daniella3d |
11-11-2011 02:37 PM |
If you want to get rid of ick in you tank then you can do a hyposalinity treatment in a quarantine tank, but if you are a beginner in saltwater I would not do it as it must be supervised closely with a good well calibrated refractometer and ammonia must be monitored a few times per day if necessary. Putting well cured liverock in the hyposalinity quarantine tank is a good way to avoid ammonia. Salinity can be lowered rather fast but raising it must be done very slowly to let the fish adjust, no more than 0.003 point per day. Hyposalinity must be at 0.009 for 4 weeks after the last kyst have disapeared.
Cupramine is another good med for this but again it is something that must be done in a quarantine tank and again ammonia is a silent killer then and it cannot be controlled with Prime as that will bind the amine in Cupramine and relase the copper into a toxic form.
YOur main tank would need to be without any fish for 6 weeks at least.
The garlic thing never worked for me so each time I get a new fish I quarantine it and it receive a dip in Seachem Paraguard for one hour before it even enter the quarantine tank. If anything show up I treat, if nothing show up, the fish spend 4 weeks min. in the quarantine tank and before it goes into the main tank it receive another one hour dip in Paraguard just to be safe.
Without doing this, you will probably have ich in your main tank showing up on regular basis, when ever the fish will be stressed or when ever you introduce some new fish. Clownfish are quite resistant but some other fish are not so.
It is also beleived that ich exaust itself after 10 generation or so. Not sure if this is true but if it is, then if you don't add any new straing of ich in your tank than it might go away and disapear eventually.
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