Humble Fish: What do you think of Gene Harm's one-week method designed to break the life cycle of the parasites? It is on YouTube and titled "One week saltwater fish quarantine method."
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Yes, but I must admit that his claimed track record is impressive. I have had good luck with fresh water dips in the past but I have never done them every two days like he does.
Thanks for the responses, HF. I've seen it recommended to match the pH of the fresh water dip to the bag water but I'm not sure how critical that would be for a 3 minute dip. Perhaps a 2 point pH difference could be enough to kill a sensitive fish.
Humblefish, quick question. I have a pair of Golden Rhomboid Fairy Wrasses and a pair of Pintail Fairy Wrasses arriving on Tuesday. I have CP from Diamondback Drugs and Cupramine both on hand. I can also order Copper Power if that's better. Which would you recommend for using for QT with these wrasses? I see some people say not to use CP with Wrasses, but think I saw you say it's ok for Fairy and Flashers, but not the rest, but to maybe dose light?
@Humblefish do you always medicate a quarantine tank as a preventative measure or do you wait to see signs of disease on a fish before you add medications?
Also, you said freshly mixed salt water... so you don't recommend water from the display for the quarantine? How is the water cycled if its freshly mixed?
Thanks so much for your time and expertise!!
Hi there! I can tell you that Humble treats prophylactically as do I. Neither of us recommend using water from your display unless you KNOW it is parasite free. Since most people we advise are dealing with a parasite in there tank due to not using a QT, that's usually not the case. Besides, there is very little bacteria in the water itself. The best practice (assuming a parasite free tank) is to keep a simple sponge in the sump so that when you need to set up your QT, you have a sponge for the filter already seeded with bacteria. The freshly mixed saltwater provides an absolutely clean slate for the fish when they are introduced and no chance of infection from anything else that may be in the water.
So, are you saying fish in the QT should be treated for ick even if they don't show signs of it after 4 weeks?
Thanks for the great thread. What is your preferred method of sterilization?
QT (TTM, PraziPro, etc.) and captive bred fishes (CBF); how critical is that, would you say?
On the more conservative side of thought; the water used to raise CBF may be shared with wild-caught fishes, which could result in disease transfer. The same also could occur if the tanks are even close to each other and not closed up (10ft aerosol transfer). A full QT would protect against these possibilities.
On the less conservative side of thought; the CBF has been, by definition, under observation for it's entire life. During this time, it is likely that any sign of illness or parasites would have been treated and handled. If you know that the vendor only handles CBF (eg; no wild-caught fishes), then the water system would never have the chance to be introduced to undesirables. A full QT in this case would put the CBF through more stress events that could have a net negative impact.
Assuming that the vendor is reputable and is only dealing in CBF, what are your thoughts on doing only a minimal QT? Eg; single tank for several days at most just to recover from travel and food-acclimate.