Joel A
New member
I've got what i believe to be my first ever case of marine ich... I've been keeping marine tanks for more than 3 years now, and this is the first incident that i've had.
Here's the story, short and to the point. Recently set up a 120 gallon tank, started basically from scratch, only seeding the tank with a select few pieces of live rock from my previous 75 gallon tank. Cycled for a month, maybe a bit more before i started to slowly move fish over, started with my yellowtail damsel, followed by my clownfish, followed by my golden rhomboid wrasse, and finally followed by my blue hippo tang.
Everyone was doing great, the tank was still undergoing typical issues for newly set-up tank, such as diatom blooms, green algae blooms, and unreliable skimmer performance.
Recently i added a Regal Angelfish. I'm aware that these fish can be tough to keep, and tough to get them to eat, but luckily i did my homework and bought a specimen from Sustainable Aquatics that was readily accepting NLS marine pellets. I've had the fish for about a month or two now, and she's been eating great, and acting very healthy and active.
About two days ago however, i noticed what looked like a pretty severe outbreak of ich on the blue tang.. never dealing with marine ich before i figured i'd just keep an eye out, since everything else in the tank was healthy, and the blue tang was still very active, and eating like a pig (he's still the best eater in the tank).
Today however, i woke up to see that my Regal now has what appears to be ich as well.. i noticed it on the fishes eyes before i noticed a light coating of it on the fishes body. Same with the blue tang, accept that the blue tang has it more noticeably on the body as well.
What's the plan of action here? I don't have a quarantine that is big enough to house 1 or these fish.. nevermind both of them.. I don't have any corals in the tank yet (they were going in next week) so i suppose i could try and treat the display.. but i'd rather not treat the display with liverock, and other clean up crew inverts in there?
Should i be trying to do something, or is ich something that in an otherwise healthy tank should run its course in healthy well fed fish?
As far as what brought on the ich, the only thing i could guess is a combination of stress from a new fish added, along with a bit of an uncommon temperature swings in the past few weeks.. maybe from 78 to 83 degrees on certain days (the tank is recently set-up, and it's in a room without AC)
any help is appreciated..
Here's the story, short and to the point. Recently set up a 120 gallon tank, started basically from scratch, only seeding the tank with a select few pieces of live rock from my previous 75 gallon tank. Cycled for a month, maybe a bit more before i started to slowly move fish over, started with my yellowtail damsel, followed by my clownfish, followed by my golden rhomboid wrasse, and finally followed by my blue hippo tang.
Everyone was doing great, the tank was still undergoing typical issues for newly set-up tank, such as diatom blooms, green algae blooms, and unreliable skimmer performance.
Recently i added a Regal Angelfish. I'm aware that these fish can be tough to keep, and tough to get them to eat, but luckily i did my homework and bought a specimen from Sustainable Aquatics that was readily accepting NLS marine pellets. I've had the fish for about a month or two now, and she's been eating great, and acting very healthy and active.
About two days ago however, i noticed what looked like a pretty severe outbreak of ich on the blue tang.. never dealing with marine ich before i figured i'd just keep an eye out, since everything else in the tank was healthy, and the blue tang was still very active, and eating like a pig (he's still the best eater in the tank).
Today however, i woke up to see that my Regal now has what appears to be ich as well.. i noticed it on the fishes eyes before i noticed a light coating of it on the fishes body. Same with the blue tang, accept that the blue tang has it more noticeably on the body as well.
What's the plan of action here? I don't have a quarantine that is big enough to house 1 or these fish.. nevermind both of them.. I don't have any corals in the tank yet (they were going in next week) so i suppose i could try and treat the display.. but i'd rather not treat the display with liverock, and other clean up crew inverts in there?
Should i be trying to do something, or is ich something that in an otherwise healthy tank should run its course in healthy well fed fish?
As far as what brought on the ich, the only thing i could guess is a combination of stress from a new fish added, along with a bit of an uncommon temperature swings in the past few weeks.. maybe from 78 to 83 degrees on certain days (the tank is recently set-up, and it's in a room without AC)
any help is appreciated..