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This should be a sticky - very good advice he. Thanks for putting it together.
Done
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This should be a sticky - very good advice he. Thanks for putting it together.
2 weeks is technically all that's necessary assuming you're properly treating all fish as if they have ich. However, 4 weeks gives you a much smaller margin of error, and more time to get the fish feeding before dt. In my case, releasing a fish that wasn't treated as if it had ich and flukes (cupramine and prazipro) in to my dt's puts thousands of dollars of fish at risk, causes so much time and stress involved in catching them, the expenses and frustrating of running the dt fallow (my recent experience with this has cost me 75/week in salt and other chemicals during the process for 10 weeks), and of course running fallow 72 days sucks.
Because a fish doesn't show symptoms of ich does NOT mean it does not have it. Even after 4 weeks of being monitored. This is a lesson many learn the hard way, myself included.
I would rather treat all incoming fish than risk the above.
If a fish has been exposed to a non-therapeutic level of copper somewhere along the way, that can mask symptoms of velvet (and possibly even ich.) In that scenario, it can take up to 4 weeks for symptoms to show. Even if your LFS doesn't use copper, there is the wholesaler, collector, etc. to consider.
This statement doesn't agree with what appears to be accepted treatment of ich. I've never read anything or seen any evidence that using copper or formalin below therapeutic levels slows down the parasite. You either kill the parasite or you don't.
I feel your pain. I also learned via the school of hard knocks. Smaller tank and inexpensive fish in my case. Regardless of expense it was still a pain. I left the tank fish-fallow for 6 weeks and re-introduced two tangs after 6 weeks which arrived with ich and were therapeutically treated with Rid-Ich for 5 days.
I don't understand your experience. The life cycle of ich, as best I know, does not include a dormant stage where the parasite remains unseen under the skin of the fish or systemically hidden within the fish for any great length of time at tropic temperatures.
Here's some info from what appears to be a reliable source:
"The trophont will spend three to seven days (depending on temperature) feeding on the fish."
(Link: http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1992196)
"Division inside the cyst into hundreds of daughter parasites, called tomites, begins shortly thereafter. This noninfectious stage can last anywhere from three to twenty-eight days. During this extended period, the parasite cyst is lying in wait for a host. "
"After this period, the tomites hatch and begin swimming around, looking for a fish host. At this point, they are called theronts, and they must find a host within twenty-four hours or die. "
Assuming that the noninfectious stage is dependent on water temperature I would reason that a temperature between 78-82F would produce free swimming tomites within a week tops.
In other words: The dormant non-attached fish stage is totally dependent on temperature. I would also like to disagree with the quoted statement above: "the parasite cyst is lying in wait for a host." I don't believe the parasite cyst has a choice as to when it develops into a free swimming theront, since I believe it's cycle is based on temperature. While it's nice to give the parasite anthropomorphic traits I doubt the parasite is capable of looking out of its cyst and making a decision to hatch based on the presence of a fish. If this were true the fish-fallow approach to getting rid of ich wouldn't work.
Personally I'd rather not treat for ich, at any dose, unless the fish shows obvious signs of the parasite. If it ain't broke don't fix it...
From a reliable source : http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=2355220
It is more of a concern with velvet.
I just read the thread and like many other internet sources there are a lot of "I thinks" based on anecdotal experience. I also did a search for low level copper marine velvet and basically saw the same thing over and over. That being that sub therapeutic levels of copper and other chemicals don't work. A google search of "does low copper mask marine velvet" produced results which all went to the same speculative thread.
The life cycle of velvet is similar to ich, with the possible exception that it's shorter given the same temperature. Personally I don't buy the LFS copper treatment conspiracy theory. I did find an article from the University of Florida: https://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/fa165
This paper states: "Chronic copper exposure will also adversely affect fish health. Sublethal and toxic levels of copper damage gills and other tissues of fish, and also are known to depress the immune system."
Bottom line is: Do what you feel is best and/or makes you feel better. Until I see some solid evidence I'm going to stick with the 3 week wait and watch QT approach.
@ftherrmann I'll have to look on Google Scholar to see if any studies have been done; however "anecdotal experience" from Steve Norvich and some of the other highly regarded people on that thread are enough for me to take heed. But at the end of the day they are your fish, so you can QT them for as long as you like.
Btw, the life cycle of velvet is in some ways very different from ich. For example, ich free swimmers aka theronts are only infective for up to 48 hours - with 6-8 hrs being when they are most active/infective. However, velvet "free swimmers" aka dinospores can remain infective for up to 15 days. This is because velvet is actually a single celled dinoflagellate and not a complex ciliated, protozoan parasite like ich. And being it is a dinoflagellate , it can use photosynthesis as a means of obtaining nutrients - and thus survive longer without a suitable host to feed on.
This is a good read on marine velvet disease: http://www.ultimatereef.com/articles/marinevelvet/
- DO float & release your new fish; DON’T drip acclimate if you can help it. One of the advantages of QT is you can set the specific gravity (SG) to match the bag water. This can usually be determined beforehand by asking the online vendor or local fish shop (LFS) what SG they keep their fish in. Knowing this, you can just float the fish for 20-30 minutes, to slowly bring the temperature of the bag’s water to match that of the receiving tank. Once that is done, open the bag and double check the SG. So long as the SG is within .001 (up or down) of the receiving tank, you can release the fish without further acclimation. If the SG in the bag is lower than the QT, you can quickly lower the SG of a QT by replacing some saltwater with freshwater. If the SG in the bag is much higher than that in the QT, then you are forced to drip acclimate. When doing drip acclimation use an ammonia reducer (ex: Amquel or Prime) if a fish has been in transit for more than a couple of hours.
So I vaguely remember reading stuff about needing to match pH too. Is that something you check as well before deciding to do float & release?
2 weeks is technically all that's necessary assuming you're properly treating all fish as if they have ich. However, 4 weeks gives you a much smaller margin of error, and more time to get the fish feeding before dt. In my case, releasing a fish that wasn't treated as if it had ich and flukes (cupramine and prazipro) in to my dt's puts thousands of dollars of fish at risk, causes so much time and stress involved in catching them, the expenses and frustrating of running the dt fallow (my recent experience with this has cost me 75/week in salt and other chemicals during the process for 10 weeks), and of course running fallow 72 days sucks.
Because a fish doesn't show symptoms of ich does NOT mean it does not have it. Even after 4 weeks of being monitored. This is a lesson many learn the hard way, myself included.
I would rather treat all incoming fish than risk the above.