I'm working through my quarantine plan for my 110 gallon mixed fish/reef tank. The idea is try to avoid ich/velvet/other diseases via quarantine.
For fish, I'm thinking I'll simply try paying someone else to do the work like https://www.marinecollectors.com/.
I'm struggling with corals/inverts. Everything I've read says that at least ich and velvet (and I assume many other things) cannot be solved by dips or rinses. You simply have to quarantine for a long period. Some say 72 days, others say others, but regardless, a really long time. The recommendation I read over and over is to set up a temporary, bare bones, QT to use for this purpose. Usually without even cycling, just frequent water changes.
What I don't understand is how people are successfully quarantining things like clams or acropora when everything I've read (and experienced) about them says "requires a well-established tank with established biome, very stable parameters, etc". To me this says "tank that's been running for a long time (many months), has cycled, has places for copepods, etc".
This doesn't seem to add up, but people seem to be doing it ... So, how are people successfully QTing more challenging corals and inverts for a month or 2 without them just dying every time?
For fish, I'm thinking I'll simply try paying someone else to do the work like https://www.marinecollectors.com/.
I'm struggling with corals/inverts. Everything I've read says that at least ich and velvet (and I assume many other things) cannot be solved by dips or rinses. You simply have to quarantine for a long period. Some say 72 days, others say others, but regardless, a really long time. The recommendation I read over and over is to set up a temporary, bare bones, QT to use for this purpose. Usually without even cycling, just frequent water changes.
What I don't understand is how people are successfully quarantining things like clams or acropora when everything I've read (and experienced) about them says "requires a well-established tank with established biome, very stable parameters, etc". To me this says "tank that's been running for a long time (many months), has cycled, has places for copepods, etc".
This doesn't seem to add up, but people seem to be doing it ... So, how are people successfully QTing more challenging corals and inverts for a month or 2 without them just dying every time?