ryan_ferguson25
New member
You can always qt. The fish will have to be treated, then sit in qt until the required fallow period has been reached in the display.
Thx...that's what I'm going to discuss tonight with LFS.
You can always qt. The fish will have to be treated, then sit in qt until the required fallow period has been reached in the display.
Look at the sticky on the life cycle of the pest. It's at the top of the Reef Discussion section.
You should do the tank transfer method to rid the fish of ich, then put them in QT while you tank sits fishless for 72 days or so.Thx
The plan is to treat and monitor with metro and garlic for now. If it worsens then they'll go to QT for the 72 days. There is only a couple spots and I'm being told not to panic or tear the house down yet. Obviously the tank will stay as is as far as live stock for quite a while.
But if his fish already have ich it won't do any good to qt. the parasite is already in the tank. Unless you just stay with the fish you have for a while till they either die or develop immunity you can't add more fish
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Thx
The plan is to treat and monitor with metro and garlic for now. If it worsens then they'll go to QT for the 72 days. There is only a couple spots and I'm being told not to panic or tear the house down yet. Obviously the tank will stay as is as far as live stock for quite a while.
One thing to clarify..if you do indeed pull the trigger for the QT/Hospital Tank for Ich, you will have to move all the fish out of the main tank and leave it for those days..not just the one you suspect is infected.
Keep us posted as I had the same problem about 2 weeks ago. Ich when I woke no ich the next day.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
The fish will most likely not make it through all that stress.
Also, even if the LFS cures it in two weeks (which seems unlikely IMO) - you'd be adding it back to a tank that still has an active ich infestation.
Unfortunately if you want to guarantee no ich you'd have to go fish less in your display tank for at least 72 days.
I have a strict QT procedure for all new fish, even given that, I avoid tangs because they are SO succespptible to ich.
Sorry to be such a Debbie downer on your plans. Realistically it takes a lot of work to have a healthy fish population in your tank. Some people have really healthy tanks and have never QTd a single fish. It's really just a matter of how risky you want to be with the health of your livestock. I rushed things, half assed my QT, added too many fish at once, and ended up losing 5 fish...that was my experience before I finally pumped the brakes and did everything a different way.
EDIT: I see now your planning on the 72 day fallow period...sorry for beating a dead horse with that recommendation again.
Also, even if the LFS cures it in two weeks (which seems unlikely IMO) - you'd be adding it back to a tank that still has an active ich infestation.
Unfortunately if you want to guarantee no ich you'd have to go fish less in your display tank for at least 72 days.
I have a strict QT procedure for all new fish, even given that, I avoid tangs because they are SO succespptible to ich.
Sorry to be such a Debbie downer on your plans. Realistically it takes a lot of work to have a healthy fish population in your tank. Some people have really healthy tanks and have never QTd a single fish. It's really just a matter of how risky you want to be with the health of your livestock. I rushed things, half assed my QT, added too many fish at once, and ended up losing 5 fish...that was my experience before I finally pumped the brakes and did everything a different way.
EDIT: I see now your planning on the 72 day fallow period...sorry for beating a dead horse with that recommendation again.
It's a ton of work - but I'm way more comfortable knowing that losing my entire stock of fish to disease is slim, and that is worth it for me. Any one of the fish that died from disease in QT could easily have wiped out my entire tank.