OK so I siphoned out most of what appeared to be "dead stuff". Just for kicks n giggles I decided to put a 4" bristle worm a 2" bristle worm and a mini brittle star into a container of fresh mixed salt water I had ready for a water change following dosing and guess what... within 15 mins the seemingly dead stuff was moving again. Seems it really wasn't dead but temporarily paralyzed/stunned.
Gotta say I am quickly losing hope with this protocol. Most of my fish are still in hiding which is not typical. I'm wondering if the necessary dose of Levi needed to kill things is so high it would also kill my fish and I'm not willing to go to that extreme. No doubt the dose I used stuns stuff but I'm not convinced it kills stuff. One can easily put an extremely high dose into a container to dip corals and stun the AEFW enough to remove them from the host easily and then put the host coral back into good water quickly enough to prevent death of the coral.
At this point I'm skeptical at best.
Can anyone confirm that they actually saw a major AEFW die-off during treatment? As in FW's peeling off of acros en-masse (more than 1 or 2 isolated AEFW's)?
I'm not sure if I would consider it a "massive die off" but I definitely saw worms dying on my first dose. Levamisole has been used as a dip for Aefw for quite a while, I don't think the question is if it kills or not, perhaps just the dosage still needs to be tweaked.
Agree, but my question is can we find the correct dose that kills the things we don't want (AEFW) while still allowing the things we do want to live without being terminally harmed in the process?
I'm not sure if I would consider it a "massive die off" but I definitely saw worms dying on my first dose. Levamisole has been used as a dip for Aefw for quite a while, I don't think the question is if it kills or not, perhaps just the dosage still needs to be tweaked.
I have a experiment if anybody can find a flatworm. This will prove that theory.
Take out a flatworm put it in a glass or budget with the proper dose of levamisole. Then after treatment of 6 hours, completely change the water back with regular untreated tank water. See if the flatworm comes back to life. This will tell us if the flatworm is really dying or not. If I could find a flatworm I would try it, but I haven't seen one.
I received my Prohibit today, plan to do some testing on individual flatworms