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On Fri, 07 Apr 2006 02:08:36 +0100, Altum
wrote: Cleaning the display tank is a very good idea - especially since you wanted to anyway. Are you going to disinfect it? Don't know, should I??? Need direction.... How do I eradicate whatever it is that's killing these fish? |
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Black Shuck wrote:
On Fri, 07 Apr 2006 02:08:36 +0100, Altum wrote: Cleaning the display tank is a very good idea - especially since you wanted to anyway. Are you going to disinfect it? Don't know, should I??? Need direction.... How do I eradicate whatever it is that's killing these fish? Are there ANY symptoms other than sudden death? If you had a better idea what was happening, you might be able to use a med that leaves your filter intact. With no idea, you might want to sterilize. Unfortunately, it will kill whatever is left of your biofiltration (probably not much after the acriflavine). First, remove the old substrate that you intend to replace. Then disinfect. Finally, set the tank back up and use Cycle (or I prefer BioSpira) to help get the filter going. I usually use potassium permangante. Kordon's Permoxyn or Jungle Clear Water are two brands. For a tank with no fish, I add double the package dose and leave it overnight with the filter running. If it goes brown in the first few hours, I add more. Then rinse everything until the water runs clear. Dilute permanganate (pale pinkish-purple) is a good dip for live plants. Leave them in for 20 minutes and rinse well. Permanganate may also help your fish in the Q-tank - it can kill bacteria and parasites on skin and gills and has a different spectrum of action than Myxazin. You treat fish for four hours with the dosage on the bottle, add dechlor to inactivate it, and then change some water and put in fresh carbon. It's strong stuff so never mix it with another med. Salt kills most FW bacteria, is really easy to rinse off, and leaves no toxic residue. Put at least 3% salt (30 grams/liter) into the tank and run it overnight. In US measurements, it's a heaping 1/2 cup per gallon - I don't know the metric equivalent but a cup holds about 250 ml. Any cheap salt from the grocery store will work. Naturally, it kills plants. Finally, you can use 5% bleach. It will kill EVERYTHING in under a half hour. You have to be extremely careful to get all of the residue out of the tank and off all the equipment, either by completely drying everything or rinsing and using dechlor. Supposedly plants can survive a brief bleach dip, but I've never tried. Whew! long post. HTH - just pick the method that looks easiest. -- Put the word aquaria in the subject to reply. Did you read the FAQ? http://faq.thekrib.com |
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