mattgumaer
New member
Ok, the power went out in my tank a few days ago and, lo and behold, I have ich. A few spots on a few fish. Everybody is still eating and generally happy. It is unclear whether I've had a low level of ich in the tank for quite some time and the stress of the outage brought it on or whether I wasn't careful enough with my new fish in a separate small quarantine tank which have/had ich and I cross-contaminated my display despite the quarantine setup. Either way, I now have ich in a 180 gallon mixed reef that is reasonably heavily stocked.
Residents are: 1) copperband; 2) mandarin; 3) 3 lyretail anthias; 4) 3 Barlett's anthias; 5) 2 percula clowns; 6) powder blue tang (showing minor signs); 7) kole tang (showing minor signs); 8) yellow tang; 9) foxface (showing minor signs); 10) an orangeback wrasse; and 11) a shrimp/goby pair I rarely see- I suppose the goby could be gone but I only every see it once every couple months deep in the rockwork so, who knows.......
So, I think my choices are: 1) try to keep the fish happy and hope they can fend it off on their own; or 2) tear the tank apart to catch all fish and try to treat separately (copper?) in a large hospital (75 gallons?) tank.
My concerns with number 1 (leave fish in) are the ich may get out of control and I may end up doing number 2 anyway but with the fish in tough shape and also that I may have to live with a tank with ich indefinitely, even if the ich stays 'under control'. I have some hope based on anecdotal reports/evidence that the ich may actually die off long term with no new additions (a year or two?)
My concerns with number 2 (take fish out and treat in 75 with Cupramine) are killing a bunch of coral getting the fish out and crashing the system generally, that fish like mandarin and copperband might not survive quarantine due to lack of what they normally eat in my reef tank and/or treatment sensitivity, and, even at 75 gallons, the quarantine will be too small to house all fish without crowding, aggression, killing with ammonia spike, etc.
Is there an option #3? Is something like tank transfer even conceivable with this number/variety of fish?
Any help would be greatly appreciated. It sucks to contemplate this while all fish look happy/healthy but, I'm afraid this could all change very quickly. Thanks.
Matt
Residents are: 1) copperband; 2) mandarin; 3) 3 lyretail anthias; 4) 3 Barlett's anthias; 5) 2 percula clowns; 6) powder blue tang (showing minor signs); 7) kole tang (showing minor signs); 8) yellow tang; 9) foxface (showing minor signs); 10) an orangeback wrasse; and 11) a shrimp/goby pair I rarely see- I suppose the goby could be gone but I only every see it once every couple months deep in the rockwork so, who knows.......
So, I think my choices are: 1) try to keep the fish happy and hope they can fend it off on their own; or 2) tear the tank apart to catch all fish and try to treat separately (copper?) in a large hospital (75 gallons?) tank.
My concerns with number 1 (leave fish in) are the ich may get out of control and I may end up doing number 2 anyway but with the fish in tough shape and also that I may have to live with a tank with ich indefinitely, even if the ich stays 'under control'. I have some hope based on anecdotal reports/evidence that the ich may actually die off long term with no new additions (a year or two?)
My concerns with number 2 (take fish out and treat in 75 with Cupramine) are killing a bunch of coral getting the fish out and crashing the system generally, that fish like mandarin and copperband might not survive quarantine due to lack of what they normally eat in my reef tank and/or treatment sensitivity, and, even at 75 gallons, the quarantine will be too small to house all fish without crowding, aggression, killing with ammonia spike, etc.
Is there an option #3? Is something like tank transfer even conceivable with this number/variety of fish?
Any help would be greatly appreciated. It sucks to contemplate this while all fish look happy/healthy but, I'm afraid this could all change very quickly. Thanks.
Matt