fitbmxdude989
Member
Are You Playing Russian Rulette With Your Aquarium?
Tuesday, June 24th, 2008 at 4:39 am
Comments (18)
I am shocked and surprised how often I come across marine aquariums (reef or fish only) that have no U.V. sterilizer filter. These aquarists are playing Russian rulette with their aquariums, running the risk of being vulnerable to a parasite outbreak.
There are many different situations that can cause a disease and/or parasite outbreak in your marine aquarium. It could be adding new fish, or perhaps one of your fish changes --- and throws off the entire pecking order, or a fish dies or is removed and that throws off the pecking order; or say your chiller (if you have one) went on the fritze during a heat wave – and the list goes on.
And given that there are so many situations that could spark a disease or parasite outbreak, wouldn’t you want to protect yourself (and your fish) against this likely possibility? Who wouldn’t? And yet many aquarists don’t have a U.V. sterilizer on their system. It’s like rolling the dice and crossing your fingers, hoping you don’t have a disease outbreak.
So, before I go any further, let me just say that - yes – you deffinitely need a U.V. sterilizer. That is, if you want your fish to live for years rather than months, and if you want to avoid even the possibility of a total system meltdown (scary scientific term). Yes, this is my opinion, but it is also backed up with over 11 years in keeping saltwater fish (primarily reef tanks) with only three disease outbreaks – and two of them were caused by human error. By disease outbreak, I mean multiple fish dying from parasite infestation. This is attributed to aggressive use of U.V. sterilizer filters. And don’t forget, I’m not talking about just one tank. I run a high-end custom aquarium design, installation and maintenance business, where we service many customers with large saltwater aquariums.
So, yes, it’s a bold statement. And it also happens to be true. See – I don’t like problems or surprises when it comes to aquariums. Over the years of running my business, I have had to develop ways of preventing problems from even being able to happen on our customer’s tanks; and then having designed the system to be prepared to accomodate the problem if it ever does happen. This is sort of our company philosophy to aquarium system design and it is a preventative approach designed to prevent problems – so that we put far less energy into reacting to and fixing problems. Any way – enough of that. Back to U.V. sterilization.
Tuesday, June 24th, 2008 at 4:39 am
Comments (18)
I am shocked and surprised how often I come across marine aquariums (reef or fish only) that have no U.V. sterilizer filter. These aquarists are playing Russian rulette with their aquariums, running the risk of being vulnerable to a parasite outbreak.
There are many different situations that can cause a disease and/or parasite outbreak in your marine aquarium. It could be adding new fish, or perhaps one of your fish changes --- and throws off the entire pecking order, or a fish dies or is removed and that throws off the pecking order; or say your chiller (if you have one) went on the fritze during a heat wave – and the list goes on.
And given that there are so many situations that could spark a disease or parasite outbreak, wouldn’t you want to protect yourself (and your fish) against this likely possibility? Who wouldn’t? And yet many aquarists don’t have a U.V. sterilizer on their system. It’s like rolling the dice and crossing your fingers, hoping you don’t have a disease outbreak.
So, before I go any further, let me just say that - yes – you deffinitely need a U.V. sterilizer. That is, if you want your fish to live for years rather than months, and if you want to avoid even the possibility of a total system meltdown (scary scientific term). Yes, this is my opinion, but it is also backed up with over 11 years in keeping saltwater fish (primarily reef tanks) with only three disease outbreaks – and two of them were caused by human error. By disease outbreak, I mean multiple fish dying from parasite infestation. This is attributed to aggressive use of U.V. sterilizer filters. And don’t forget, I’m not talking about just one tank. I run a high-end custom aquarium design, installation and maintenance business, where we service many customers with large saltwater aquariums.
So, yes, it’s a bold statement. And it also happens to be true. See – I don’t like problems or surprises when it comes to aquariums. Over the years of running my business, I have had to develop ways of preventing problems from even being able to happen on our customer’s tanks; and then having designed the system to be prepared to accomodate the problem if it ever does happen. This is sort of our company philosophy to aquarium system design and it is a preventative approach designed to prevent problems – so that we put far less energy into reacting to and fixing problems. Any way – enough of that. Back to U.V. sterilization.