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Justusfish 03-02-2007 10:14 PM

Ich and what carries it?!
 
I am buying a 210 gallon tank with no visible Ich on any of its occupants. My 50 gallon tank has 8 fish in it, three with Ich, (relatively mild) Two tangs and one Maroon clown affected. The damsels and pajama cardinals, a non-issue. No ich.

So my question is this: Can I put my live rock from the "iched" tank into the 210 or do they contain ich? Can I move my corals over? Then I could treat my fish after removing the rock and coral with chemicals and quarantine them for eight weeks before moving the fish into the tank?

Is any of this feasible?

Thanks

marie 03-03-2007 01:11 AM

It is possible and probable that ich will transfer over with the rock from your tank

marie 03-03-2007 01:50 AM

This is from an article Steven Pro wrote for reefkeeping magazine
Quote:

The lifecycle of the parasite is interesting and important to understand when evaluating a treatment. The stage where the parasite is attached to a fish is called a trophont. The trophont will spend three to seven days (depending on temperature) feeding on the fish. After that, the trophont leaves the fish and becomes what is called a protomont. This protomont travels to the substrate and begins to crawl around for usually two to eight hours, but it could go for as long as eighteen hours after it leaves it's fish host. Once the protomont attaches to a surface, it begins to encyst and is now called a tomont. Division inside the cyst into hundreds of daughter parasites, called tomites, begins shortly thereafter. This noninfectious stage can last anywhere from three to twenty-eight days. During this extended period, the parasite cyst is lying in wait for a host. After this period, the tomites hatch and begin swimming around, looking for a fish host. At this point, they are called theronts, and they must find a host within twenty-four hours or die. They prefer to seek out the skin and gill tissue, then transform into trophonts, and begin the process all over again (Colorni & Burgess, 1997).

mark 03-03-2007 02:04 AM

Though possible you would bring ich across, sounds like you will be having two tanks anyway which would allow you to break the life cycle.

Set up 210 with your rock and coral, all fish in in the 50 for your 6-8 week treatment and observation.

Big caution with a QT is make sure to monitor for NH3 frequently as since no rock or for biological filtering it can build quickly.

Reefer Rob 03-03-2007 05:03 AM

It would be easiest to treat your fish in your quarantine tank, and leave your old tank "fishless" for 5 weeks. Anything you bring over before 5 weeks could cause an infestation in your new tank.

Justusfish 03-03-2007 01:51 PM

thanks
 
Thanks for the help folks. Much appreciated.

bubblepuffer 03-06-2007 06:34 PM

is that possible Ich come by itself?? My Porcuppine Puffer only show up with Ich problem with he is stress up badly.. when he is happy after some Happy Meal, the ich will gone in 24-72hrs.. it happen couple of time already

BlueNWhite 03-06-2007 07:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bubblepuffer (Post 239262)
is that possible Ich come by itself?? My Porcuppine Puffer only show up with Ich problem with he is stress up badly.. when he is happy after some Happy Meal, the ich will gone in 24-72hrs.. it happen couple of time already

Unfortunately, this only means that the parasites are already in your tank. Just because the puffer only shows signs of it sometimes, doesn't necessarily mean that the parasite isn't there anymore.

As long as your fish continue eating, most of them should be able to fight them off and return to full health. It's the ich magnet fish like certain tangs that you have to worry about because they tend to have a harder time fighting them off. That's why I will never try another Powder Blue Tang again. I don't want to risk the life of my Angels.

Good luck.

And Justusfish, if you do go through the trouble of quarantining all of those fish, you may as well go a little longer beyond 5 weeks to be safe.

PoonTang 03-06-2007 09:27 PM

Tangs that are kept in a smaller tank are going to be stressed and therefore going to get ich. Garlic may help.

justinl 03-06-2007 09:38 PM

garlic seems to work for some, but there is no solid proof of any garlic or garlic based med actually works. I read an article on it a while back. I think the best thing to do is QT all the fish until your display is ich free.


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