I've been trying to fix up my professor's tank which has been plagued with massive amounts of aiptasia, hair algae, dinoflagellates, cyano, mantis shrimp, and just about every other problem in marine aquariums. I've gotten rid of all of the problems, except for what I think is marine velvet disease. I lost an ocellaris clown, a royal gramma, and an aiptasia-eating filefish within the past two months to what looked like marine velvet. The fish had cloudy patchy growths on their scales and were lethargic and not eating. The clown died a few weeks before the royal gramma and filefish, which died two weeks ago. I did a black-out to try to kill any marine velvet dinos in the water column, but I'm not sure if it worked. My yellow tailed damsel and lawnmower blenny look healthier than ever, but I'm afraid to add any new fish. I now have 0 nitrates and near-zero, 0.004 ppm phosphates.
What are the best methods to removing marine velvet from a reef aquarium that contains SPS? Should I just wait a long time before adding any new fish? Will the damsel and blenny act as asymptomatic carriers of the disease?
Thank you for your help!
What are the best methods to removing marine velvet from a reef aquarium that contains SPS? Should I just wait a long time before adding any new fish? Will the damsel and blenny act as asymptomatic carriers of the disease?
Thank you for your help!