ezhoops
New member
So, I have Been attempting to find some quality anemone quarantine procedures. Here is what Dr. Ron recommends.
Hi Eric,
About 13-15 years ago I suggested QT method to one dealer.* It worked so well (for him, at least) that he published an article in a pet trade publication about it.
As you surmised it used water changes.* I don't think using antibiotics for this sort of thing is a good thing, about all that would do is breed*stronger microbes, and possibly kill the animal's zooxanthellae.* So... avoid antibiotics.
Anyway, my suggestions*were to have on hand some excess salty water, several times the amount necessary for a single water change in the QT tank.* It needs to either be natural sea water or be artificial sea water*mixed to full oceanic salinity.* NEVER allow the anemone to touch any sea water that is not at full oceanic salinity (36-36 PSU).
The procedure varies a bit depending on how the animal arrives in care.*
If it is shipped to you:
1) Prior to arrival*have some clean, or freshly prepared, full-salinity*sea water (36 PSU)*cooled down to about 65 deg F.* This temperature is prophylactic and the exposure to it only will last for a short period, and it will not harm the anemone.* The cool water slows the anemone's metabolism during the rinsing, cleaning procedure and helps prevent excess damage.**You will need probably two or three volumes of your arrival/rinsing*tank.
2) Have on hand and ready for use: 1)*a container for arrival processing/rising, and 2) the QT tank/container.
The arrival container should be small enough so that you can easily*manipulate the animal in it*- a*white plastic bucket works well, or even a large bowl (cleaned of course, and never having had soap or such in it) will do.
The QT container should be a tank large enough to allow the animal to fully inflate.* This should*probably be*about a 30 gallon tank in most cases.* This tank needs to be set up to receive and maintain the animal*in good health for the*isolation period.* It should*have some sort of filtering system active and in place. *It MUST have adequate lighting.* It*MUST have*some clean*substrate that is acceptable to the animal in it.* The substrate will vary, depending on the anemone; in other words, one subtrate isn't acceptable for all species of host anemones.* The proper substrate is necessary to prevent the animal's normal reflex to move in an unacceptable habitat from starting.* If the substrate is not a proper one, the moving reflex will often cause the animal to continually move, and not feed, and then die.* The*QT container*needs to be*kept at reef normal temperatures,*say about 82-84 deg F.* Any lower than that will*stress the animal. **
3).* Upon arrival...* You should be wearing gloves.* You may need to manipulate the animal gently and doing this by hand offers the best chance of not damaging the anemone - consequently you need to have the gloves to prevent your bare skin from damaging the*anemone, and to prevent the anemone from stinging you and potentially causing you great harm (the possibility of anaphylactic shock from an anemone sting is a real one).**
Upon arrival...
Remove the animal from its shipping bag using the following procedure (pray that the shipper only put one animal per bag - two, or more, anemones per bag is really bad news).* Typically, freshly shipped anemones are mostly retracted.* Open the bag and gently pour off any excess water leaving just enough to cover the animal.**Gently pour*the animal and the remaining shipping water*into*a small bowl; a finger bowl often works well, but a small soup*bowl*may be better for larger animals.* Again this bowl*should never have*had soap or any cleaning agent in it.*Try not to touch the animal, but if it is necessary to do so, use gentle force and minimize your contact with it.
Your arrival/rinsing vessel should have enough cool water in it to cover the animal in its bowl.**Place the animal (in its bowl)*into the cool water.**Submerge the animal and pour it out of the bowl.* Move the animal gently around in this water to remove any excess mucus or oxygenation chemicals or whatever else has been put into the shipment.* Then carefully scoop the animal up in its bowl and place that*on a safe*surface and discard all of the water in the*arrival/rinsing container.* Refill the container to the appropriate level.**And then repeat the rinsing*procedure (everything in black above).**Repeat this procedure two or three times (more times if the animal seems to be producing excessive mucus).
At the completion of the rinsing procedure, fill the rising container with just enough cool sea water to cover the animal, and place the animal in this water.* Then slowly (not terribly slowly - maybe a gallon a minute) siphon in normal reef temperature sea water to bring the animal up to its normal temperature.* Anemones need to be carefully acclimated to salinity changes, but temperature acclimation is largely unnecessary, they don't have any organs or organ-systems that can be damaged by rapid temperature changes.* Consequently, the animal can be rapidly brought up to normal reef temperature (82 -84 F).
Once the animal has been brought up to normal reef temperature, scoop it up with the bowl and move it to the QT tank (which should at the same temperature and salinity as the new arrival's post-rinsing*water).* Treat the animal as normally as possible in the QT tank: that is, once it has extended feed it, daily or twice daily, at least; give it the appropriate illumination and currents.
Most anemones will recover from shipping stress within a few hours.* The length of the QT period is up to you.* Probably two weeks to a month is sufficient to ensure the animal is*not diseased or likely to die from stress factors.
If the animal is not shipped to you, but collected from the local LFS, rinse the animal one or two times in normal reef temperature sea water and put it into the QT tank.
I hope this helps
Cheers, Ron
"The difference in mind between man and the higher animals, great as it is, certainly is one of degree and not of kind. The love for all living creatures is the most noble attribute of man." Charles Darwin (1809-1882)
Hi Eric,
About 13-15 years ago I suggested QT method to one dealer.* It worked so well (for him, at least) that he published an article in a pet trade publication about it.
As you surmised it used water changes.* I don't think using antibiotics for this sort of thing is a good thing, about all that would do is breed*stronger microbes, and possibly kill the animal's zooxanthellae.* So... avoid antibiotics.
Anyway, my suggestions*were to have on hand some excess salty water, several times the amount necessary for a single water change in the QT tank.* It needs to either be natural sea water or be artificial sea water*mixed to full oceanic salinity.* NEVER allow the anemone to touch any sea water that is not at full oceanic salinity (36-36 PSU).
The procedure varies a bit depending on how the animal arrives in care.*
If it is shipped to you:
1) Prior to arrival*have some clean, or freshly prepared, full-salinity*sea water (36 PSU)*cooled down to about 65 deg F.* This temperature is prophylactic and the exposure to it only will last for a short period, and it will not harm the anemone.* The cool water slows the anemone's metabolism during the rinsing, cleaning procedure and helps prevent excess damage.**You will need probably two or three volumes of your arrival/rinsing*tank.
2) Have on hand and ready for use: 1)*a container for arrival processing/rising, and 2) the QT tank/container.
The arrival container should be small enough so that you can easily*manipulate the animal in it*- a*white plastic bucket works well, or even a large bowl (cleaned of course, and never having had soap or such in it) will do.
The QT container should be a tank large enough to allow the animal to fully inflate.* This should*probably be*about a 30 gallon tank in most cases.* This tank needs to be set up to receive and maintain the animal*in good health for the*isolation period.* It should*have some sort of filtering system active and in place. *It MUST have adequate lighting.* It*MUST have*some clean*substrate that is acceptable to the animal in it.* The substrate will vary, depending on the anemone; in other words, one subtrate isn't acceptable for all species of host anemones.* The proper substrate is necessary to prevent the animal's normal reflex to move in an unacceptable habitat from starting.* If the substrate is not a proper one, the moving reflex will often cause the animal to continually move, and not feed, and then die.* The*QT container*needs to be*kept at reef normal temperatures,*say about 82-84 deg F.* Any lower than that will*stress the animal. **
3).* Upon arrival...* You should be wearing gloves.* You may need to manipulate the animal gently and doing this by hand offers the best chance of not damaging the anemone - consequently you need to have the gloves to prevent your bare skin from damaging the*anemone, and to prevent the anemone from stinging you and potentially causing you great harm (the possibility of anaphylactic shock from an anemone sting is a real one).**
Upon arrival...
Remove the animal from its shipping bag using the following procedure (pray that the shipper only put one animal per bag - two, or more, anemones per bag is really bad news).* Typically, freshly shipped anemones are mostly retracted.* Open the bag and gently pour off any excess water leaving just enough to cover the animal.**Gently pour*the animal and the remaining shipping water*into*a small bowl; a finger bowl often works well, but a small soup*bowl*may be better for larger animals.* Again this bowl*should never have*had soap or any cleaning agent in it.*Try not to touch the animal, but if it is necessary to do so, use gentle force and minimize your contact with it.
Your arrival/rinsing vessel should have enough cool water in it to cover the animal in its bowl.**Place the animal (in its bowl)*into the cool water.**Submerge the animal and pour it out of the bowl.* Move the animal gently around in this water to remove any excess mucus or oxygenation chemicals or whatever else has been put into the shipment.* Then carefully scoop the animal up in its bowl and place that*on a safe*surface and discard all of the water in the*arrival/rinsing container.* Refill the container to the appropriate level.**And then repeat the rinsing*procedure (everything in black above).**Repeat this procedure two or three times (more times if the animal seems to be producing excessive mucus).
At the completion of the rinsing procedure, fill the rising container with just enough cool sea water to cover the animal, and place the animal in this water.* Then slowly (not terribly slowly - maybe a gallon a minute) siphon in normal reef temperature sea water to bring the animal up to its normal temperature.* Anemones need to be carefully acclimated to salinity changes, but temperature acclimation is largely unnecessary, they don't have any organs or organ-systems that can be damaged by rapid temperature changes.* Consequently, the animal can be rapidly brought up to normal reef temperature (82 -84 F).
Once the animal has been brought up to normal reef temperature, scoop it up with the bowl and move it to the QT tank (which should at the same temperature and salinity as the new arrival's post-rinsing*water).* Treat the animal as normally as possible in the QT tank: that is, once it has extended feed it, daily or twice daily, at least; give it the appropriate illumination and currents.
Most anemones will recover from shipping stress within a few hours.* The length of the QT period is up to you.* Probably two weeks to a month is sufficient to ensure the animal is*not diseased or likely to die from stress factors.
If the animal is not shipped to you, but collected from the local LFS, rinse the animal one or two times in normal reef temperature sea water and put it into the QT tank.
I hope this helps
Cheers, Ron
"The difference in mind between man and the higher animals, great as it is, certainly is one of degree and not of kind. The love for all living creatures is the most noble attribute of man." Charles Darwin (1809-1882)