Hello!
I have a 100+ gallon reef tank in early development. After the initial cycle, I added Floridian aquacultured live rock. This went well and numbers were good, so I am slowly adding fish. I had two tiny ORA gobies and a small Kole tang. They did well for a couple weeks, then one of the gobies got a cirolanid. I caught the fish easily and removed the pest. The fish looked fine that night, but was deceased the next morning - I think the stress, blood loss, and harassment from its ex-partner did this. I confirmed cirolanid under a microscope. A couple weeks went by with no more cirolanids. Today I saw what appeared to be two larger cirolanids on my tang! The remaining goby is clean.
My question is about my plan of treatment. I will catch the goby and move it to a small quarantine tank for a month, to prevent it from meeting the same fate as its ex. I will also catch and remove the parasites from the tang. What should I do with the tang after this? My options are:
(1) remove it to a 15-20 gallon quarantine tank, where the tank would be free of cirolanids, but this might cause stress and feeding would not be optimal. I have plenty of fresh algae to give it and it also takes spirulina-based frozen food, but nothing beats how the comb-tooth grazing seems to benefit it. After a month or two of a clean tank, I could put it back in.
(2) leave it in to try and "attract" remaining cirolanids. This may expose it to more stress, especially if I have to catch it again next week, but its choice of food is much greater. There is a chance of no more cirolanids, but also a chance of feeding and breeding the cirolanids.
(3) do nothing and see if the skunk cleaner shrimp will eat the isopods (I'm not keen on this option).
I am leaning toward a putting the tang in a quarantine tank, but will a small Kole tang be okay in a 20 gallon for a month or two, provided that filtration is excellent? Either way, I will not add any more fish until I have at least one to two months clean of any cirolanid isopods (per research suggesting this as an appropriate time frame to starve them out). There is no other evidence of parasites and water parameters are good. I use a skimmer, bio-filtration, and turf-scrubber but no UV or ozone or anything like that.
Any opinions or survivor experiences would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks,
Morgan
I have a 100+ gallon reef tank in early development. After the initial cycle, I added Floridian aquacultured live rock. This went well and numbers were good, so I am slowly adding fish. I had two tiny ORA gobies and a small Kole tang. They did well for a couple weeks, then one of the gobies got a cirolanid. I caught the fish easily and removed the pest. The fish looked fine that night, but was deceased the next morning - I think the stress, blood loss, and harassment from its ex-partner did this. I confirmed cirolanid under a microscope. A couple weeks went by with no more cirolanids. Today I saw what appeared to be two larger cirolanids on my tang! The remaining goby is clean.
My question is about my plan of treatment. I will catch the goby and move it to a small quarantine tank for a month, to prevent it from meeting the same fate as its ex. I will also catch and remove the parasites from the tang. What should I do with the tang after this? My options are:
(1) remove it to a 15-20 gallon quarantine tank, where the tank would be free of cirolanids, but this might cause stress and feeding would not be optimal. I have plenty of fresh algae to give it and it also takes spirulina-based frozen food, but nothing beats how the comb-tooth grazing seems to benefit it. After a month or two of a clean tank, I could put it back in.
(2) leave it in to try and "attract" remaining cirolanids. This may expose it to more stress, especially if I have to catch it again next week, but its choice of food is much greater. There is a chance of no more cirolanids, but also a chance of feeding and breeding the cirolanids.
(3) do nothing and see if the skunk cleaner shrimp will eat the isopods (I'm not keen on this option).
I am leaning toward a putting the tang in a quarantine tank, but will a small Kole tang be okay in a 20 gallon for a month or two, provided that filtration is excellent? Either way, I will not add any more fish until I have at least one to two months clean of any cirolanid isopods (per research suggesting this as an appropriate time frame to starve them out). There is no other evidence of parasites and water parameters are good. I use a skimmer, bio-filtration, and turf-scrubber but no UV or ozone or anything like that.
Any opinions or survivor experiences would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks,
Morgan