I’m not meaning to be disrespectful, I just feel like the debates are very much related. What is the difference between treating prophylactically or treating symptomatically in terms of the treated fish’s ability to thrive in a parasite-friendly environment?
If you do not treat ALL of your fish prophylactically, there is a very good chance that parasites will eventually find their way into your display. I’ve seen this myself, multiple times. I’ve added multiple fish that have all had a lengthy 30 day+ observational QT... none symptomatic..and then all of a sudden, one is covered in spots. Then another, and another... and before you know it, you are scrambling to salvage whatever you can while fish die left and right.
So where did the parasites come from? And why didn’t my “un-treated” fish survive the attack? How do you remedy this scenario? How do I treat those fish with symptoms and still have them live harmoniously with the parasites that will inevitably end up in my tank?
I’ve had TWO velvet wipe-outs, in the 8-9 years I’ve been doing this. The only thing that has changed this for me, adopting a prophylactic treatment protocol. Maybe I’m “doing it wrong” but it’s not what’s worked for me... it’s what hasn’t worked for me.
I would be interested in WHY you think you got the velvet outbreaks - was there anything you can remember doing (i.e. was it a new fish, a temp change, etc etc?). I also had one outbreak - and it was when I decided to go with a low-priced internet supplier. Not only the new fish - but all my old fish died as well (within a week) - I also didnt do biopsies, etc - but it sure sounded like velvet - and didn't look like CI.
IMHO - the first part of prophylaxis against disease is not medicine - its making sure you're buying healthy fish from a supplier that uses proper methods. I, for example - buy fish from ONLY 1 store that does not use copper (low dose) that are already eating, healthy and in invertebrate containing tanks many times I go in look at a fish - and only buy it 2 weeks later. Coral - I only buy from stores where there is no fish in the tank - and usually larger pieces that have been in that tank for some time (i.e. the coral is already 'fallow') to a great degree.
The second part of prophylaxis is making sure you're tank is appropriate for the things you're putting into it (water conditions, stocking density, flow, filtration) perhaps even gorgonians ...
But - it would only be after making sure all of those things are checked that I would even consider buying a new fish. Then the question becomes 'QT or QT+Medication or Nothing'.
Frankly (and I dont mean you @ngoodermuth) my guess is that most people just pick a fish online - and don't pay attention to some of these 'other things'.
Frankly - there has to be a 'difference' between what you are seeing in the supply chain - and what I'm seeing in my area. There has to be a reason why many people can just drop fish in and others have problems. Interested in your thoughts above
And PS - that to me is the purpose of this whole exercise - its not debating semantics in various scientific papers (though I highly rely on reviewing several sources) - its about trying to figure out why there seems to be such a dichotomy.
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