Hello everyone!
I am trying to decide on which size tank to use for my new QT. The fish that I will be putting through are:
Small Anthias (<3")
Dwarf Angelfish (<3")
Dwarf Angelfish (>4")
Large Angelfish (<5")
Butterflyfish (5")
Obviously these fish would all be put through the process individually.
Thanks for any help!
~Michael
It is not obvious at all.
QTing a lot of fish at the same time demands more confidence and skills.
The skills are in disease control. And many sick fish all in the same tank is quite scary for the newbies. Not recommended for the newbies.
The size of the QT is important, but a rather large AGA is not expensive these days. A 50 gal AGA is about $60 here in SoCal. A tank that will not stop the fish from feeding is the min; otherwise not critical for eight weeks.
I always prefer to QT as many fish as I plan to have in DT. This requires more skills and confidence, but streamlines the QT process to be thorough and effcient. Fish that will not feed easily in a QT are in a different class, however, and requires special considerations. Otherwise, the amount of bioload in QT per se is not the limitation of QT.
One always cycles the medium of filtration intend for QT very well in advance so that there will be no ammonia problem, especially when no drug that impairs nitrification is used. I always have active UV in QT, when I eradicate ich, against lurking waterborne pathogenic bacteria and viruses, when I am not using a drug that is degraded by UV.
If you do not have experience in disease control, QTing fish one at a time is wiser.