I have it, I have the ich... It came on two clowns, and now it's in my system. I have a mixed reef and live in an apartment. A hospital tank is out, and so is copper.
I've read a lot regarding Ich and it seems as though a popular approach is to increase the water temperature to ~87 degrees. Supposedly, this increases the life-cycle of the ich to point where it can not effectively thrive in an aquarium. I have also read that this applies more to fresh-water ich and that marine ich's metabolism is less dependent on temperature. I know that it may not eliminate the parasite indefinitely, but if I can get the fish healthy and keep it from reinfesting I'll be happy.
I've also read a lot regarding the maximum temperatures that are safe for coral (this will vary wildly based on species) and other fauna... It's a raging debate.
On one side, there are anecdotal reports of dissolved O2 dropping off dramatically after 82 degrees. (I'm not so sure that this is true. The difference in d02 for 80 and 87 degrees is less than 10%.) coral bleaching out and dying, and inverts going belly up.
On the other side, there are people writing that "most" of the coral we keep often sees temperatures exceeding 88 degrees in the wild and that it's nothing to worry about. Others report that their fish and coral have been absolutely fine at 86-87 for as long as a week.
I don't want to hear any more speculation. I don't want to hear "that's a terrible ich treatment; get a hospital tank". I just want to know.
I keep 2 clowns / 1 Tail spot blenny
Soft Coral:
Zoanthids (blue + pink)
Brown Button Polyps
Green Alien Eye Palythoa
Finger Leather
Tree
Mushrooms
Ricordea
Xenea (pulsing pom pom)
LPS:
Frogspawn
Hammer
SPS:
Montipora
Birdsnest
Will slowly raising my water temperature to 87 degrees over the course of 4 days nuke my tank? Or, will it simply operate slightly above the optimal range with relatively few detrimental side effects?
I've read a lot regarding Ich and it seems as though a popular approach is to increase the water temperature to ~87 degrees. Supposedly, this increases the life-cycle of the ich to point where it can not effectively thrive in an aquarium. I have also read that this applies more to fresh-water ich and that marine ich's metabolism is less dependent on temperature. I know that it may not eliminate the parasite indefinitely, but if I can get the fish healthy and keep it from reinfesting I'll be happy.
I've also read a lot regarding the maximum temperatures that are safe for coral (this will vary wildly based on species) and other fauna... It's a raging debate.
On one side, there are anecdotal reports of dissolved O2 dropping off dramatically after 82 degrees. (I'm not so sure that this is true. The difference in d02 for 80 and 87 degrees is less than 10%.) coral bleaching out and dying, and inverts going belly up.
On the other side, there are people writing that "most" of the coral we keep often sees temperatures exceeding 88 degrees in the wild and that it's nothing to worry about. Others report that their fish and coral have been absolutely fine at 86-87 for as long as a week.
I don't want to hear any more speculation. I don't want to hear "that's a terrible ich treatment; get a hospital tank". I just want to know.
I keep 2 clowns / 1 Tail spot blenny
Soft Coral:
Zoanthids (blue + pink)
Brown Button Polyps
Green Alien Eye Palythoa
Finger Leather
Tree
Mushrooms
Ricordea
Xenea (pulsing pom pom)
LPS:
Frogspawn
Hammer
SPS:
Montipora
Birdsnest
Will slowly raising my water temperature to 87 degrees over the course of 4 days nuke my tank? Or, will it simply operate slightly above the optimal range with relatively few detrimental side effects?