tangaeric
New Member
Dear Terry,
I just read an article by Dr. Harry W. Dickerson on treatment of C. irritans in aquaria (http://www.breeders-registry.gen.ca....umr/******.htm) in which he mentions that part of the life cycle of the parasite is to attach itself to the host fish as a trophont for a period of growth until maturity of 5-7 days after which it disattaches itself and leaves the host. The tomont, after swimming in the water colum until it attaches itself to some substrate where it will encysts, the subdivide for a period of 3-28 days after which it will hatch into several free swimming tomites.
The editors note at the end of the article summarises that in their lab experiments they found that cysts exposed to hyposalinity of SG 1.011 or less for a period of 48 hours or more do not produce live tomonts.
Now, considering that the best place for a fish to be, other than in its natural environment in the sea, is to be in a display tank rather than in a quarantene tank where the level of stress is likely to be higher than in the simulated natural environment of a display (although it might not always be true), ideally a quarantene period would be as short as possible in order to get the fish into the display. For example, a powder blue tang that can be a difficult feeder is more likely to feed well in a display tank than in a quarantene tank (in my experience so far). Also, maintaining good water quality for extended periods of time in a quarantene tank where one could be administering treatments, has been difficult for me when compared to my display tank.
Therefore, since I've been unable to access any of your published papers on the subject, could you indicate, based on your research, at which stage hyposalinity affects the and breaks the life cycle of C. irritans?
Based on the above referenced paper by Dr. Dickerson, one could theorize that if a fish entering quarantene is carrying the parasite, it would be carrying it in the trophont stage, which would, according to the referenced research, only last 5-7 days before it disattaches itself from the fish and encysts somewhere in the quarantene tank. Based on the same study one could then assume that if the cysts formed after a maximum of 7 days after the quarantened fish are exposed to hyposalinity of SG 1.009 remain exposed to the hypo for more than 48 hours, then no live tomites would hatch, meaning that the fish could then not get re-infected. Based on these theories, hypo quarantene tanks for C. irritans would only need to run in hypo for a maximum of, say, 12 days (to be on the safe side) instead of the minimum 21 days you recommend.
Could you comment on this theory?
Thanks,
Eric
P.S. I have a new quarantene cycle running with a better setup of a 1200L plastic tank for the fish, a 1200L tank acting as a sump with a trickle carbon/sand filter running in the sump. I cycled the tank for 15 days before putting any fish in there and it seems to be working alot better than the previous cycles. Thanks for all the past advice
I just read an article by Dr. Harry W. Dickerson on treatment of C. irritans in aquaria (http://www.breeders-registry.gen.ca....umr/******.htm) in which he mentions that part of the life cycle of the parasite is to attach itself to the host fish as a trophont for a period of growth until maturity of 5-7 days after which it disattaches itself and leaves the host. The tomont, after swimming in the water colum until it attaches itself to some substrate where it will encysts, the subdivide for a period of 3-28 days after which it will hatch into several free swimming tomites.
The editors note at the end of the article summarises that in their lab experiments they found that cysts exposed to hyposalinity of SG 1.011 or less for a period of 48 hours or more do not produce live tomonts.
Now, considering that the best place for a fish to be, other than in its natural environment in the sea, is to be in a display tank rather than in a quarantene tank where the level of stress is likely to be higher than in the simulated natural environment of a display (although it might not always be true), ideally a quarantene period would be as short as possible in order to get the fish into the display. For example, a powder blue tang that can be a difficult feeder is more likely to feed well in a display tank than in a quarantene tank (in my experience so far). Also, maintaining good water quality for extended periods of time in a quarantene tank where one could be administering treatments, has been difficult for me when compared to my display tank.
Therefore, since I've been unable to access any of your published papers on the subject, could you indicate, based on your research, at which stage hyposalinity affects the and breaks the life cycle of C. irritans?
Based on the above referenced paper by Dr. Dickerson, one could theorize that if a fish entering quarantene is carrying the parasite, it would be carrying it in the trophont stage, which would, according to the referenced research, only last 5-7 days before it disattaches itself from the fish and encysts somewhere in the quarantene tank. Based on the same study one could then assume that if the cysts formed after a maximum of 7 days after the quarantened fish are exposed to hyposalinity of SG 1.009 remain exposed to the hypo for more than 48 hours, then no live tomites would hatch, meaning that the fish could then not get re-infected. Based on these theories, hypo quarantene tanks for C. irritans would only need to run in hypo for a maximum of, say, 12 days (to be on the safe side) instead of the minimum 21 days you recommend.
Could you comment on this theory?
Thanks,
Eric
P.S. I have a new quarantene cycle running with a better setup of a 1200L plastic tank for the fish, a 1200L tank acting as a sump with a trickle carbon/sand filter running in the sump. I cycled the tank for 15 days before putting any fish in there and it seems to be working alot better than the previous cycles. Thanks for all the past advice