mattsilvester
Team RC
This topic has been done to death in one form another many many times, but here it goes again.
Is it possible for a tank to ever be totally free of "ich"? In practical terms. I would contend "no"; and here's why.
1. Depending of what you read, ich can lay dormant for weeks on end ..... To 2-3 months.... Adhered to a hard surface. In the many fish stores I visit they all keep a small number of fish in the coral systems. So given the high stress high turn over environment of an LFS it seems inevitable to me that ich will be present and hence when you buy a coral and place it in your reef tank you have a reasonable chance of introducing the parasite. I know there are some people that diligently quarantine their corals for 2-3 months but practically speaking most of us are not set up to do that.
2. Ich just not just die out as long as there fish present. In a healthy aquarium with strong fish it may have appeared to have died off but in reality the fish are always "infected" with one or two parasites persisting in the gills etc out out of sight and we are blissfully unaware. Strong healthy fish have a good enough immune system to keep it at bay. Until something goes wrong.
So - my point is that unless we quarantine everything including every rock and coral and snail - for several months then one can never truly be rid of it.
Is that a fair point / position? Again I stress that there people with the time, space and money to do this - but for most people...... Is it not a case of damage control rather than outright prevention?
Is it possible for a tank to ever be totally free of "ich"? In practical terms. I would contend "no"; and here's why.
1. Depending of what you read, ich can lay dormant for weeks on end ..... To 2-3 months.... Adhered to a hard surface. In the many fish stores I visit they all keep a small number of fish in the coral systems. So given the high stress high turn over environment of an LFS it seems inevitable to me that ich will be present and hence when you buy a coral and place it in your reef tank you have a reasonable chance of introducing the parasite. I know there are some people that diligently quarantine their corals for 2-3 months but practically speaking most of us are not set up to do that.
2. Ich just not just die out as long as there fish present. In a healthy aquarium with strong fish it may have appeared to have died off but in reality the fish are always "infected" with one or two parasites persisting in the gills etc out out of sight and we are blissfully unaware. Strong healthy fish have a good enough immune system to keep it at bay. Until something goes wrong.
So - my point is that unless we quarantine everything including every rock and coral and snail - for several months then one can never truly be rid of it.
Is that a fair point / position? Again I stress that there people with the time, space and money to do this - but for most people...... Is it not a case of damage control rather than outright prevention?