Tony B (UK)
Important cool title
Hi guys,
I am planning a hospital tank, for the treatment of AEFW and I would be grateful for any input you may be able to offer.
Hospital tank details: The tank is 100cm x50cm x 50cm and will be lit with a 400w halide, skimmed with an Aquamedic TF1000 multi sl and I have two adjustable flow dosing pumps that I will use to ball calcium chloride and sodium bicarbonate, cooling is not needed but heating is and I will use a 300w heater. For internal water movement I have a Tunze nano stream. To aid the course of treatment I will also use x2 25w TMC vecton UVs.
Treatment procedure: I plan to use a small header tank to treat multiple corals in at once, I am not 100% decided on how frequently to dip/treat the corals yet, but I am thinking once a week should be enough (eggs take about 2 weeks to hatch, although I plan to remove any eggs buy hand - afaik eggs wont be killed by the treatment). As far as what meds to use to treat the AEFW, Aquarium Products Fluke-Tabs apparently work well, http://www.drsfostersmith.com/product/prod...amp;pcatid=4760 as does TLF Revive Coral Cleaner - think it might be 6 of one, half a dozen of the other, if you know what I mean.
My concern is with cross infection; when I take all the corals out I am concerned that there may be some AEFW left in the hospital tank, maybe stuck on the glass or sitting on the small amount of live rock (LR used will be the biological filter) so even after I've dipped everything, the AEFW can hop back onto the corals, thus avoiding treatment. Any ideas how I could reduce the chance of cross infection? I am thinking that I could set up another holding tank, with 6 bits of live rock (or sponge) to act as my bio filter, after each treatment I bin the old filter media, drain and wipe down surfaces of the hospital tank and then re-fill with the same water. Although I have also considered that the AEFW may also become 'water born' during this movement, so to catch the little sods, I would pump the water through an Aquamedic bypass filter, filled with new/fresh filter floss to act as a trap.
Is cross infection likely? Do you think the above measures to reduce cross infection are honestly needed?
Any comments or further considerations/suggestions welcomed.
Regards,
Tony
I am planning a hospital tank, for the treatment of AEFW and I would be grateful for any input you may be able to offer.
Hospital tank details: The tank is 100cm x50cm x 50cm and will be lit with a 400w halide, skimmed with an Aquamedic TF1000 multi sl and I have two adjustable flow dosing pumps that I will use to ball calcium chloride and sodium bicarbonate, cooling is not needed but heating is and I will use a 300w heater. For internal water movement I have a Tunze nano stream. To aid the course of treatment I will also use x2 25w TMC vecton UVs.
Treatment procedure: I plan to use a small header tank to treat multiple corals in at once, I am not 100% decided on how frequently to dip/treat the corals yet, but I am thinking once a week should be enough (eggs take about 2 weeks to hatch, although I plan to remove any eggs buy hand - afaik eggs wont be killed by the treatment). As far as what meds to use to treat the AEFW, Aquarium Products Fluke-Tabs apparently work well, http://www.drsfostersmith.com/product/prod...amp;pcatid=4760 as does TLF Revive Coral Cleaner - think it might be 6 of one, half a dozen of the other, if you know what I mean.
My concern is with cross infection; when I take all the corals out I am concerned that there may be some AEFW left in the hospital tank, maybe stuck on the glass or sitting on the small amount of live rock (LR used will be the biological filter) so even after I've dipped everything, the AEFW can hop back onto the corals, thus avoiding treatment. Any ideas how I could reduce the chance of cross infection? I am thinking that I could set up another holding tank, with 6 bits of live rock (or sponge) to act as my bio filter, after each treatment I bin the old filter media, drain and wipe down surfaces of the hospital tank and then re-fill with the same water. Although I have also considered that the AEFW may also become 'water born' during this movement, so to catch the little sods, I would pump the water through an Aquamedic bypass filter, filled with new/fresh filter floss to act as a trap.
Is cross infection likely? Do you think the above measures to reduce cross infection are honestly needed?
Any comments or further considerations/suggestions welcomed.
Regards,
Tony