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#1
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![]() I see nothing wrong at all with your original plan. Minus the siphoning of the sand. That won't do anything for Ick. Keep your hands outta the tank, it's just added stress. I'm a huge supporter on using garlic and it has never failed me yet. I've been following a thread on another site and guys have been having success with using powdered ginger. Haven't tried it, cuz well trust me, garlic works. I wouldn't steer you wrong and I speak from experience. Good luck.
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#2
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![]() Had some ick 6-7 years ago and really didn't do anything other than kept everyone well fed and stress free (didn't try to catch to put in QT etc). Cleared up on it's own and haven't seen since. Didn't do garlic but read it helps.
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#3
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![]() If the fish are healthy ich typically isn't a problem. Stick with the garlic soaked food, don't change things around in the tank and keep water parameters in check. I like to add garlic and selcon to my food even though I don't have any ich issues just to keep everyone happy.
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#4
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Just my 2 cents based on past experience. |
#5
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![]() I'm a little leary to jump in here with all the talk about leaving fish in the DT and using garlic and such, but here goes ...
First off, Tangs are one of the most susceptible fish to marine ich, so no surprise you have it I'm a proponent of both a QT regime, and a hyposalinity regime for cases of MI I agree with the idea of leaving the fish alone so as to not stress them anymore than they already are, and keep them fat and healthy to fight off infections, but MI can apparently cycle up to (if I remember correctly) 11 times before it dies out (or is that 11 months ? ...) In either case, it's a long time to go without adding anything new to your tank if you want to be MI-free If you want to rid yourself of it, go fallow (read below) Healthy fish can fight off most diseases, just as you and I do, but the simplest things can kill very easily MI can attack the gills just as easily as the outer visible parts, so watch out for heavy breathing issues On the flip side to your guys having it, many cases of people losing their fish to 'MI' have in fact been mis-diagnosed and were actually Velvet. It kills, and fast So some of the horror stories we've read may not in fact be about MI at all And there are lots of reefers (even here on Canreef) who actively have MI in their tanks and live with it I've had fish in QT with MI (bad, bad coverage all over) and it's never killed anything I've owned, but that's during a hypo treatment so the effects of the low SG may come into play under heavily infested conditions I can't say I've ever had any experience with long-term exposure in a DT as I've never allowed it in So, with that said, it's up to you what to do next You can either live with it now that you have it, or remove them to a QT for 9+ weeks (11 is better) while you leave your DT fallow and wait for the MI to die off Keep the inverts in the DT and 'ghost feed' the tank to keep them alive Then in the future use your QT everytime you buy new critters Either way, I'm still gonna say it ... Get a QT going and use it for new critters ![]() Good luck, and Happy New Year ! Last edited by gregzz4; 01-01-2014 at 06:06 AM. |
#6
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![]() Thank you all for taking the time to read and reply to my post
![]() I think since the kole is eating and behaving normally I will leave him in the DT for now and continue feeding with garlic. If he gets worse however I will move him to a QT and if I see it drastically spreading to my other fish then I will consider moving all the fish to QT's for treatment and leave my DT fallow for 12 weeks. I really hope the latter won't be necessary... Mark and halwake, you both said you had ich in your tanks before but it eventually subsided on its own. Does that mean it died off completely? Or the fish are just co-existing with it? I think I'm going to pick up a couple of cleaner shrimp this week and then I will not be adding any more livestock to the DT for a good 2-3 months after the last white dot is gone. |
#7
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![]() Quote:
2-3 months is not going to make a difference if the web info is correct I know I haven't given you a chance to read my post yet, but it can take up to 11 cycles (months ?) for MI to die out |
#8
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Although it seems that fish can co-exist with the parasite I'm assuming it's probably annoying for them to deal with. Also I'm assuming every time I add a new fish even after QT the dots will reappear since the ich is living in the DT. I think I may just go the fallow path and invest the time now and instead of dealing with the heartache later lol. I have another question now... instead of moving the fish to a QT (which I would have to buy because I only have 5 and 10 gal spare tanks) could I move the inverts (snails, shrimp, urchin) to my 29gal fowlr and just do hyposalinity on the DT? On a side note the kole is still looking good and the dots have reduced. I'm sure it's ich and not velvet ![]() |
#9
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![]() If the kole only has dots, and doesn't look like it's been rolled in flour, then I'm pretty sure you're safe to assume it's not velvet
Sure you could do hypo in the DT with the inverts removed, but I'd recommend you remove the LR too, and you'll have to leave the LR fallow for I think 9 weeks If you leave the LR in the DT during hypo you'll probably lose all the pods and such |
#10
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