Just having a think about this process and how it may be more definitively applied I was wondering if people would comment on an idea I had (others have probably also thought this).
As the fish are transferred into the QT for hypo and you can generally get the fish to low salinity within 48 hours then the number of trophonts that drop off and form tomonts would be small(ish). Then assuming from that point the salinity is held at 1.009 then any further trophonts that fall off would die before forming tomonts due to the low salinity then we are only risking the small numbers that have formed tomonts in the first 48 hours that could survive for the maximum period of 72 days. During the next 4 weeks all the trophonts will have left the fish and died and then we are only left with the possibility of the remaining tomonts surviving past the 4 weeks when we lift the salinity back up.
Stay with me
At this point prior to lifting the salinity could you do a tank transfer and then lift the salinity in the new tank. This would mean that no tomont would be present in the new quarantine tank and therefore no risk of them releasing once the salinity was back up and infecting your fish again.
Just thoughts. Keen on some feedback.
marc
As the fish are transferred into the QT for hypo and you can generally get the fish to low salinity within 48 hours then the number of trophonts that drop off and form tomonts would be small(ish). Then assuming from that point the salinity is held at 1.009 then any further trophonts that fall off would die before forming tomonts due to the low salinity then we are only risking the small numbers that have formed tomonts in the first 48 hours that could survive for the maximum period of 72 days. During the next 4 weeks all the trophonts will have left the fish and died and then we are only left with the possibility of the remaining tomonts surviving past the 4 weeks when we lift the salinity back up.
Stay with me

At this point prior to lifting the salinity could you do a tank transfer and then lift the salinity in the new tank. This would mean that no tomont would be present in the new quarantine tank and therefore no risk of them releasing once the salinity was back up and infecting your fish again.
Just thoughts. Keen on some feedback.
marc