Recty
New member
Yes, an ich free tank is my end goal. Think of it this way... when you've got $2-3000 worth of fish swimming around in a tank, you dont want to lose it all to a parasite<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15017087#post15017087 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by DamnPepShrimp
Is an ich free tank your ultimate goal? I really don't think its possible, but could be wrong. To me, a little bit of ich is nothing to lose sleep over. If you have healthy fish, they will fight it off no problem. Personally, I'd be worried about coppering your whole tank and having some die off, thus making the water quality suffer and your fish potentially dying. If you are going to treat the display and want an ich free tank, then you need to take all your inverts in the 210g and your 4 new shrimp and put them in QT for a minimum of 12 weeks. I have heard of stories about leaving a display fallow for 12 weeks and ich still survived. Apparently there are two different types of strands of ich, one that can go without a host for about 6-8 weeks, the other about 12 weeks.
So if you think coppering your display will be ok. I would wait until the fish in QT have recovered, eating well and doing 100%. Give them a few weeks like you said. If they seem fine, no disease or any problems, then add them to the display. Wait until all the battling settles down, maybe a couple of weeks and then start treating with cupramine and prazipro. At this time or better before, I would put all inverts, hermits, snails, shrimp, anything that won't make the copper treatment into a QT tank. Also, if you plan on getting more inverts, replenish your CUC, now is the time. Keep them in QT by themselves with no hosts for ich for at least 12 weeks. Then you can treat the display for 4-6 weeks, and when the inverts are ready, add them back in.
That seems like a lot, but to me, that is the best and only way I see you having an ich free and healthy system. The only thing I don't like it coppering the display, but if you do, use cupramine. Make sure to keep the inverts fallow from ich hosts for 12 weeks, its extreme, but having an ich free tank is no easy task.
I had a major tank wipe out about a year ago, all my fish died to ich. The ich had been in the tank a while and was at a totally "acceptable" level to the fish. Some fish would show spots from time to time but quickly get over it. Then my controller had a failure and the heater stopped plus my return pump stopped. This happened sometime in the middle of the night and my tank temps went from 78 degrees to about 70 plus all that was keeping the water oxygenated was some koralia pumps, but it was just blowing water around, not getting real nice and O2 saturated like a protein skimmer helps with. Long story short, I woke up in the AM to the problem, quickly fixed it, and by the next day every single fish in there looked like I sprinkled salt all over them. Some you could barely see the fish between all the ich.
Anyway, I just dont ever want that to happen again. Yes, I know a healthy fish can live successfully with ich. I want to know, though, that if a big major stressful event happens, my fish wont have to deal with ich coming back in a major way.
It may be a lot of work to accomplish this, but in the long run I think it's worth it.
As far as moving my inverts and what not to a QT tank for 12 weeks, it's already been done, basically. I've got 4 or 5 small hermit crabs in the main tank and that is it. All my shrimp are in QT right now and they can stay there just fine for as long as they need. I dont think I'll be ordering any more clean up crew, I thought about it though. I never have to scrape my glass anymore, I honestly havent cleaned the glass for 3-4 months. I havent had a algae problem at all except my rocks getting some green growth but the tangs and angels all seem to like it, so I dont really care if it's there. I dont feed near as much as I used to when I had triggers either, it's really easy to feed just the right amount to the tank, no excess, so the couple little pieces that dont get eaten I think the shrimps will take care of.
I'm not really worried about die off in the tank, there isn't much in there to die off but bacteria, all invert life is wiped out multiple times over. From studies I've read, it seems like bacteria colonies lose about 25% of their population when initially treating with copper and it quickly ramps back up. Most fish dont seem to eat well for the first couple days of copper anyway so I probably wont be feeding much.
Anyway, yes, a lot of work is involved, but healthy fish is the outcome I hope and I'm willing to do that