fish population. I did not have the ability to set up an isolation tank nor as it turned out did I have the time. I lost 80% of my fish population in 10 days.
After a long discussion with J&L I decided to treat my mixed reef tanks with PROTO MARIN.
All in all it did not cause any problems with my Corals other than a few if them slimmed up.
Of the fish I had left (mostly Tangs and Damsels) any that were showing symptoms of velvet cleared up within a few days.
I am not sure that the PROTO MARIN cleaned up the Velvet or whether the Velvet had just not effected those fish that survived never showed any symptoms of Velvet at all.
I was now faced with the same problem that you are in. Were the remaining fish carriers or were they cured by the PROTO MARIN.
I decided that rather than breaking down my system and rebuilding it (I would likely loosing the majority of my corals) I would let the system run without adding any new fish for 6 months and if the Velvet did not repeat itself I would add some fish after that.
I have since added a few new fish mostly Tangs without any problems. I never lost one coral in this whole ordeal.
Good luck with your decision.
Tom R
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