So I'm >95% sure my tank has uronema marinum in it. A couple months back, I lost two chromis and a wrasse which ended up exhibiting sores that looked like uronema; it now looks like I'm going to be losing a diamond goby. I'm at the point where I don't want to deal with pathogens in the tank and want to properly address the situation.
I know that leaving the tank fallow won't work because uronema doesn't require a host fish and can instead survive on bacteria. I understand that Furan 2 and other formaldahyde-containing medications will kill the uronema, but they aren't reef safe. I'm looking at a couple different options, and would appreciate feedback or advice for other options. I'm looking at:
a) Moving corals and CUC to a quarantine tank and treating DT with Furan 2. I'd then go through a hyposalinity cycle to address ich that is also in the DT (no need to lecture, :deadhorse
. Meanwhile the corals and CUC would get dunked in 3 buckets of RO water before being placed in the QT tank (using freshly-mixed saltwater and Dr. Tims bacteria starter). Once hypo treatment completed, perform three 50% water changes, then add corals and CUC back to DT.
b) Moving the fish to the QT, treat QT with Furan 2, then replace QT water with freshly-mixed saltwater. Use QT and 5-gallon buckets with heaters/pumps for tank-transfer ich treatment. Once tank-transfer process completed, keep fish in QT, then 3-bucket RO water rinse for corals and CUC and place them in QT also. Empty DT, nuke all live rock, dispose of all sand, then restart DT (new sand/water, and new cycle).
I'm leaning towards option A. The timeline would be quicker, cost and time commitment would be lower, and I suspect less stressful for the fish. Either way, I'd like input from the experts.
Are there any problems with the two methods I propose?
Will Furan 2 kill uronema present in the sand bed or only in the water column?
Are there any additional medications/treatments I should incorporate while I'm at it?
Will the 3-bucket RO rinse be effective at removing all pathogens from my corals (LPS, softies, and zoas)? If not, any suggestions on how to ensure I'm not spreading the uronema without killing the corals?
Thanks in advance.
I know that leaving the tank fallow won't work because uronema doesn't require a host fish and can instead survive on bacteria. I understand that Furan 2 and other formaldahyde-containing medications will kill the uronema, but they aren't reef safe. I'm looking at a couple different options, and would appreciate feedback or advice for other options. I'm looking at:
a) Moving corals and CUC to a quarantine tank and treating DT with Furan 2. I'd then go through a hyposalinity cycle to address ich that is also in the DT (no need to lecture, :deadhorse
b) Moving the fish to the QT, treat QT with Furan 2, then replace QT water with freshly-mixed saltwater. Use QT and 5-gallon buckets with heaters/pumps for tank-transfer ich treatment. Once tank-transfer process completed, keep fish in QT, then 3-bucket RO water rinse for corals and CUC and place them in QT also. Empty DT, nuke all live rock, dispose of all sand, then restart DT (new sand/water, and new cycle).
I'm leaning towards option A. The timeline would be quicker, cost and time commitment would be lower, and I suspect less stressful for the fish. Either way, I'd like input from the experts.
Are there any problems with the two methods I propose?
Will Furan 2 kill uronema present in the sand bed or only in the water column?
Are there any additional medications/treatments I should incorporate while I'm at it?
Will the 3-bucket RO rinse be effective at removing all pathogens from my corals (LPS, softies, and zoas)? If not, any suggestions on how to ensure I'm not spreading the uronema without killing the corals?
Thanks in advance.