Posing a question here...with a specific instance:
It's a 'given' in the community that if you have had a fish with ich, ich is in the tank. Accepted.
It is believed that if you take all fish out and treat in qt, and let the tank lie fallow for 6 weeks, the ich parasite will die out and you will have an ich-free tank. Accepted.
Here's where the question comes in. Suppose you have had ich in the tank, removed the afflicted fish, but left the others [gobies, blennies, chromis, dragonets, all but one ich-resistent] in the tank. Suppose none of them demonstrated any ich---if you have never seen ich again, within 6 months, that's months, not weeks---have the ich parasites died out? Is this now an ich-free tank?
Suppose you brought in an ich-susceptive fish AND qt'ed that particular fish to be sure he was ich-free. Would it be likely to contract it in this tank?
Discussion?
It's a 'given' in the community that if you have had a fish with ich, ich is in the tank. Accepted.
It is believed that if you take all fish out and treat in qt, and let the tank lie fallow for 6 weeks, the ich parasite will die out and you will have an ich-free tank. Accepted.
Here's where the question comes in. Suppose you have had ich in the tank, removed the afflicted fish, but left the others [gobies, blennies, chromis, dragonets, all but one ich-resistent] in the tank. Suppose none of them demonstrated any ich---if you have never seen ich again, within 6 months, that's months, not weeks---have the ich parasites died out? Is this now an ich-free tank?
Suppose you brought in an ich-susceptive fish AND qt'ed that particular fish to be sure he was ich-free. Would it be likely to contract it in this tank?
Discussion?