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#1
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![]() Can't say I've heard of 6 lines eating Ich myself, But even if yours does.
I doubt it would be able to eliminate ich from your tank. Also taking the tang out to treat wouldn't solve your problem either. Part of ich life cycle is an off the fish, So you take the fish out cure him of ich, put him back in the tank and hes got ich again. Just because you cant see ich doesn't mean its not there I'm afraid. Basically your option's are QT and treat all your fish for over a month. Or live with the fact that you have Ich in your tank and try to solve what the tangs issue is.
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______________ Tim |
#2
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![]() Quote:
I guess I was hoping that if something could pick off the white spots (can't keep a cleaner shrimp because my angels will eat it) my Lavender would now be healthy/less stressed enough to keep the spots from coming back. I believe the white spots annoy me more then they annoy her ![]()
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One more fish should be ok?, right!!! ![]() |
#3
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![]() Try a Cleaner Wrasse.
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Mark. |
#4
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![]() ich is an internal parasite, not an external one. Cleaner shrimp, cleaner wrasses ect. do not help with ick but will clean other parasites.
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I'm out. ![]() |
#5
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![]() I swear by neon gobies. They're captive bred and easy to feed if theres nothing to pick at.
![]() I was under the impression that ick (Cryptocaryon irritans) was an external parasite. It adheres to the skin of the fish, makes its way into the mucous layer and into the epithelium. While at this point anything attempting to "eat" the parasite off of the fish would be ineffective, the initial "spots" found on the fish as tiny salt grains would be halted from completing the life cycle.
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Christy's Reef Blog My 180 Build Every electronic component is shipped with smoke stored deep inside.... only a real genius can find a way to set it free. |
#6
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![]() +1 for christy's suggestion. while neon gobies aren't quite the parasite eating machines that cleaner wrasses are, they aren't completely dependent on parasites as food; in fact they take to prepared foods quite well. cleaner wrasses die probabl 99% of the time in captivity because they are so damn picky... and even if they do eat prepared foods (rare, but not unheard of) they still die well before their time. It seems that they can only get the right diet from a steady diet of parasites.
cleaner shrimp are sort of hit or miss (more often the latter) it seems. might just depend how well fed it is and how complying the fish feels. I could see a sixline eating external parasites if it were hungry enough but it certainly isn't anywhere near conclusive... if i were you i wouldn't bother with that route. |
#7
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![]() FWIW, I had a Cleaner Wrasse that ate small Silverside bits like they were it's last meal. Not sayin' all CW's will do this, but one could get lucky. I guess I was a lucky one. Recommend observing a store feeding. And for the record, yes the CW I had died, but that was during a crosstown move. I had the little guy for a year and a half prior to that.
HTH and cheers,
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Mark. |