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- Feb 27, 2018
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Last night I was doing some sump renovations, when I finished I realized the silicone I've used had a small label that read "anti-fungal" (I'm from Argentina and it's in spanish actually but I'm translating). I bought the same brand I always use, but this time my usual shop was closed so I went to another and ask for the same product, I didn't even check it.. I was having a bad day, and it was just starting. The clerk hand me a version with an anti-fungal which looks almost the same as the regular one.
When I was about the turn on the pumps I realized my mistake, I decided to act quickly and undo all I have done. I stayed until 3 am removing all the silicone I could from the sump with a box cutter and ethanol. I turned on the pumps and went to sleep. Today everything looks fine, I have a 500 gallons system I'm sure that helps. I think I dodged a bullet here.
So, why am I posting you might ask? Well, last year I manage to convince my college to build 2 reef tanks using some cube tanks they had laying around. I work and study in the University of Buenos Aires, which is a public funded school, so not a lot of money to go around (you might also have heard about the economic situation in Argentina). I'm part of the zoology department and the idea is to use the aquariums so the students can study the animals alive, instead of dead like they usually do. Buenos Aires has no sea coast so a lot of small critters from our aquariums are really useful for our students (amphipods, asterina stars, bristle worms, etc.).
I plan to make a thread about it in the future, but the reason I'm writing this here is because I realized that the silicone the college gave me to build the aquarium is the same I used yesterday with the anti-fungal chemical. I was having trouble maintaining easy corals from my own system (rhodactis, actinodiscus, calaustrea. The rhodactis are fine actually, but the actinodiscus died which is weird). I blamed it on the custom build lights not being good enough.
Also, I had a problem with the previous pump which I suspect was leaching copper, so when some asterina stars started dying at the start (which had never happened in my home aquarium) I blamed it on the pump and changed it.
According to the box the chemical compound in question is
One of the cubes have a couple of clownfish for months now and they never had any problems. I've amphipods and copepods by the thousands, lot of bristle worms also.
Thanks for the help and sorry about the long post
When I was about the turn on the pumps I realized my mistake, I decided to act quickly and undo all I have done. I stayed until 3 am removing all the silicone I could from the sump with a box cutter and ethanol. I turned on the pumps and went to sleep. Today everything looks fine, I have a 500 gallons system I'm sure that helps. I think I dodged a bullet here.
So, why am I posting you might ask? Well, last year I manage to convince my college to build 2 reef tanks using some cube tanks they had laying around. I work and study in the University of Buenos Aires, which is a public funded school, so not a lot of money to go around (you might also have heard about the economic situation in Argentina). I'm part of the zoology department and the idea is to use the aquariums so the students can study the animals alive, instead of dead like they usually do. Buenos Aires has no sea coast so a lot of small critters from our aquariums are really useful for our students (amphipods, asterina stars, bristle worms, etc.).
I plan to make a thread about it in the future, but the reason I'm writing this here is because I realized that the silicone the college gave me to build the aquarium is the same I used yesterday with the anti-fungal chemical. I was having trouble maintaining easy corals from my own system (rhodactis, actinodiscus, calaustrea. The rhodactis are fine actually, but the actinodiscus died which is weird). I blamed it on the custom build lights not being good enough.
Also, I had a problem with the previous pump which I suspect was leaching copper, so when some asterina stars started dying at the start (which had never happened in my home aquarium) I blamed it on the pump and changed it.
According to the box the chemical compound in question is
4,5-Dichloro-2-n-octyl-4-isothiazolin-3-one
Could it be that this problems are due to the antifungal in the silicone? It's been over a year, should I still worry and re-do the overflow boxes (where I used that silicone), or it had been long enough? Would something like activated carbon help? Can it still be leaching into the water after all this time?One of the cubes have a couple of clownfish for months now and they never had any problems. I've amphipods and copepods by the thousands, lot of bristle worms also.
Thanks for the help and sorry about the long post