nothing1191
New member
I was reading about everyone's experience with ridding their tank of ich.
Introduction of the parasite:
I bought a fish (blue hippo) about a year and a half ago and introduced it to my 75 gallon without quarantine, I didn't have a QT setup and against my better judgment when I got the fish home from the LFS I was so captivated by it that I introduced it despite seeing a few cysts. Though no other fish (at the time, couple of clowns, pygmy angel, gobie, couple damsels) ever showed signs the blue hippo slowly died off as it just wouldn't eat heartily.
Waiting to try again....
About 4 months later after the tank appeared be symptom free despite NO treatment whatsoever except temporary inline UV sterilization , I decided to give it another go. This time I shopped until I found a smaller hippo that had been at the LFS for a couple weeks and exhibited absolutely no symptoms and looked very healthy.
Time to find out....
Introduced it to the tank, it acclimated very well and ate very very well. A few weeks later along came the white spots.... so apparently 4 months with no symptoms and the ich was still present in the tank.
Treatment.... or lack there of
This being a very healthy, well acclimated blue tang I decided to use the natural treatment method rather than trying to QT the fish and treat it for ich after having had bad experiences with the last fish and stressing it out to the point where a fish that was not a strong eater, stopped altogether.
This new hippo continued to eat heartily. And a few days later the symptoms were gone... of course we all know they returned again shortly there after. However the fish was able to consistently fight the parasite off and survive (quite easily) over and over small outbreaks.
Present time...
The hippo in question was about 1.5" when purchased, today it measures about 5" - it grew rapidly after the introduction of a Naso tang that was about 4.5" when introduced. As of the time I am writing this, the hippo has not exhibited any smptoms of ich in the past 8-10 months.
The question is, in this observation did the fish develop an immunity to the parasite? Did a higher resistance over time develop which keyed the ich to die off? Or is the ich present but in such small qty due to the overall health of potential hosts that it is unable to manifest itself at normal levels where it can be observed as a symptom?
Anyone have any input?
Introduction of the parasite:
I bought a fish (blue hippo) about a year and a half ago and introduced it to my 75 gallon without quarantine, I didn't have a QT setup and against my better judgment when I got the fish home from the LFS I was so captivated by it that I introduced it despite seeing a few cysts. Though no other fish (at the time, couple of clowns, pygmy angel, gobie, couple damsels) ever showed signs the blue hippo slowly died off as it just wouldn't eat heartily.
Waiting to try again....
About 4 months later after the tank appeared be symptom free despite NO treatment whatsoever except temporary inline UV sterilization , I decided to give it another go. This time I shopped until I found a smaller hippo that had been at the LFS for a couple weeks and exhibited absolutely no symptoms and looked very healthy.
Time to find out....
Introduced it to the tank, it acclimated very well and ate very very well. A few weeks later along came the white spots.... so apparently 4 months with no symptoms and the ich was still present in the tank.
Treatment.... or lack there of
This being a very healthy, well acclimated blue tang I decided to use the natural treatment method rather than trying to QT the fish and treat it for ich after having had bad experiences with the last fish and stressing it out to the point where a fish that was not a strong eater, stopped altogether.
This new hippo continued to eat heartily. And a few days later the symptoms were gone... of course we all know they returned again shortly there after. However the fish was able to consistently fight the parasite off and survive (quite easily) over and over small outbreaks.
Present time...
The hippo in question was about 1.5" when purchased, today it measures about 5" - it grew rapidly after the introduction of a Naso tang that was about 4.5" when introduced. As of the time I am writing this, the hippo has not exhibited any smptoms of ich in the past 8-10 months.
The question is, in this observation did the fish develop an immunity to the parasite? Did a higher resistance over time develop which keyed the ich to die off? Or is the ich present but in such small qty due to the overall health of potential hosts that it is unable to manifest itself at normal levels where it can be observed as a symptom?
Anyone have any input?