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#1
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TheRock wrote:
Before you transfer your fish to another tank, take everything out so you can catch them...... Or you can just medicate the water with Kent Rx P Parasite Treatment or Mardel Fresh & Salt Water Maracide or Aquarium Pharmaceuticals Erythromycin. What fish do you have again ? emycin won't do squat for any type of ich, AND it will crash your biological filtration to boot! |
#2
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George Patterson wrote:
Take *all* the fish out and transfer them to a hospital tank. Treat them there with copper (I prefer "CopperSafe") and keep them there for 4 weeks to allow the parasites in the main tank to die. Ack! It's funny as I just read about the value of a quarantine tank about a week ago, and now that's been hit home. But, I probably picked it up on the tang the first week that I had my tank and still a very green newbie. --Kurt |
#3
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George Patterson wrote:
Sounds like ich (oodinimum). Has the tang been going through a cycle of this? That is, does the tang exhibit symptoms for about a week and then have no symptoms for about a week? And when the tang has no symptoms, do there seem to be a bunch of very tiny white dots doing loops in the water? Maybe. Tang does seem to go through periods when he itches furiously, but then he doesn't seem to for awhile. Just when I think I should do something, he seems to get better. I only see the tiny white dots on the coral beauty. I've looked at the yellow tang, but maybe it's obscured by the bright color because I can't seem them. As for the water and tiny dots, it appears so. I don't have a good mechanical filter yet, so it's hard to say. --Kurt |
#4
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George Patterson wrote:
Sounds like ich (oodinimum). Or it could be crypto. I have seen the two misdiagonsed as eachother many times. OOdinium looks more like the fish has been dipped in powdered sugar, but you still see some distinct spots. Crypto is more distinct white spots, with amore raised appearance. |
#5
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I speak on my own experience, any similar events are pure coincedence
(disclaimer =). When I got my Blue Tang, he got it ick very soon. I put the tank apart just to catch him. I isolated him on a 10G with an ich reef safe medicine (according to the LFS) and it was hard to see the stress he was going throught. The eyes for just a little bigger but eventually he got better, not completely but much better, wich make me feel sorry and put him back in the tank. Besides it make the silicon blue stained on my tank. A few months later he got it again, very very bad to a point where he scratched the skin out and you could see deep into the red flesh. At that point I keep feeding him and decided to pull him out to end his suffering. He didn't let me, kept hiding coming out only to eat. I gave up and two or three weeks later he came out of his hiding showing all his skin back. If you look at him now he's perfect, no scars at all. My advice would be, feedings(frozen/good quality food), water changes and patience. I read parasites are always present, it takes fish weakness to be vulnerable. I wouldn't try any medication again, especially on the whole tank. I learned Blue tangs are very sensitive to ick, meaning they will get it again on the next nervous crisis. A celaner shrimp may help. Mine used to jump on top of the fish to clean them, very cool, for some reaon I lost about 5 shrimps, no apparent reason (I think there must be a guilty fish). I just got a coral banded and it's still alive. I suspect he is not a nice treat with those claws. If you find the source of stress then you find the cure, maybe the Damsel is causing the stress...darn damsels, lol, they get so mean but they are so cheap....=) Good Luck, Ruben "KurtG" wrote in message ... My tang has been itching itself for weeks/months, and often allows the 4-stripe damsels to "chew" on him. However, he's a nut case anyway, so I didn't worry about it (maybe a newbie error). Now my Coral Beauty has some bright white dots on it, and it's starting to itch as well. Could this be marine itch? Should I isolate these two and treat with Copper Sulfate? I read that pygmy angles don't handle Copper sulfate very well. --Kurt |
#6
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RubenD wrote:
.... My advice would be, feedings(frozen/good quality food), water changes and patience. I read parasites are always present, it takes fish weakness to be vulnerable. I wouldn't try any medication again, especially on the whole tank. My newb thoughts exactly. I've had two minor bouts of ich both cleared up with improved husbandry. ("Emergency" Water changes - turn over at least 50% of the tank in a day or two.) A celaner shrimp may help. Mine used to jump on top of the fish to clean The first time my tank got ich I ran out and got a cleaner. He got busy quick and it's fun to watch him now. A great addition to a reef tank in any case. The other other thing I did was feed flake soaked in fresh mashed garlic. I was surprised everyone ate it, but they did. The ich cleared up in a few days but more importantly did not come back. -K |
#7
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![]() KurtG wrote: My tang has been itching itself for weeks/months, and often allows the 4-stripe damsels to "chew" on him. However, he's a nut case anyway, so I didn't worry about it (maybe a newbie error). Now my Coral Beauty has some bright white dots on it, and it's starting to itch as well. Could this be marine itch? Should I isolate these two and treat with Copper Sulfate? I read that pygmy angles don't handle Copper sulfate very well. --Kurt I would tend to think that it is. Get your water in shape first, something is wrong that's allowing the ich to take hold. (it will almost always be there in some form, whether it has an outbreak is another thing). I've used Ruby Reef's "Kick Ich" in the past and had success with it treating the parasite. Also, I think a garlic additive and a good nutritious food for the fish will help get them strong enough to fight it off. YMMV. |
#8
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Blackheart wrote:
(it will almost always be there in some form, whether it has an outbreak is another thing). This is a prevalent idea which is total bull. Ick is a parasite. It has a 21 day life cycle. After that it dies. If it cannot feed off a fish at some point in that period, it dies earlier and does not lay eggs. If it can feed off a fish, it lays eggs. These hatch after a few days; they do not have the capability of lying dormant. When they hatch, they attach themselves to a fish, and the cycle starts over. If you have oodinium in your tank, your fish will periodically be parasitized; that is, you *will* get outbreaks. If you don't have outbreaks, no ick is present in any form. George Patterson Forgive your enemies. But always remember who they are. |
#10
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Wayne Sallee wrote:
But the reality is that if a fish is healthy with a good immune system, it will not die, but will recover fine. Sure. But then the next cycle, there are more parasites. This population explosion eventually kills the fish. George Patterson Forgive your enemies. But always remember who they are. |
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