Brando31
New Member
Oh so many rookie mistakes:
75 gallon with skimmer, sump, refugium, flow, auto top off, and LED's at 76 degrees.
So I basically poisoned my invertebrates by dosing my display tank with copper after seeing a few spots on my fish. I didn't know about the copper invertebrate relationship until about two minutes after I dosed. I lost a few snails but managed to save the rest by setting up an emergency quarantine tank. I moved all the invertebrates to the quarantine tank and continued to dose my display tank with paragaurd (a copper based product). I still ended up losing a flame angel and a fox face. I caught the juvenile imperial angel (who was in really bad shape) and took him back to my brother in laws pet store were he is recuperating nicely.
The two fish specialist employees at my brother in laws LFS argued intensely over wether the disease was ich or velvet or both and over what I should do next. They even thought he might have something that was specific to that breed if fish. So I decided to go to a different LFS for advice. In my display tank I still had a couple damsels, a clown and a yellow tang that looked okay, not great but okay. They had no physical signs other than flashing. The new LFS said to stop dosing my display tank with copper because it would be really hard to get it out of the rock and sand. They had me do a large water change and start feeding with garlic and dosing with Herbtana, a "natural" fish immunity enhancer. But it does NOT KILL ich. 10 days of that, and it didn't seem to do much if anything at all.
I did another 40% water change after the herntana 10 days dosing process and put my invertebrates back in the display tank and turned my skimmer back on. My PH, nitrate, nitrites, and ammonia numbers all look good. The fish and the invertebrates are still doing just okay. Nothing looks bad but nothing looks very good either. No signs of ich, but I have a feeling I'm gonna see it again when the parasite cycles. Fish are still twitching and flashing. Less than before, but its still happening.
1. I really don't know what to do next
2. I'm worried corals/invertebrates will never thrive since the tank was introduced to copper. Even with the water changes.
3. Even with a quarantine tank, it seems like there still is no full proof way to avoid ich
4. Considering breaking the whole thing down, curing the rock and sand and starting over
5. Maybe just a reef only or fish only tank would be easier for a rookie. I don't want to abandon the hobbie but I feel like I am literally flushing money down the toilet. The learning curve is bigger than I anticipated.
I'm not giving up, but I am bummed and highly discouraged.
75 gallon with skimmer, sump, refugium, flow, auto top off, and LED's at 76 degrees.
So I basically poisoned my invertebrates by dosing my display tank with copper after seeing a few spots on my fish. I didn't know about the copper invertebrate relationship until about two minutes after I dosed. I lost a few snails but managed to save the rest by setting up an emergency quarantine tank. I moved all the invertebrates to the quarantine tank and continued to dose my display tank with paragaurd (a copper based product). I still ended up losing a flame angel and a fox face. I caught the juvenile imperial angel (who was in really bad shape) and took him back to my brother in laws pet store were he is recuperating nicely.
The two fish specialist employees at my brother in laws LFS argued intensely over wether the disease was ich or velvet or both and over what I should do next. They even thought he might have something that was specific to that breed if fish. So I decided to go to a different LFS for advice. In my display tank I still had a couple damsels, a clown and a yellow tang that looked okay, not great but okay. They had no physical signs other than flashing. The new LFS said to stop dosing my display tank with copper because it would be really hard to get it out of the rock and sand. They had me do a large water change and start feeding with garlic and dosing with Herbtana, a "natural" fish immunity enhancer. But it does NOT KILL ich. 10 days of that, and it didn't seem to do much if anything at all.
I did another 40% water change after the herntana 10 days dosing process and put my invertebrates back in the display tank and turned my skimmer back on. My PH, nitrate, nitrites, and ammonia numbers all look good. The fish and the invertebrates are still doing just okay. Nothing looks bad but nothing looks very good either. No signs of ich, but I have a feeling I'm gonna see it again when the parasite cycles. Fish are still twitching and flashing. Less than before, but its still happening.
1. I really don't know what to do next
2. I'm worried corals/invertebrates will never thrive since the tank was introduced to copper. Even with the water changes.
3. Even with a quarantine tank, it seems like there still is no full proof way to avoid ich
4. Considering breaking the whole thing down, curing the rock and sand and starting over
5. Maybe just a reef only or fish only tank would be easier for a rookie. I don't want to abandon the hobbie but I feel like I am literally flushing money down the toilet. The learning curve is bigger than I anticipated.
I'm not giving up, but I am bummed and highly discouraged.