aak420
New Member
All of these posts have much information and alot of it good. But, we should be clear about "ich" since this is something that will enevitably affect all who keep saltwater fish. First, ich is almost impossible to not have present in your aquarium. It is a parasite that is found in every tropical enviornment of saltwater habitat on the planet. It is imported to the aquarium trade via fish, live rock, and any other host it can hitch a ride on. With respect to Yellow Tangs as a cycle fish, I have had tremendous success. Tangs in do run a higher rate of "getting" ich. But, ich attacks hosts that have become weakened due to stress. The cycling of a new tank is not a stressful event for a hardy fish, this is regardless of species. Most tangs that get ich, get it because other fish in the tank bully them and cause them to stress out. If you buy a tang that is in good condition and add it to your tank in the begining, you will accomplish multiple goals. 1. You will cycle your tank, 2. You will have a fish that is desireable long term, 3. You aren't staring at a piece of rotting shrimp and waiting, 4. You are allowing the tang to "own" the enviornement prior to other fish being introduced, this further gives the tang less opportunity for stress down the road. Again, this is not something I have done once in my own tank and consider it a success. This is something I have done for 15 years with all of my own tanks and with all of my customers tanks.