MrTuskfish
Team RC
Read what SeaChem says about using Cupramine and ammonia neutralizers together. About te 2nd post down on the FAQA. They can be deadly. http://www.seachem.com/Products/product_pages/Cupramine.html
I have a 90g tank set up to QT an orange shoulder tang, bluethroat trigger and one spot foxface. There is an aquaclear 110 running on it, with media seeded from my 150g reef. The trigger is showing ich so I need to treat, but am currently having issues with my ammonia. I've added a sponge filter and have been doing daily %25 water changes. The ammonia stubbornly is staying at 1mg/l (according to 2 seperate api tests). Could my tests be wonky? When I test the reef it's at zero. Why can't I get the ammonia down?
Nothing even resembles a debate; professionals (I consider SeaChem tech folks among the best around) that work with these chemicals every day just are saying what most experienced hobbyists know. When someone has an experience that goes against almost all proven knowledge, should we point that out or tell a new hobbyist to go by the one exception? This is a forum; sharing knowledge, experience, and opinions. nothing more, nothing less. Your experience is one experience; the discussion just doesn't end there.Again never had an issue. Works perfectly. Used it with triggers including a pair of cross hatch, large angels and puffers. I can't be that lucky. I would have killed something by now. I am not here to have a debate about a chemical. I was just suggesting something that worked for me in the past.
I think you'll be fine. I don't know why using cupramine creates false ammonia readings. Just keep an eye on it, don't overfeed, and another tip in QT is to use a turkey baster to siphon leftover food/waste off the bottom so that's not an extra ammonia source.
One question though - where are you from that you use the word "wonky" and what the heck does that mean?![]()
In general, you should never have any ammonia in QT.
This is because you should have cycled enough of a medium for use in QT a few weeks before you plan to QT any fish.
If your medium for QT had recently processed several ppm of ammonia within a 48 hour period, you should never have any ammonia while you use the medium in QT. This will be the case if the medium had processed several ppm pulses of ammonia several days apart. No realistic bioload can exceed this artificial ammonia.
One should plan ahead.
I routinely QT many fish at once, but only one well-versed with disease control should do so. QTing many fish at once is NOT recommended until you have mastered disease control quite well. Tuition is cheaper with one fish at a time.
Even a newbie can make sure that the medium for QT is very well cycled, however. So ammonia should never be an issue in QT even for a newbie.
The only exception is when bacterial infection occcurs at the same time. This is because often an antibiotic against pathogenic bacteria will have some negative impact on nitrification bacteria.
Ammonia can be very bad for fish. Many will not die at once but will live for only a couple of months after exposure to ammonia.