AquaWave523
New member
Ok, so...I realized since I got the blue hippo tang, he caught ich and now it's in my main display tank.
Right now I only have 1 Seabae Anemone, 2 small frags of mushrooms and 1 big hairy mushroom. Which isn't a whole lot verses all the little fish I have to struggle to capture without tearing down the entire tank (rocks structure).
So I plan on treating the main display tank with copper since this is the only method I know of. Before doing so, I will move all the corals and the anemone to the 20 gallon QT tank until the main display tank is fully treated.
Can someone tell me how long would this take to treat the tank?
And, before doing so, I thought of other several options...
1.) Increase temperature to 84 F, feed food soaked in garlic and then get a cleaner shrimp to help. Hoping this would increase the immune system of the fish and keep them strong enough to overpower the ich from taking over its body.
2.) Move alllllllll the fishes out the tank and isolate in a quaratine tank and dose the main display tank with copper. However, as explained above, the reason why I decided not to take this route. Plus, I have more than enough fish that will overload the bioload in a 20 gallon which then I'd have to purchase a 55 gallon tank or put them in a brute trashcan with a powerhead...that might even stress them out more.
3.) Hypo-salanity method...this seems too much of a headache to do. So I skipped this overall...i think this is just decreasing the amount of salanity over a time period of 4-6 weeks. Thats closely monitoring all the parameters...
Oh yeah, is it safe to use copper with Live Rocks? This includes liverocks that have feather duster attached to it?
And the sump tank/refugium...it has liverocks, sand and algae in there. Do I shut off the water that feeds into the refugium area? Do i remove all the filter pad, carbon and shut off the protein skimmer?
What kind of copper medication has people used successfully? I'll go pick it up today to start treating.
I know this is a lot to read, sorry for me blabbing on. I just want to make sure I do it the right way with no regrets.
-------------------SETUP INFO --------------------
Info: 90 Gallon with 40 gallon sump/refugium
Protein skimmer (MSX200) with 110lbs of Live rocks and 4" of Live Sand.
Water movement: two return valve (Mag -9, 660 gph), Two Korilla 4 (2500+ gph) and one Maxijet (600gph).
Fishes:
One -1" blue hippo tang
One - 4" yellow tang
Three - 3" false percula clown
One - 2-3" chromis
One - 2" royal gramma
One - 3" sailfin blenny
One - 3" jawfish
----------------
Any thoughts or suggestions anyone?
Thanks!!!
AW523
Right now I only have 1 Seabae Anemone, 2 small frags of mushrooms and 1 big hairy mushroom. Which isn't a whole lot verses all the little fish I have to struggle to capture without tearing down the entire tank (rocks structure).
So I plan on treating the main display tank with copper since this is the only method I know of. Before doing so, I will move all the corals and the anemone to the 20 gallon QT tank until the main display tank is fully treated.
Can someone tell me how long would this take to treat the tank?
And, before doing so, I thought of other several options...
1.) Increase temperature to 84 F, feed food soaked in garlic and then get a cleaner shrimp to help. Hoping this would increase the immune system of the fish and keep them strong enough to overpower the ich from taking over its body.
2.) Move alllllllll the fishes out the tank and isolate in a quaratine tank and dose the main display tank with copper. However, as explained above, the reason why I decided not to take this route. Plus, I have more than enough fish that will overload the bioload in a 20 gallon which then I'd have to purchase a 55 gallon tank or put them in a brute trashcan with a powerhead...that might even stress them out more.
3.) Hypo-salanity method...this seems too much of a headache to do. So I skipped this overall...i think this is just decreasing the amount of salanity over a time period of 4-6 weeks. Thats closely monitoring all the parameters...
Oh yeah, is it safe to use copper with Live Rocks? This includes liverocks that have feather duster attached to it?
And the sump tank/refugium...it has liverocks, sand and algae in there. Do I shut off the water that feeds into the refugium area? Do i remove all the filter pad, carbon and shut off the protein skimmer?
What kind of copper medication has people used successfully? I'll go pick it up today to start treating.
I know this is a lot to read, sorry for me blabbing on. I just want to make sure I do it the right way with no regrets.
-------------------SETUP INFO --------------------
Info: 90 Gallon with 40 gallon sump/refugium
Protein skimmer (MSX200) with 110lbs of Live rocks and 4" of Live Sand.
Water movement: two return valve (Mag -9, 660 gph), Two Korilla 4 (2500+ gph) and one Maxijet (600gph).
Fishes:
One -1" blue hippo tang
One - 4" yellow tang
Three - 3" false percula clown
One - 2-3" chromis
One - 2" royal gramma
One - 3" sailfin blenny
One - 3" jawfish
----------------
Any thoughts or suggestions anyone?
Thanks!!!
AW523