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#31
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What do you want to quarantine it for, ich? If so, it's rather pointless as it will be in the DT and just get re-infected when re-introduced. Another removal and QT process will probably be no better on the fish stress wise than simply leaving it in the tank.
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#32
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Hey Joe
I prefer to put an Ich infected fish in QT until the visible spots disappear, then start the clock. Minimum 4 weeks to pass the next cycle of Trophonts, then watch for another 2 weeks for signs of new infection. So in my case, it can be up to 7-8 weeks in QT. Last time I had an issue I ended up running my tank fallow for 86 days while I treated the survivers in a Hospital tank. Good luck bud |
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#33
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Just for interest sake.
I read some interesting research where they say if you have ich in your tank and for reasons you can't remove fish or treat tank. If you wait 11-12 months without adding anything new-no corals,fish rock etc the ich will actually die off naturally as after multiple generation cycles it wears out. Genetically it just weakens to the point where it can't survive. |
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#34
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I've heard that too, but with a new strain taking up to 72 days per cycle, that 11-12 months just became around 30 ...
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#35
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What was never mentioned is tank size? If the tank is only 50 gallons ish..... then the stress of a small tank will continue to bring on disease..... may not be ich at all. Tangs need space or they will not ever be healthy and happy.
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Red Sea Reefer 525 XL, Vortec M1, Reef Octopus 150 SSS Elite, Apex, WAV power heads, 3 X Aqua Illumination 26 HD. |
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| blue hippo tang, ich |
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