<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9026843#post9026843 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by drej424
Well, I quarantined the fish. I have tried other methods to try to get rid of the ich, so now I'll do this. Hopefully, it will work (without killing any more fish). I don't think I have to keep copper in the quarantine tank the entire time, do I? Because if the copper kills the ich on the fish and then I keep the salinity low for the entire 8 weeks in the quarantine tank, that should be enough, shouldn't it?
The corals I have are a purple mushroom, a green mushroom, 3 feather dusters, pearl bubble coral, tongue coral, green star polyps, yellow polyps, hammer coral, daisy coral, and table coral. I've been feeding my fish a mixture of pellets, veggie flakes, mysis, garlic extract and selcon. I add some plankton 2 x's per week.
Copper doesn't kill the parasite while it's on the fish, neither does any other treatment. The way the treatments work, is that after the parasite drops of the fish to reproduce is when it's vulnerable. It's at the free swimming stages that copper kills the parasite. BTW if your going with copper, I highly recomend using Cupramine from Sea Chem and testing daily to adjust the dosage as needed. The daily testing is also required of any other copper, however I find the Cupramine is more fish friendly. If you have a refractometer or lab grade hydrometer, I actually prefer hyposalinity.
For the corals, the ones with obvious feeding tentacles and mouths such as the pearl and tongue, I like to feed small pieces of shrimp and silversides a couple of times a week. Yellow polyps will do well with grated shrimp, fish and brine shrimp nauplii. The green star polyps, feather dusters and shrooms don't need any targeted foods, so don't worry about those