cambo123
New member
Okay, this is not going to be another miracle fix it for me thread. I understand and have read much of the information regarding the parasite and would like to take the steps necessary to eradicate it. I have done the wait and see thing with AEFW, and that drove me nuts!
Here is my situation, I broke down my tank two months ago from a 34 gallon cube into two 40 breeders. I did this in principle to rid myself of everything you can imagine pest wise on the coral and rock side of the hobby before I move in July. I also was hoping to have a solid QT/FRAG setup for corals as a result. Well it worked, I am now (knock on wood) AEFW, monti eating nudibranch, redbug, byropsis, bubble algae, pest anemone, free!!! While these pest were completely in control, the extra labor associated with keeping that state was extremely annoying and time consuming.
Fast forward to my current situation. I (stupidly) got a dwarf angle locally for a great deal that after 10 days seems (I think but I can't get a picture) to have ich on its fins. I at the moment do not have a QT setup for fish. I wish I could, but the reality is I have more invested in coral then in fish and I don't want to push the number of tanks with the landlord. I am trying to do this in a way that I don't have to setup a 3rd tank.
Which of the two options do you feel would be best?!
#1. Corals are 100% movable from the display to the coral QT tank which doing very well! All snails could likewise be moved. My rocks were started as a dry rock cycled from bottle bacteria. I have added additional live rock to seed Coraline. As a result, there is not an abundance of life to die off on them. Given that all coral and snails are out of the tank, is it practical to do hyposalinity in my display tank leading up to my late July move? Additional benefits of this are, there is currently no substrate and I could use my ALK dosing pump to keep the PH high.
#2. Wait until I move, catch all the fish, and set the frag tank up as a quarantine tank with hyposalinity. The only downside of this is I would be feasibly significantly stressing the fish by moving and then placing them in hypo where is with option #1 I could bring the salinity back up a few weeks post move?
Thoughts? Advice?
Thanks
Here is my situation, I broke down my tank two months ago from a 34 gallon cube into two 40 breeders. I did this in principle to rid myself of everything you can imagine pest wise on the coral and rock side of the hobby before I move in July. I also was hoping to have a solid QT/FRAG setup for corals as a result. Well it worked, I am now (knock on wood) AEFW, monti eating nudibranch, redbug, byropsis, bubble algae, pest anemone, free!!! While these pest were completely in control, the extra labor associated with keeping that state was extremely annoying and time consuming.
Fast forward to my current situation. I (stupidly) got a dwarf angle locally for a great deal that after 10 days seems (I think but I can't get a picture) to have ich on its fins. I at the moment do not have a QT setup for fish. I wish I could, but the reality is I have more invested in coral then in fish and I don't want to push the number of tanks with the landlord. I am trying to do this in a way that I don't have to setup a 3rd tank.
Which of the two options do you feel would be best?!
#1. Corals are 100% movable from the display to the coral QT tank which doing very well! All snails could likewise be moved. My rocks were started as a dry rock cycled from bottle bacteria. I have added additional live rock to seed Coraline. As a result, there is not an abundance of life to die off on them. Given that all coral and snails are out of the tank, is it practical to do hyposalinity in my display tank leading up to my late July move? Additional benefits of this are, there is currently no substrate and I could use my ALK dosing pump to keep the PH high.
#2. Wait until I move, catch all the fish, and set the frag tank up as a quarantine tank with hyposalinity. The only downside of this is I would be feasibly significantly stressing the fish by moving and then placing them in hypo where is with option #1 I could bring the salinity back up a few weeks post move?
Thoughts? Advice?
Thanks
Last edited: