squirreloso
Member
wrong info is in the eye of the beholder. i speak from experienc and my own method has worked for me. will it work for everyone? of course not. i dont know how bad off the fish is to begin with.
when my baby hippo tang came to me he was only an inch. he got ich within a week, no other fish got it, just him. tangs have very small scales, as delicate as a scaless fish (but they do have scales)
so its no surprise that some species of tang get ich while the rest of the tank is fine.
what did i do? nothing, 90% of fish with ich recover if its not an extreme outbreak (like the fish isnt covered from head to toe with ich)
i feed him foods soaked in garlic twice a day. the ich goes through a cycle where it leaves the fish host, giving the tang a break. in this time he is getting stronger and bigger, still fed with garlic.
its a month now since i got him and he has doubled in size and he is ich free.
of course ich is still in the system but as long as hes not stressed out (like no fish are attacking him) well then he should remain ich free for life.
garlic will always be fed to my tangs, i do cut down in time though once i see they have built up a strong immune system.
three years ago in my other tank my pair of clowns and a blenny came down with ich and the clowns ich and blackspot. in this tank i did absolutely nothing, the water quality was high and they were well fed. after a few weeks they were ich free, the blackspot went away on its own too. three years later i still have this tank, with the SAME fish! alive and well.
the only tank i ever had wiped out was do to velvet, not ich. i did treat with copper and formylin(?) (quick cure) every fish died. believe me id take ick over velvet anyday
if you take out your hippo, hypo salinity him and if he even survives that stress, once you place him back in your main display he most likely will get ich all over again, since it IS in your system.
frequent water changes help remove some of the free floating ich. bare bottom tanks also help siphoning the bottom.
but ive found all this not necessary, time consuming and in some cases too much stress for the fish leading to a worse outbreak than before.
in the future if you want a tang there are other tangs that have "thicker skin" and arent as ich prone as the hippos, powder blues etc.
lavender and naso tangs are one of the strongest tangs out there.
so to the poster who said your getting bad advice, i dont see that. ive learned from experience not just what i read online or on forums.
you will gather your own info and do what you feel is best for your fish, and you will learn what method works for you so you can use it in the future
when my baby hippo tang came to me he was only an inch. he got ich within a week, no other fish got it, just him. tangs have very small scales, as delicate as a scaless fish (but they do have scales)
so its no surprise that some species of tang get ich while the rest of the tank is fine.
what did i do? nothing, 90% of fish with ich recover if its not an extreme outbreak (like the fish isnt covered from head to toe with ich)
i feed him foods soaked in garlic twice a day. the ich goes through a cycle where it leaves the fish host, giving the tang a break. in this time he is getting stronger and bigger, still fed with garlic.
its a month now since i got him and he has doubled in size and he is ich free.
of course ich is still in the system but as long as hes not stressed out (like no fish are attacking him) well then he should remain ich free for life.
garlic will always be fed to my tangs, i do cut down in time though once i see they have built up a strong immune system.
three years ago in my other tank my pair of clowns and a blenny came down with ich and the clowns ich and blackspot. in this tank i did absolutely nothing, the water quality was high and they were well fed. after a few weeks they were ich free, the blackspot went away on its own too. three years later i still have this tank, with the SAME fish! alive and well.
the only tank i ever had wiped out was do to velvet, not ich. i did treat with copper and formylin(?) (quick cure) every fish died. believe me id take ick over velvet anyday
if you take out your hippo, hypo salinity him and if he even survives that stress, once you place him back in your main display he most likely will get ich all over again, since it IS in your system.
frequent water changes help remove some of the free floating ich. bare bottom tanks also help siphoning the bottom.
but ive found all this not necessary, time consuming and in some cases too much stress for the fish leading to a worse outbreak than before.
in the future if you want a tang there are other tangs that have "thicker skin" and arent as ich prone as the hippos, powder blues etc.
lavender and naso tangs are one of the strongest tangs out there.
so to the poster who said your getting bad advice, i dont see that. ive learned from experience not just what i read online or on forums.
you will gather your own info and do what you feel is best for your fish, and you will learn what method works for you so you can use it in the future