GillsGoneWild
New member
Hi everybody"¦long time reader, first time poster. I'm looking for a little feedback on something I was told by my LFS regarding ich and quarantine. First, a little background "“ 90 gallon rimless mixed reef plus a 30 gallon frag tank (to feed my wife's zoanthid addiction) all of which are plumbed to a community 20 gallon sump/refugium. About two months after cycling, we noticed there was an ich outbreak starting. Big surprise"¦no quarantine system. I retroactively set up a 29 gallon quarantine tank and transferred all of the fish one night while my wife was at work (she gets a little worked up during these things"¦it's easier this way) and a couple days later began treating with Cupramine, slowly ramping up the dosage over several days. Everything is going great, fish are healthy and eating well, and we are excitedly counting down the days until the end of our ten week quarantine period (28 more days!):dance:
But then I hear this from my LFS, nearly verbatim:
"œYou can quarantine your fish for a year, treating them with copper and/or hyposalinity, and keep no fish in the display, and the ich will still be there. When you transfer them back to the tank and they get stressed, the ich will come back. It will live dormant under scales and under the slime coat. Welcome to the world of keeping tangs."
This blew me away, as it seems to go against everything that I've ever read regarding the parasite. It is doubly troubling considering the owner of the LFS is a friend. I'm looking forward to hearing your input on this topic.
But then I hear this from my LFS, nearly verbatim:
"œYou can quarantine your fish for a year, treating them with copper and/or hyposalinity, and keep no fish in the display, and the ich will still be there. When you transfer them back to the tank and they get stressed, the ich will come back. It will live dormant under scales and under the slime coat. Welcome to the world of keeping tangs."
This blew me away, as it seems to go against everything that I've ever read regarding the parasite. It is doubly troubling considering the owner of the LFS is a friend. I'm looking forward to hearing your input on this topic.