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#1
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![]() Quote:
How do you make sure you don't get fish store water into your tank? I've always thought that allowing fish tank water into your tank is a way for parasites etc to enter your tank. I tried a linkia and did an 1.5 hour acclimate but it died. It hid under a huge peice of live rock and then I got concerned and brought it out into the open. It then melted a few days later. If I got a star again how would I do the best acclimate? I floated the bag for half an hour in my display with the lights off and then put a quarter cup of display water into the bag. When it got full, I took water out. I know people have done the airline hose drip acclimate but I haven't tried it. I recently lost an awesome bright yellow sail fin tang after a week in my 20 gal quarantine tank. The copper band and the kole tang are fine. The sail fin looked healthy. I did notice a few tiny white spots on the tail of the copper band. I dosed with herbtana and artemiss for three days each and it seems fine. Is there a problem with my acclimation process for fish as well? |
#2
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![]() The drip method (airline barely open via small valve or knot) is the only way to go. I use this for all livestock, and starfish are most important to have a gradual change. If you start a siphon with it and have a little airline shutoff valve, you can easily adjust the drip rate.
As for aquarium water in the tank, it's true you don't ideally want much of their water in the tank... though to be fair after 2 hours of dripping, and removing water often as the bag keeps getting full, the amount of store water left in the bag is in the minority, then it comes to technique: I turn off the pumps so no flow, and get him transfered into a small cup inside the bag, with water right up near the top. Then I slowly bring the cup to the water, and with one hand inside the cup on the star and another on the cup I slowly lower the cup into the water, still vertical, and as soon as the cup is about 1/2 submerged I pull the star into the water column and immediately remove the cup from the water without spilling - since no flow, the amount of water that left the cup will be negligible.
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Single System Setup: 210G SPS reef, 225G FOWLR, 72G water change, 50G frag, 120G sump. I promise a journal at some point! (anyone need some coral frags? I likely always have stuff that is frag-ready) |
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