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- May 16, 2019
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I know the ich life cycle. I know what will kill it and what won’t. I know how to treat a tank that has ich in it. But I don’t treat the ich in my 30 gallon biocube.
I’ve seen ich at its worst. Infecting almost every fish and multiplying rapidly. But the ich in my tank has never been very aggressive. Many fish have come and gone (moved out to a larger tank not dead) including tangs and every one of them would break out in ich within a week of arriving in the 30 gallon tank. But never to a life threatening extent. they would then fight it off and live comfortably until they move on to my larger display.
I know there are many strains of ich and mine seems to be particularly impotent compared to others I’ve seen and experienced. So I leave it be to help new fish build their temporary immunity rather than treat every new fish with copper.
but this got me thinking. Surely the many fish that were added to the 30 gallon would have brought in other strains of ich over time? The only parasite I treat for is velvet by using a trusted store and doing a brief quarantine since velvet shows symptoms sooner, so new strains of ich would probably be able to make it through my limited quarantine. But I haven’t had any outbreaks or severe symptoms after adding new fish.
I wonder if two strains of ich cannot coexist in one tank. Like in most ecosystems one will outcompete the other. my theory is that my strain of ich is a little like penicillin. It’s more benign and it outcompetes other potentially more harmful parasites and prevents them from spreading.
this is just a theory. But I’m wondering what people think. If it is valid then it stands to reason that one could intentionally culture a strain of ich that is particularly aggressive towards other strains of ich. And particularly benign towards fish. Then you could introduce that strain intentionally to a tank to prevent a dangerous outbreak in the future.
I’ve seen ich at its worst. Infecting almost every fish and multiplying rapidly. But the ich in my tank has never been very aggressive. Many fish have come and gone (moved out to a larger tank not dead) including tangs and every one of them would break out in ich within a week of arriving in the 30 gallon tank. But never to a life threatening extent. they would then fight it off and live comfortably until they move on to my larger display.
I know there are many strains of ich and mine seems to be particularly impotent compared to others I’ve seen and experienced. So I leave it be to help new fish build their temporary immunity rather than treat every new fish with copper.
but this got me thinking. Surely the many fish that were added to the 30 gallon would have brought in other strains of ich over time? The only parasite I treat for is velvet by using a trusted store and doing a brief quarantine since velvet shows symptoms sooner, so new strains of ich would probably be able to make it through my limited quarantine. But I haven’t had any outbreaks or severe symptoms after adding new fish.
I wonder if two strains of ich cannot coexist in one tank. Like in most ecosystems one will outcompete the other. my theory is that my strain of ich is a little like penicillin. It’s more benign and it outcompetes other potentially more harmful parasites and prevents them from spreading.
this is just a theory. But I’m wondering what people think. If it is valid then it stands to reason that one could intentionally culture a strain of ich that is particularly aggressive towards other strains of ich. And particularly benign towards fish. Then you could introduce that strain intentionally to a tank to prevent a dangerous outbreak in the future.