Sterilizing my tank?

Steve_B

New member
I had a disease of unknown origin that killed all of my fish one at a time. I went through every treatment I could find here to know avail.

Anyway, I have 2 questions;

Are there any parasites that can live without a host? The tank has no live rock, just 1 coral replica, and runs with a wet/dry system.
It's empty now of fish, nothing

If there are, I want to sterilize the entire thing.
Would running completely fresh water kill everything that could only live in saltwater?
I'm going to start all over, recycle it with a few damsels and go from there.
Sorry, this issue may have already been addressed and I didn't do a search. I don't have time because my toilet broke and I have to haul butt to get it fixed before my wife beats me to death with a steel pan.

Thanks for any help
Steve
 
what size tank? 10g?

if 10g, i would just take everything out, rinse it real good and let it dry for a few days in the hot sun.
 
Most, if not all, diseases/parasites will starve out if you leave the tank fishless for 8-9 weeks. If you just want to start over and recycle, drain the tank, fill it up with freshwater, wait a few days and then add your salt.
 
Most, if not all, diseases/parasites will starve out if you leave the tank fishless for 8-9 weeks. If you just want to start over and recycle, drain the tank, fill it up with freshwater, wait a few days and then add your salt.



Because time isn't an issue, I'm going to run freshwater. I didn't think that any parasites that live in salt water could survive in fresh.
Thanks for confirming my idea.
I'll probably convert it back to salt after a few weeks of freshwater, possibly more. I make RODI water and run a 36 watt sterilizer. I'm sure the steralizer has been running with probably WAY insufficient dwell time to accomplish anything, if a sterilizer does anything at all. I figure it can't hurt. My RODI water is as perfect as possible. I use a high quality TDS meter and it reads 0 PPM out of the membrane and after the DI as well.
 
BTW, I just wanted to add something about my comments before. I've been keeping saltwater fish for a long time now. I have never used anything except copper and a freshwater dip maybe 2x in all of those years to combat any disease. I never used an isolation tank; they just went into the display tank. Back then all I was using was under gravel filters and a Magnum 350, all fake or dead coral. I went for years without 1 fish dying.
This disease started in a 225 gallon tank that was running perfectly with a wet/dry filter for several years. I introduced a blue tang that had been in my 70 gallon tank for months showing no signs of any problem. After that one went in the carnage began. I started using my tried and true copper treatment with 50% water changes after treatment. Everything kept going wrong so I began using treatments I had ever used, everything I could find here and nothing worked, they were dropping like flies. I took the remaining 3 out of maybe 15 that had died to a LFS advising them of the problem so they were aware of what happened. I must have changed possibly as much as over a few thousand gallons rodi water in between each different treatments. It all went wrong so I broke down the 225 and I'm selling it. The nightmare had to come to an end. I kept this 70 gallon and only introduced two into the tank. They are fine but I'm going to give them away in the event they may have "œthe whatever" I have graduated up to a 10 gallon executive JR. starter tank with 2 clowns and they have been thriving for over 1 year with only a hang on filter with a bio wheel. They have been completely isolated from anything in my 70 with only 2 perfect fish, but they have to go too, start completely over from square one. I've had enough watching my prized fish all die off. It's my 2 "œnemo" guys in their own place and some little friendly little guys in my 70, that's it.

Thus the tale of my nightmare

The end
 
I'm old school like you, been doing s/w since the 80s. Back then I never QT'd and if I did have a problem, it wasn't anything a little copper couldn't cure. The game has changed, my friend. Internal worms, bacterial infections, fungus, Lymphocystis. None of these diseases respond to copper. Don't ask me what's so different nowadays, I haven't figured it out. My advice to you is to start QT'ing everything for 8-9 weeks.
 
I'm old school like you, been doing s/w since the 80s. Back then I never QT'd and if I did have a problem, it wasn't anything a little copper couldn't cure. The game has changed, my friend. Internal worms, bacterial infections, fungus, Lymphocystis. None of these diseases respond to copper. Don't ask me what's so different nowadays, I haven't figured it out. My advice to you is to start QT'ing everything for 8-9 weeks.
(CAPS BECAUSE I’m IN A HURRY)

THE THING ABOUT IT IS THAT THE BLUE TANG WAS IN MY 70 CORNER TANK FOR A FEW MONTHS. IT DID GET SOME RAGID TAIL FINS WHICH I ATTRUBED TO THE FACT THAT SOMETIMES HE WOULD GET CHASED AROUND. I NEVER PLANNED ON KEEPING IT IN THERE FOREVER, (NO REASON FOR THE TANG POLICE) I PLANNED ON PLACEING HIM IN MY 225 AT SOME POINT. NONE OF THE OTHERS IN THE 70 SHOWED A SIGN OF A DISEASE. THAT IS PRETTY MUCH WHAT THE ISOLATION TANK WAS; THE ISOLATION TANK WAS AN ACTUAL DISPLAY TANK. I THINK THAT DIFFERENT DISEASES MAY MUTATE JUST LIKE A STAFF INFECTION IN A HUMAN HOSPITAL.
BECAUSE OF THAT FACT DRS. ARE WORRIED THAT THIS MUTATION MAY GET TO THE POINT THAT THEY WILL NO LONGER HAVE A CURE AFTER EVERYTHING HAS LOST ITS ABILITY. THAT WAS A FEW YEARS AGO WHEN I SAW A DOCUMENTARY REGARDING THIS PROBLEM
I HAVE NO IDEA WHERE THIS SITUATION IN HOSPITALS IS AT THIS POINT.
 
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