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A case of Ick?
I've got a 29 gallon tank that has been cycled for over a month now. I used two albino tiger barbs to cycle the tank. 10 days ago, I picked up 6 bleeding heart tetra's and 3 young false juli catfish. I know that's alot of fish to add at once but I've been watching my levels and everything looks good. I acclimated all the of the fish before putting them in my tank. Everybody seemed to be doing great. The tiger barbs were a little freaked out the first day since they had been the only fish in the tank for two months but were fine the next day. On the second day, one of my catfish died. The next day, a second one died and the third was missing. I moved all the decorations and couldn't find him anywhere. I figured he jumped out of the tank and one of my cats got him since there is a small opening near the filter. 2 days later I find him floating at the top of the tank. I brought the two back to the store (the fifth one didn't surface until before the guarantee period) and they exchanged them. All they had were full size false juli catfish so I got those. Come to find out after talking with the LFS, those young juli's I got bought just arrived the morning of the day I bought them. All the stress of going from two tanks in one day is probably what killed them. I was upset that the LFS didn't tell me when I bought them that they were new or I would have held off. After seven days of adding the new fish to my tank, I notice my bleeding heart tetras have white spots all over there body and fins. From what I can tell it looks like Ick. I've tried to get a picture of the fish but I can't seem to get one that is clear enought. I went down to the LFS and they recommend I pickup some Aquarisol (http://www.drsfostersmith.com/produc...&N=2004+113521). The instructions say to up the temperature in the tank to 85 degrees and add 12 drops per 10 gallons daily until the Ich is gone. I removed the filter cartridge and put in one that didn't have carbon in it. I have a Marineland Visi-Therm Stealth 100 heater and I moved the dial to 86 degrees but the temperature of the tank will not go above 82 degrees, even after several days. I even tried moving the dial to 88 degrees but still no change. I've been treating the tank with the Aquarisol for the past three days. I did a 25% water change the second day and added the Aquarisol after that. Over the past 5 days, the tank has been cloudy too. I'm thinking that might be a bacteria bloom because I added alot of fish at once. I've already had 2 of the bleeding hearts die, one yesterday and another one this morning. The barbs and the catfish are not showing any white spots on there body or fins, just the bleeding hearts. I would move the other fish to a different tank, but the only other tank I have is an unheated 5 gallon. Does this sound like Ick? Am I doing everything properly to clear it up and hopefully save my fish? Any ideas on why my heater will not go above 82 degrees? Any help would be appreciated. Thanks. Rodney |
A case of Ick?
"Rodney M" wrote in message
... I've got a 29 gallon tank that has been cycled for over a month now. I used two albino tiger barbs to cycle the tank. 10 days ago, I picked up 6 bleeding heart tetra's and 3 young false juli catfish. I know that's alot of fish to add at once but I've been watching my levels and everything looks good. I acclimated all the of the fish before putting them in my tank. Everybody seemed to be doing great. The tiger barbs were a little freaked out the first day since they had been the only fish in the tank for two months but were fine the next day. On the second day, one of my catfish died. The next day, a second one died and the third was missing. I moved all the decorations and couldn't find him anywhere. I figured he jumped out of the tank and one of my cats got him since there is a small opening near the filter. 2 days later I find him floating at the top of the tank. I brought the two back to the store (the fifth one didn't surface until before the guarantee period) and they exchanged them. All they had were full size false juli catfish so I got those. Come to find out after talking with the LFS, those young juli's I got bought just arrived the morning of the day I bought them. All the stress of going from two tanks in one day is probably what killed them. I was upset that the LFS didn't tell me when I bought them that they were new or I would have held off. After seven days of adding the new fish to my tank, I notice my bleeding heart tetras have white spots all over there body and fins. From what I can tell it looks like Ick. I've tried to get a picture of the fish but I can't seem to get one that is clear enought. I went down to the LFS and they recommend I pickup some Aquarisol (http://www.drsfostersmith.com/produc...&N=2004+113521). The instructions say to up the temperature in the tank to 85 degrees and add 12 drops per 10 gallons daily until the Ich is gone. I removed the filter cartridge and put in one that didn't have carbon in it. I have a Marineland Visi-Therm Stealth 100 heater and I moved the dial to 86 degrees but the temperature of the tank will not go above 82 degrees, even after several days. I even tried moving the dial to 88 degrees but still no change. I've been treating the tank with the Aquarisol for the past three days. I did a 25% water change the second day and added the Aquarisol after that. Over the past 5 days, the tank has been cloudy too. I'm thinking that might be a bacteria bloom because I added alot of fish at once. I've already had 2 of the bleeding hearts die, one yesterday and another one this morning. The barbs and the catfish are not showing any white spots on there body or fins, just the bleeding hearts. I would move the other fish to a different tank, but the only other tank I have is an unheated 5 gallon. Does this sound like Ick? Would need a picture. Ich is small white dots. Probably is, as it's the most common ailment fish catch. Am I doing everything properly to clear it up and hopefully save my fish? Quarantine is what is (was) needed to keep your fish well. The store fish are more at risk as they are less hardy due to the transit and water shock. Their weakness may allow any diseases to grow stronger, putting your fish at greater risk. Aquarisol is not particularly strong, and I've generally avoided it because I don't like copper-based medications. Having said that, follow the directions, keep the water clean and you'll probably be fine. Ich is really not hard to cure, unless there are other underlying problems (check your ammonia, nitrite levels). Weak fish might sucumb to it. Any ideas on why my heater will not go above 82 degrees? Any help would be appreciated. Thanks. I've encountered this as well, and it was not a pleasant surprise. Apparently heaters which are adjustable to the high 80s are becoming harder to find. Discus breeders complain about this too. For your application, the elevated temperature would have accelerated the Ich life cycle (which only has one stage vulnerable to the medication), though if it was kept hot enough, I think you could kill the Ich eventually without medication. The old-fashioned cure was heat, salt and water changes. Research the life cycle of this parasite (ie: 3 weeks) and other techniques to combat it, and hopefully someone here will have experience with Aquarisol and give you dosing instructions. In the absence of guidelines, I would water change by gravel vac, dose, wait 2 days and repeat for several cycles, but you need more Aquarisol-specific advice. -- www.NetMax.tk Rodney |
A case of Ick?
Rodney M wrote:
snip Does this sound like Ick? Am I doing everything properly to clear it up and hopefully save my fish? Any ideas on why my heater will not go above 82 degrees? Any help would be appreciated. Thanks. Yes, it sounds like ich. Aquarisol is very hard to use. If I were you, I'd do two big water changes to get rid of the copper and switch to something simpler like 1/2 strength Quick Cure. My Visitherm Stealth goes to 86F without a problem. Heat above 85F often kills ich, or at least speeds up ts lifecycle so it's more vulnerable to medications. You may not have enough wattage if your house is really cold. |
A case of Ick?
Rodney M wrote:
Any ideas on why my heater will not go above 82 degrees? The higher the difference in temperature between your tank and the room it's in, the faster it loses heat. So, to maintain a high temperature, your heater will spend more time on than it does for a lower temperature. When it's on all the time, that's the highest temperature you'll be able to get. Unless you wrap your tank in a blanket, or put in a more powerful heater. -- Pete Becker Dinkumware, Ltd. (http://www.dinkumware.com) |
A case of Ick?
When it's on all the time, that's the highest temperature you'll be able to get. Unless you wrap your tank in a blanket, or put in a more powerful heater. -- Pete Becker Dinkumware, Ltd. (http://www.dinkumware.com) Or increase the temperature of your room! |
A case of Ick?
I beleive your heater problems have been answered. But as for your ich
problems, I would be carefull with too much salt with catfish. Also I cannot stress the importance of good water quality, you may have to do daily 20% water changes (with proper conditioners). Good bio filtration is a must, but this takes time. Seeding your tank with aged gravel from a friend or an aged sponge filter (they work great) can also help. I have used "medicated wonder shells' for years on my aquarium maintenance route with excellent results (they also help with cloudy water, but do not replace good water quality management). You can obtain them at http://americanaquariumproducts.com/...mProducts.html Carl |
A case of Ick?
wrote in message
oups.com... I beleive your heater problems have been answered. But as for your ich problems, I would be carefull with too much salt with catfish. Also I cannot stress the importance of good water quality, you may have to do daily 20% water changes (with proper conditioners). Good bio filtration is a must, but this takes time. Seeding your tank with aged gravel from a friend or an aged sponge filter (they work great) can also help. I have used "medicated wonder shells' for years on my aquarium maintenance route with excellent results (they also help with cloudy water, but do not replace good water quality management). You can obtain them at http://americanaquariumproducts.com/...mProducts.html Carl I've seen this web site. These are your own product, aren't they? I understand the time release functionality you are trying to get, but it's not clear what else is in there or how it works. Clever to design something which reduces your visits. -- www.NetMax.tk |
A case of Ick?
Yes this is a product that I designed (and have refined over time) over
15 years ago. I do not show all ingredients as I do want it to be too easy to copy. I have had excellent results not only because of less visits, but more importantly, more steady medicine levels. Carl |
A case of Ick?
wrote in message
oups.com... Yes this is a product that I designed (and have refined over time) over 15 years ago. I do not show all ingredients as I do want it to be too easy to copy. I have had excellent results not only because of less visits, but more importantly, more steady medicine levels. Carl I'm sure you mean "You do *not* want it to be too easy to copy. Can you sell a product with no ingredients labelling? I understand that products for fish don't require too much scrutiny or even testing (at least in North America), but some ingredients and binders must be declared. California is quite particular about malachite green, and I'd expect antibiotics to require some regulation and identification. It's an interesting conundrum, where you can't reveal details without risking trade infringement, but need the details to sell the product. I don't envy your situation. Credibility cannot be established through the normal means of existing scientific data on the individual ingredients. A possible scenario is to publish the active ingredients and kept proprietary items such as the binders and the process a secret. Alternately some type of a controlled test program documenting the results with & without, but this requires scientific rigour, expertise and expense. A suggestion - since the time release component is still a compelling feature, perhaps you should invent a 'fertilizing wonder shell'. Time release fertilization would be a great feature (no more PMDD), and since it's not involved in the health of fish, and would contain no potentially harmful ingredients, the product would face far less public scrutiny and there should be less issues with labelling, cross-state transport, export documents etc. From a legislative perspective, it's fertilizer (poop ;~), from an aquarist's perspective, it could be a precise mix of various macro and trace elements time-released with a binder which buffers the water's carbonates. -- www.NetMax.tk |
A case of Ick?
We do state the active ingredients on our web site and other
information we have published over the years. We just do not show the binders. As for malachite green, (and a Californian for 43 years) they have many carcinogenic issues with the product which have yet to be proven. California has many problems banning fish (such as the piranah) and medications without any real evidence. Chloramphenical is an example of an excellent antibiotic banned in the pet industry without much evidence. Carl |
A case of Ick?
and medications without any real evidence. Chloramphenical is an
example of an excellent antibiotic banned in the pet industry without much evidence. Uh, other than it causes Leukemia-like symptoms in many people. Great drug for fish though, I still have some. It's a last resort antibiotic in humans. -- Need Mercedes parts ? - http://parts.mbz.org Richard Sexton | Mercedes stuff: http://mbz.org 1970 280SE, 72 280SE | Home page: http://rs79.vrx.net 633CSi 250SE/C 300SD | http://aquaria.net http://killi.net |
A case of Ick? - OT Chloramphenical
Richard Sexton wrote:
and medications without any real evidence. Chloramphenical is an example of an excellent antibiotic banned in the pet industry without much evidence. Uh, other than it causes Leukemia-like symptoms in many people. Great drug for fish though, I still have some. It's a last resort antibiotic in humans. Interesting...chloramphenical is one of the most commonly used ingredient in eye drops over here....it's prescription only but is the first thing usually given (I have a reaction to it personally so can't use it)... Got any stuff to back up the "last resort antibiotic" stuff? |
A case of Ick?
|
A case of Ick? - OT Chloramphenical
On Tue, 14 Feb 2006 10:48:48 +0000, Gill Passman
wrote: Richard Sexton wrote: and medications without any real evidence. Chloramphenical is an example of an excellent antibiotic banned in the pet industry without much evidence. Uh, other than it causes Leukemia-like symptoms in many people. Great drug for fish though, I still have some. It's a last resort antibiotic in humans. Interesting...chloramphenical is one of the most commonly used ingredient in eye drops over here....it's prescription only but is the first thing usually given (I have a reaction to it personally so can't use it)... Got any stuff to back up the "last resort antibiotic" stuff? I haven't figured out how to insert hyperlinks in Agent, but a search will take you to Merck Manual, PDR, etc. And you will find the last resort stuff wherever you look. This drug needs to be saved for typhoid, meningitis and serious stuff like that. -- Mr Gardener |
A case of Ick? - OT Chloramphenical
In article ,
Gill Passman wrote: Richard Sexton wrote: Interesting...chloramphenical is one of the most commonly used ingredient in eye drops over here....it's prescription only but is the first thing usually given (I have a reaction to it personally so can't use it)... Got any stuff to back up the "last resort antibiotic" stuff? I got mine off a pharmacist fishkeepig friend, he told me this. Google would probably provide more info than I have. -- Need Mercedes parts ? - http://parts.mbz.org Richard Sexton | Mercedes stuff: http://mbz.org 1970 280SE, 72 280SE | Home page: http://rs79.vrx.net 633CSi 250SE/C 300SD | http://aquaria.net http://killi.net |
A case of Ick?
"Rodney M" wrote in message ... *SNIP* it. I have a Marineland Visi-Therm Stealth 100 heater and I moved the dial to 86 degrees but the temperature of the tank will not go above 82 degrees, even after several days. I even tried moving the dial to 88 degrees but still no change. Visitherm rates that heater for 30G tank; if you have it in a 29G, it's pretty much at the max volume the manufacturer believes it can heat uniformily. Add a second heater or one with more wattage. Visitherm are decent, I have 2 visitherm deluxes in one of my tanks I haven't replaced with Ebo Jagers yet, but on the low end of the heater universe IMO. I always buy at least one "step" up in regards to rated volume to allow additional heating if needed, also works well if upgrade tank size that way. I have a 150 watt Jager in my 29G. It may not help you in the current circumstances, but you can find heaters fairly cheap online, say at drsfostersmith.com or big al's online or your choice of other fine sites. LFS prices for heaters are friggin ridiculous. the hobby is expensive enough, plan ahead saves some loot. :) I've been treating the tank with the Aquarisol for the past three days. I did a 25% water change the second day and added the Aquarisol after that. Over the past 5 days, the tank has been cloudy too. I'm thinking that might be a bacteria bloom because I added alot of fish at once. Good possibility. Whitish cloudy is bacterial bloom. Resposnse to adding additional fish/food/overfeeding to compensate for new fish (?). I've already had 2 of the bleeding hearts die, one yesterday and another one this morning. The barbs and the catfish are not showing any white spots on there body or fins, just the bleeding hearts. I would move the other fish to a different tank, but the only other tank I have is an unheated 5 gallon. Does this sound like Ick? Am I doing everything properly to clear it up and hopefully save my fish? Any ideas on why my heater will not go above 82 degrees? Any help would be appreciated. Thanks. I don't have much experience with tetras, or ICH, I've managed never to have it in my tanks, *knock on wood* but info on line for Hyphessobrycon erythrostigma seem to suggest the fish should be kept at about 80 degrees F max. some fish don't tolerate high temperatures, even in the short term. Only thing you're doing by raising temp is speeding life cycle of parasite - parasite only susceptible to meds in certain life stages. Search online for ICH or hopefully somebody more familiar with your fish/situation can help better than I. In either case, your tank is contaminated by the parasite at this stage if more than 1 fish are showing symptoms, moving them now will not contain the disease IMO. You're better off treating the tank. Perhaps look at different meds not dependent on temp increase if you don't have good results with the aquarisol. In the future, use a quarantine tank for new arrivals, for tetras your 5G would probably work..get a small heater and get religious about water changes. Good luck! HTH -lila pilamaya Anybody know how to "reset" outlook? ;) ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= East/West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
A case of Ick?
On Sat, 11 Feb 2006 17:34:18 -0500, "NetMax"
wrote: "Rodney M" wrote in message .. . I've got a 29 gallon tank that has been cycled for over a month now. I used two albino tiger barbs to cycle the tank. 10 days ago, I picked up 6 bleeding heart tetra's and 3 young false juli catfish. I know that's alot of fish to add at once but I've been watching my levels and everything looks good. I acclimated all the of the fish before putting them in my tank. Everybody seemed to be doing great. The tiger barbs were a little freaked out the first day since they had been the only fish in the tank for two months but were fine the next day. On the second day, one of my catfish died. The next day, a second one died and the third was missing. I moved all the decorations and couldn't find him anywhere. I figured he jumped out of the tank and one of my cats got him since there is a small opening near the filter. 2 days later I find him floating at the top of the tank. I brought the two back to the store (the fifth one didn't surface until before the guarantee period) and they exchanged them. All they had were full size false juli catfish so I got those. Come to find out after talking with the LFS, those young juli's I got bought just arrived the morning of the day I bought them. All the stress of going from two tanks in one day is probably what killed them. I was upset that the LFS didn't tell me when I bought them that they were new or I would have held off. After seven days of adding the new fish to my tank, I notice my bleeding heart tetras have white spots all over there body and fins. From what I can tell it looks like Ick. I've tried to get a picture of the fish but I can't seem to get one that is clear enought. I went down to the LFS and they recommend I pickup some Aquarisol (http://www.drsfostersmith.com/produc...&N=2004+113521). The instructions say to up the temperature in the tank to 85 degrees and add 12 drops per 10 gallons daily until the Ich is gone. I removed the filter cartridge and put in one that didn't have carbon in it. I have a Marineland Visi-Therm Stealth 100 heater and I moved the dial to 86 degrees but the temperature of the tank will not go above 82 degrees, even after several days. I even tried moving the dial to 88 degrees but still no change. I've been treating the tank with the Aquarisol for the past three days. I did a 25% water change the second day and added the Aquarisol after that. Over the past 5 days, the tank has been cloudy too. I'm thinking that might be a bacteria bloom because I added alot of fish at once. I've already had 2 of the bleeding hearts die, one yesterday and another one this morning. The barbs and the catfish are not showing any white spots on there body or fins, just the bleeding hearts. I would move the other fish to a different tank, but the only other tank I have is an unheated 5 gallon. Does this sound like Ick? Would need a picture. Ich is small white dots. Probably is, as it's the most common ailment fish catch. Am I doing everything properly to clear it up and hopefully save my fish? Quarantine is what is (was) needed to keep your fish well. The store fish are more at risk as they are less hardy due to the transit and water shock. Their weakness may allow any diseases to grow stronger, putting your fish at greater risk. I guess I'm gonna have to invest in a 10 gallon quarantine tank and put any new fish in that. I would really hate to put my other fish at risk again. Aquarisol is not particularly strong, and I've generally avoided it because I don't like copper-based medications. Having said that, follow the directions, keep the water clean and you'll probably be fine. Ich is really not hard to cure, unless there are other underlying problems (check your ammonia, nitrite levels). Weak fish might sucumb to it. After using the Aquarisol for about 6 days and after reading/listening to the advice of others, I tried using Quick Cure for 3 days. That didn't seem to help either. I ended up losing all 6 of my bleeding heart tetras by the third day of using it. Every morning I would wake up and find 1 floating until they were all dead. The weird thing is, my two catfish and two albino tiger barbs are showing no signs of Ich and seem healthy. I quit using any kind of treatment. I put a new filter in with carbon (wanted the carbon back since my water was really cloudy and that helped clear it up). I'm going to wait a couple of weeks before adding any new fish to my tank. I still have the temperature running at about 83 degrees. I'm going to gradually bring this back to 76 starting today. I wonder if I should Thanks for your help. Rodney |
A case of Ick?
On 11 Feb 2006 18:16:58 -0800, "Altum" wrote:
Rodney M wrote: snip Does this sound like Ick? Am I doing everything properly to clear it up and hopefully save my fish? Any ideas on why my heater will not go above 82 degrees? Any help would be appreciated. Thanks. Yes, it sounds like ich. Aquarisol is very hard to use. If I were you, I'd do two big water changes to get rid of the copper and switch to something simpler like 1/2 strength Quick Cure. I tried switching over to Quick Cure but I didn't help. I lost of 6 of my bleeding heart tetras. Two of them were dead before I started using it and the other 4 died by the third day of using the Quick Cure. My Visitherm Stealth goes to 86F without a problem. Heat above 85F often kills ich, or at least speeds up ts lifecycle so it's more vulnerable to medications. You may not have enough wattage if your house is really cold. II'm thinking my problem is due to the heater only be rated for a 30 gallon tank and mine is a 29 gallon. I should have bought a heater with a higher wattage. On a good note, Marineland did offer to send me a new heater free of charge, which was very nice. Rodney |
A case of Ick?
"Rodney M" wrote in message
... On Sat, 11 Feb 2006 17:34:18 -0500, "NetMax" wrote: "Rodney M" wrote in message . .. I've got a 29 gallon tank that has been cycled for over a month now. I used two albino tiger barbs to cycle the tank. 10 days ago, I picked up 6 bleeding heart tetra's and 3 young false juli catfish. I know that's alot of fish to add at once but I've been watching my levels and everything looks good. I acclimated all the of the fish before putting them in my tank. Everybody seemed to be doing great. The tiger barbs were a little freaked out the first day since they had been the only fish in the tank for two months but were fine the next day. On the second day, one of my catfish died. The next day, a second one died and the third was missing. I moved all the decorations and couldn't find him anywhere. I figured he jumped out of the tank and one of my cats got him since there is a small opening near the filter. 2 days later I find him floating at the top of the tank. I brought the two back to the store (the fifth one didn't surface until before the guarantee period) and they exchanged them. All they had were full size false juli catfish so I got those. Come to find out after talking with the LFS, those young juli's I got bought just arrived the morning of the day I bought them. All the stress of going from two tanks in one day is probably what killed them. I was upset that the LFS didn't tell me when I bought them that they were new or I would have held off. After seven days of adding the new fish to my tank, I notice my bleeding heart tetras have white spots all over there body and fins. From what I can tell it looks like Ick. I've tried to get a picture of the fish but I can't seem to get one that is clear enought. I went down to the LFS and they recommend I pickup some Aquarisol (http://www.drsfostersmith.com/produc...&N=2004+113521). The instructions say to up the temperature in the tank to 85 degrees and add 12 drops per 10 gallons daily until the Ich is gone. I removed the filter cartridge and put in one that didn't have carbon in it. I have a Marineland Visi-Therm Stealth 100 heater and I moved the dial to 86 degrees but the temperature of the tank will not go above 82 degrees, even after several days. I even tried moving the dial to 88 degrees but still no change. I've been treating the tank with the Aquarisol for the past three days. I did a 25% water change the second day and added the Aquarisol after that. Over the past 5 days, the tank has been cloudy too. I'm thinking that might be a bacteria bloom because I added alot of fish at once. I've already had 2 of the bleeding hearts die, one yesterday and another one this morning. The barbs and the catfish are not showing any white spots on there body or fins, just the bleeding hearts. I would move the other fish to a different tank, but the only other tank I have is an unheated 5 gallon. Does this sound like Ick? Would need a picture. Ich is small white dots. Probably is, as it's the most common ailment fish catch. Am I doing everything properly to clear it up and hopefully save my fish? Quarantine is what is (was) needed to keep your fish well. The store fish are more at risk as they are less hardy due to the transit and water shock. Their weakness may allow any diseases to grow stronger, putting your fish at greater risk. I guess I'm gonna have to invest in a 10 gallon quarantine tank and put any new fish in that. I would really hate to put my other fish at risk again. Aquarisol is not particularly strong, and I've generally avoided it because I don't like copper-based medications. Having said that, follow the directions, keep the water clean and you'll probably be fine. Ich is really not hard to cure, unless there are other underlying problems (check your ammonia, nitrite levels). Weak fish might sucumb to it. After using the Aquarisol for about 6 days and after reading/listening to the advice of others, I tried using Quick Cure for 3 days. That didn't seem to help either. I ended up losing all 6 of my bleeding heart tetras by the third day of using it. Every morning I would wake up and find 1 floating until they were all dead. The weird thing is, my two catfish and two albino tiger barbs are showing no signs of Ich and seem healthy. I quit using any kind of treatment. I put a new filter in with carbon (wanted the carbon back since my water was really cloudy and that helped clear it up). I'm going to wait a couple of weeks before adding any new fish to my tank. I still have the temperature running at about 83 degrees. I'm going to gradually bring this back to 76 starting today. I wonder if I should Thanks for your help. Rodney That's the trouble with many of these meds, if the fish are too far gone, it can push them over the edge (and tetras don't have a lot of stamina to start with). Letting the tank cool back to 76F and stabilize sounds like a good idea. If after a month, you don't see any sign of Ich, then you are probably clear. The bugs need hosts to survive, and that's usually sick stressed fish. -- www.NetMax.tk |
A case of Ick? - OT Chloramphenical
Mr. Gardener wrote:
Got any stuff to back up the "last resort antibiotic" stuff? I haven't figured out how to insert hyperlinks in Agent, but a search will take you to Merck Manual, If you are looking for a chemical, the web sites of chemical companies like www-sigma-aldrich.com are good first bets. Safety information is in the "material safety data sheets (MSDS)" which they have to publish on all their products. Also worth looking for is www.chemfinder.com, although unpaid access is now much more restricted than it used to be during the dot-com bubble. |
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