wooden_reefer
New member
"Why a bare tank? Because when under assault, the ich will encyst and drop off the fish to attach to sand, rock, or filter media. Get rid of media daily. Because the visible ich has left your fish is no guarantee it's gone. [hint: I go to the hobby store and get a big bag of polyester pillow stuffing; wrap a tuft of that cheap stuff around a teaspoon of carbon---yes! you can use carbon while using hypo, another virtue---and use that for your filter. You can rig a very potent little filter with an old CD holder: put the pump in the bottom, put pillowstuffing atop, and let 'er rip. It's a pot filter, which I use in my koi pond, and it is pretty efficient. Couple that with an air filter with a bubble wand, and you've got plenty of filtration and plenty of oxygen."
I have to completely disagree with this approach of bare tank.
While the reason is plausible, the problem with ammonia is greater.
If the hypo condition will kill 1000 ich organisms, it will also kill 1000,000. True, there can be genetic varaition among them (say most will be killed at 0.010 but a few may survive), but this is not the focus if you treat for long enough.
That a bare tank will trap fewer ich is plausible, but this cannot be the focus; which is to make sure that the fish is not exposed to any ammonia during treatment (so that the treatment can be long and safe).
I actually use a "bare tank" but I have a separate mature, cycled medium running at all times so that the ammonia is zero.
Do not do away with biological filtration during QT or treatment whenever possible; this will allow less effort and longer treatment.
I have to completely disagree with this approach of bare tank.
While the reason is plausible, the problem with ammonia is greater.
If the hypo condition will kill 1000 ich organisms, it will also kill 1000,000. True, there can be genetic varaition among them (say most will be killed at 0.010 but a few may survive), but this is not the focus if you treat for long enough.
That a bare tank will trap fewer ich is plausible, but this cannot be the focus; which is to make sure that the fish is not exposed to any ammonia during treatment (so that the treatment can be long and safe).
I actually use a "bare tank" but I have a separate mature, cycled medium running at all times so that the ammonia is zero.
Do not do away with biological filtration during QT or treatment whenever possible; this will allow less effort and longer treatment.
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