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Thread: Yet another Ich question

  1. #1
    Join Date
    10-04-2012
    Location
    Schertz, Texas
    Posts
    5

    Default Yet another Ich question

    Hello I just recently discovered MAAST and once i can locate when/where the next meeting will be held, I can't wait to become a ful fledged member. Great to see such a helpful aquarium community in the SA area. So on with my "Emergency"...

    My daughter has a very small 12G tank with a small clown, blue damsel, and a pseudochromis. No corals or live rock "thankfully!!" and pink fiji aragonite as a substrate. Of course like any small child she could not wait to just set up her tank and get it going instead of going the quarantine route and now I guess we are paying the price. The pseudo is now showing "physical symtoms" of Ich.

    I just finished reading the Ich article posted ealier in this forum.

    I guess I'm look more for opinions of should we vacuum out all the substrate and water and try to convert this tank to a hospital tank and dose it with the copper treatments recommended in the article? We were recommended the "all natural" Ich-Attackr manufactured by Kordon by a local aquarium store in the area. However, after reading the Ich article I have my doubts that this wil only prolong the fish's suffering and waste time.

    Or being such a small tank should I just trash the tank move the fish to a new tank for "hospitalization" and then start over with a new tank going the QT route this time to avoid this in the future?

    Thanks for any help or opinions.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    03-13-2009
    Location
    doesnt matter
    Posts
    7,459

    Default

    first off that tank is a lil cramped(for the fish you have), first thing i see is you have some agressive fish also. have you noticed any chasing nipping at eachother, stress can cause ich. also what is you salinity, ph and amonia at.
    REEF MAFIA
    "TEFLON DON"

  3. #3
    Join Date
    01-11-2012
    Location
    NE San Antonio, TX
    Posts
    4,691

    Default

    First off, welcome to MAAST!!

    Secondly, your question.
    No live rock? What are you doing for filtration? Please tell us more about your system.

    Thirdly, your livestock list would indicate a heavy bioload. While clown and damselfish can be cohabitants, as they mature they will fight. Clowns are also a species of damselfish.

    I'm not trying to discourage you by any means. We love to help out folks.


    - Ben -
    "Wisdom is not the product of schooling but of the lifelong attempt to acquire it"
    - Albert Einstein


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  4. #4
    Join Date
    02-10-2009
    Location
    San Antonio, Bulverde Village
    Posts
    8,057

    Default

    Hey dude,

    Welcome to MAAST. Good to have a new guy on the forum.

    Let me clarify what Chris mentioned. Stress doesn't cause ich, the stress reduces the fish's ability to fight it. One of the reasons we feed heavy and introduce garlic to stimulate the feeding response is because a well fed fish can fight off the parasite much easier than a fish that is overly stressed.

    Your tank would be toast if you introduce copper in it, and ever hope to house coral.

    I would let it ride, keep feeding the fish and maintain a happy little aquarium. But if you are indeed going to upgrade, well that's another story all together. As Chris mentioned earlier, that damsel is a pretty dominant creature... and in a little tank he's going to want to establish dominance which will further stress the other inhabitants. Just for the fact that you've three fish in a 12 gallon will be a bit of a stressful environment in itself.

    What kind of clown?
    Reefing 210
    Multi-Genera

  5. #5
    Join Date
    02-10-2009
    Location
    San Antonio, Bulverde Village
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    8,057

    Default

    To echo Ben in another fashion...

    Dude, post up a picture of your tank! We love pictures here. ;)
    Reefing 210
    Multi-Genera

  6. #6

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by allan View Post
    Hey dude,

    Welcome to MAAST. Good to have a new guy on the forum.

    Let me clarify what Chris mentioned. Stress doesn't cause ich, the stress reduces the fish's ability to fight it. One of the reasons we feed heavy and introduce garlic to stimulate the feeding response is because a well fed fish can fight off the parasite much easier than a fish that is overly stressed.

    Your tank would be toast if you introduce copper in it, and ever hope to house coral.

    I would let it ride, keep feeding the fish and maintain a happy little aquarium. But if you are indeed going to upgrade, well that's another story all together. As Chris mentioned earlier, that damsel is a pretty dominant creature... and in a little tank he's going to want to establish dominance which will further stress the other inhabitants. Just for the fact that you've three fish in a 12 gallon will be a bit of a stressful environment in itself.

    What kind of clown?
    whats up, welcome to Maast +1 ^on this, the biggest thing i have learned is just take your time dont rush anything
    100 gallon reef in process. . . .

  7. #7
    Join Date
    10-04-2012
    Location
    Schertz, Texas
    Posts
    5

    Default

    Ben I appreciate your feedback and vetting of my info regrettable I read the FAQ of the Emergency group after I submitted so I should have included the items you suggested:

    The tank is a Marineland 12 G salt tank kit, comes with a rectangular tank, generic full spectrum light, biowheel and charcoal filter pad. I have always frowned against kits as you usually end up replacing the provided supplies anyway. However this was a "special sale item" so I gave in. I replaced the T8 generic bulb with a Corallife 50/50 bulb.

    I also added a Hydor Koralia Evolution 75 powerhead to increase circulation.

    Salinitiy of the tank has been around 1.020 - 1.022
    Nitrates have slowly risen the past week to approx 10 pmm.
    Nitrite is 0 ppm
    pH 7.8
    NH - do not remember this off the top of my head may have to post later.

    I noticed there was some tension between the clown and pseudo when we first introduced them into the tank. However, the damsel and clown usually hang out on one side of the tank in their hiding spots and swim with no nipping. The pseudo hangs out on the other side of the tank. During feeding I have not noticed any agressiveness toward each other. If they make it through the Ich then I will take you up on the suggestion and split them up into other tanks.

    I have seen the compatibility charts regrettably after purchase, which is why I have kept a close eye out for aggresiveness. Is there a rule of thumb or guide for determining the bioload or is it a matter of the amount of filtration/live rock going on in the aquarium? Once again we bought this for our 4 y/o daughter so I did not want to turn this into a full fledged reef system with refugium/sump. So any ideas for preserving a small system for her would be great. Unfortunately for my daughter we are also using this as a learning experience before moving onto a full fledged large reef tank .

  8. #8
    Join Date
    01-11-2012
    Location
    NE San Antonio, TX
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    4,691

    Default

    Thanks Allan. I'm running the crane and that post took over 10 minutes to type out.


    - Ben -
    "Wisdom is not the product of schooling but of the lifelong attempt to acquire it"
    - Albert Einstein


    http://sincemylastcigarette.com/bann..._5.75_dark.png

  9. #9
    Join Date
    01-11-2012
    Location
    NE San Antonio, TX
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    4,691

    Default

    You don't need to go full blown. I've got 3 tanks running and only 1 is running a sump.
    I'd pick up an established piece of live rock at one of our sponsors stores and let it ride! Maybe around 10 pounds. Your parameters sound pretty good. Especially since there is no live rock.
    You mentioned the clown and damsel hide on their side. What do they hide in?


    - Ben -
    "Wisdom is not the product of schooling but of the lifelong attempt to acquire it"
    - Albert Einstein


    http://sincemylastcigarette.com/bann..._5.75_dark.png

  10. #10
    Join Date
    02-10-2009
    Location
    San Antonio, Bulverde Village
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    Default

    lol

    The damsels will develop into a territorial little fiend... but that in itself is a learning environment for your child as well. With the light that you have you can probably support some of the softies if you wanted to give her an introductory peek into reef madness.


    See if you can get her to realize where the problem is by giving her the reading material to figure it out. Not sure if you can find some child friendly literature though. I don't remember what reading level she should be at at four. But I do remember the "see john run" and "see alice walk" reading material that my mom gave me. I can tell you from experience that THAT wasn't fun.
    Reefing 210
    Multi-Genera

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