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Not so much quarantined but acclimated to salt. While some get away with it, you normally cant drop them in salt and walk away. Same applies to valentini puffer. You want to place them in a container and increase salt level periodicallyover 48 hours to your tank salinity.As per the title - if a Molly is freshwater raised does it need QT before going into a saltwater tank?
/aside from any salinity acclimation
Thank you - I just picked up three on a whim and while setting up QT it occurred that the freshwater might not need it.Not so much quarantined but acclimated to salt. While some get away with it, you normally cant drop them in salt and walk away. Same applies to valentini puffer. You want to place them in a container and increase salt level periodicallyover 48 hours to your tank salinity.
As long as the mollies came from pure freshwater and not brackish, you’ll be o.k. Velvet can live down to 4ppt salt, so if the mollies were kept saltier than that, there could be some risk.Thank you - I just picked up three on a whim and while setting up QT it occurred that the freshwater might not need it.
Plan is to drip acclimate them to approx 1.05 in the QT tank over a couple hours and then water change out over the next few days to raise them up to the tank salinity.
Hmmm.As long as the mollies came from pure freshwater and not brackish, you’ll be o.k. Velvet can live down to 4ppt salt, so if the mollies were kept saltier than that, there could be some risk.
Jay
They are likely detritus wormsThank you - I just picked up three on a whim and while setting up QT it occurred that the freshwater might not need it.
Plan is to drip acclimate them to approx 1.05 in the QT tank over a couple hours and then water change out over the next few days to raise them up to the tank salinity.
/Side note - reducing the QT salinity to 1.05 shook a large number of tiny white worms (Dorvilleidae I think) that the mollies are munching on like crazy as they get siphoned into the acclimation box.
The question is 'why are you putting a mollie into a saltwater tank'? It is kind of a frowned upon thing to do - for a variety of reasons - if you are using the Mollie as a 'canary in a coal mine' for saltwater diseases, for example.Thank you - I just picked up three on a whim and while setting up QT it occurred that the freshwater might not need it.
Plan is to drip acclimate them to approx 1.05 in the QT tank over a couple hours and then water change out over the next few days to raise them up to the tank salinity.
/Side note - reducing the QT salinity to 1.05 shook a large number of tiny white worms (Dorvilleidae I think) that the mollies are munching on like crazy as they get siphoned into the acclimation box.
Goal is a low aggression FOWLR tank of preferably colorful fish. The Mollies in question are a nice gold and black, and my understanding is they’re bolder swimmers than some of the other fish - or less likely to hide in rockwork, so seem to fit the bill. My hope is they’ll live long and happy little fish lives.The question is 'why are you putting a mollie into a saltwater tank'? It is kind of a frowned upon thing to do - for a variety of reasons - if you are using the Mollie as a 'canary in a coal mine' for saltwater diseases, for example.