Re: garlic facts
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14082952#post14082952 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by spamreefnew
hi all , i was just reading some threds on garlic,and was wondering if anybody has found any science facts about it yet?
I don't know of any scientific studies on the efficacy of garlic in curing anything as far as marine fish, or even freshwater fish, are concerned.
There are scientific papers on the beneficial effects of the primary ingredient in garlic for certain human conditions. I believe I posted those several years ago but I can't seem to find them now.
The only thing we have as far as the effect of garlic on marine fishes is concerned are anecdotal reports.
I can tell you my experience with it and you can file it away in the for what it's worth box. I make no claims whatsoever, I'm just relaying what I observed in my own tank.
I purchased a coral beauty angelfish (
Centropyge bispinosa) and added it to my 120-gal tank that already had three fairy wrasses (two
Cirrhilabrus scottorum and one
C. lineatus), an orchid dottyback (
Pseudochromis fridmani) and a foxface rabbitfish (
Siganus vulpinus). About three days later I noticed ich on the coral beauty and the foxface rabbitfish -- no more than two or three visible trophonts on each fish.
I immediately added about a half teaspoon of very finely minced fresh garlic to the food and let that soak for fifteen minutes before feeding it to the tank. I was surprised that the fish seemed to like the tiny pieces of garlic. They all ate it just as if it were regular fish food. I continued to add a small amount of freshly minced garlic to my twice-daily feedings.
A day or two after noticing ich on the coral beauty and the foxface rabbitfish, I noticed a few trophonts on all three fairy wrasses. By this time there were probably five or six trophonts visible on the coral beauty and the foxface. The orchid dottyback never did show any signs of ich.
The worst that the ich ever got was about six or seven visible trophonts on each of the fish that were infected. I continued to feed freshly minced garlic twice a day for three weeks. After about the first week, there were no visible signs of ich on any of the fish. I continued feeding garlic for another two weeks and then stopped.
About a week after I stopped feeding the garlic, I noticed three or four trophonts on one or two fish. I immediately resumed feeding finely minced garlic but this time it was three times a day. The visible trophonts disappeared in a couple of days but I continued feeding freshly minced garlic three times a day for five or six weeks, then I stopped.
There were no signs of ich in my tank after that. I sold the tank some two years later when I had to move. I did not add any new fish to my tank after the coral beauty.
There are all sorts of explanations for what I observed. It could be that the garlic had no effect in spite of my observations. Maybe it was just a coincidence.
It could be that the trophonts don't like the smell of garlic. It could be that all that garlic in the tankwater caused the theronts to become disoriented and make it more difficult for them to find a fish to attach to. Maybe the garlic interfered with the tomont's ability to encyst properly.
Maybe the garlic actually helped the fishes' immune systems resist the parasite. Maybe the garlic gave the fish bad breath and the theronts kept their distance.
Maybe I should have used a quarantine tank in the first place.
P.S. -- Points to remember about my experience: the ich was never really a bad infestation. I used only freshly minced garlic that I chopped up myself just before adding it to a 1/4 cup of tankwater with the fish food (various frozen Ocean Nutrition products). I began feeding garlic immediately upon first sight of any trophonts. I fed the freshly minced garlic three times a day for a long period of time, at least five weeks after the disappearance of the last trophonts.
I don't recommend garlic. I'm just saying that I used it and that's what happened.