I know this has been covered a million times. I have a 2 clowns, a royal grama, 6 line, 2 cromis for 2-4 yrs. These fish have never exibited ich...lucky me.
But now, I'm upgrading tanks. And when I do I'll also be upgrading fish and I want to try and QT. I'm wondering if I should QT my existing fish. I understand that some fish just succumb to ich more easily than others. But if ever there was some ich swimming in my tank, they would need a fish host...if the fish never exhibited symptoms for this long, is it safe to say that they've never been hosted? Thus, the life cycle broken. And Thus, so far I am ich free?
I've had some really crappy water at times (neighbors doing bad babysitting).
And I'm pretty sure I stress the crap out of my fish (inconsistent water changing, 2 part alk and calc, inconsistent feeding, hotter days, sloppy salinity monitoring) I have corals too.
I want a powder brown, and knowing tangs a susceptible, I want to properly QT it. I just don't want to do all that, and then add it to a main tank that does in fact still have ich lurking on some very hardy fish.
But now, I'm upgrading tanks. And when I do I'll also be upgrading fish and I want to try and QT. I'm wondering if I should QT my existing fish. I understand that some fish just succumb to ich more easily than others. But if ever there was some ich swimming in my tank, they would need a fish host...if the fish never exhibited symptoms for this long, is it safe to say that they've never been hosted? Thus, the life cycle broken. And Thus, so far I am ich free?
I've had some really crappy water at times (neighbors doing bad babysitting).
And I'm pretty sure I stress the crap out of my fish (inconsistent water changing, 2 part alk and calc, inconsistent feeding, hotter days, sloppy salinity monitoring) I have corals too.
I want a powder brown, and knowing tangs a susceptible, I want to properly QT it. I just don't want to do all that, and then add it to a main tank that does in fact still have ich lurking on some very hardy fish.