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Nonsense, I am just waiting for us for you to regale us with more anecdotes, cargo-cult theories and folk wisdom.
Subcomandante Marcos":1lafxyj3 said:Nonsense, I am just waiting for us for you to regale us with more anecdotes, cargo-cult theories and folk wisdom.
Subcomandante Marcos":23rqlkj1 said:But getting back to the point: If you stress a fish, it is more likely to develop ich. To avoid the stress, it is best to net it out of the bag and dump it directly into a well-established reef tank, with no mixing of water either in the tank or even in the bag.
Subcomandante Marcos":pkmnma6a said:By far the best treatment is also the cheapest: Hyposalinity. It always works. It rarely kills the fish. You can move the corals and do it in a reef tank if you have to (although I would never do that). He lists it as number 4. I'd do that first.
Subcomandante Marcos":2fmvy16x said:Actually, the ariticle is crap:
Lawdawg":22p92xvy said:Subcomandante Marcos":22p92xvy said:But getting back to the point: If you stress a fish, it is more likely to develop ich. To avoid the stress, it is best to net it out of the bag and dump it directly into a well-established reef tank, with no mixing of water either in the tank or even in the bag.
Nonsense
JohnHenry":2l4jzhah said:JimM":2l4jzhah said:JohnHenry":2l4jzhah said:I don't quarantine anything, and have not had any infectious disasters.
I think if you're careful with what you buy, and are willing to take some risk, then it is not as necessary as many would have you believe.
Again, you're saying "I haven't worn a seatbelt for a year, and I'm still alive. Therefore seatbelts are not very necessary" A rather narrowminded approach methinks.
Thank you.
Let me try to explain my point using your own analogy.
1st, I refute your conclusion that my statement's logic is equal to "I haven't worn a seatbelt for a year, and I'm still alive. Therefore seatbelts are not very necessary".
My logic, in your terms, is that:
-not all car trips are equal.
-not all drivers are equal.
-not all roads are equal.
Let us imagine a man who lives in the country. He only drives to the local store and to his neighbor's house. He's been driving for fifty years. He drives without a seatbelt. And he's neversomuch as broken a fingernail. These people do exist.
For this guy, yes, I'd be willing to say 'seatbelts are not necessary.'
Now imagine that this guy lives by the ocean and keeps marine fish. He has a large stable tank, gets his fish from LFSs who get them straight from the ocean. The LFS always QTs and watches for disease. He knows his tank and the environment from which his livestock is bought.
I'd say this guy can continue doing just fine without the QT.
Any other approach, I thinks, would be narrowminded.![]()
That said, my 1st response to this thread was just that, a response to the OP's question. It was not meant to be advice, and not meant to be driven recklessly.
Subcomandante Marcos":281du36f said:But getting back to the point: If you stress a fish, it is more likely to develop ich. To avoid the stress, it is best to net it out of the bag and dump it directly into a well-established reef tank, with no mixing of water either in the tank or even in the bag.
Subcomandante Marcos":7t6a5285 said:Lawdawg":7t6a5285 said:Subcomandante Marcos":7t6a5285 said:But getting back to the point: If you stress a fish, it is more likely to develop ich. To avoid the stress, it is best to net it out of the bag and dump it directly into a well-established reef tank, with no mixing of water either in the tank or even in the bag.
Nonsense
As the fish metabolizes and excretes ammonia, dissolved ammonia increases in concentration. As CO2 is exhaled by the fish, the pH of the water in the bag drops. This shifts the equilibrium away from dissolved ammonia gas and to ammonium ion (the ammonia becomes protonated to a greater extent at lower pH). Thus the carbonic acid fortuitously detoxifies the ammonia.
When you dump tank water into the bag, it raises the pH, shifting the equilibrium back to dissolved ammonia gas, and gives the fish a blast of ammonia during the acclimation period. This probably isn't a big deal when you just bring the fish home from the LFS, but when shipped, this becomes quite crucial.
knowse":1zv92j8c said:Subcomandante Marcos":1zv92j8c said:Lawdawg":1zv92j8c said:Subcomandante Marcos":1zv92j8c said:But getting back to the point: If you stress a fish, it is more likely to develop ich. To avoid the stress, it is best to net it out of the bag and dump it directly into a well-established reef tank, with no mixing of water either in the tank or even in the bag.
Nonsense
As the fish metabolizes and excretes ammonia, dissolved ammonia increases in concentration. As CO2 is exhaled by the fish, the pH of the water in the bag drops. This shifts the equilibrium away from dissolved ammonia gas and to ammonium ion (the ammonia becomes protonated to a greater extent at lower pH). Thus the carbonic acid fortuitously detoxifies the ammonia.
When you dump tank water into the bag, it raises the pH, shifting the equilibrium back to dissolved ammonia gas, and gives the fish a blast of ammonia during the acclimation period. This probably isn't a big deal when you just bring the fish home from the LFS, but when shipped, this becomes quite crucial.
What does any of that have to do with hyposalinity?
Detoxing fish of ammonia with the use of lower pH, hyposalinity for getting rid of marine ich and the use of a quarenteen/hospital tank are 3 seperate issues.
According to Subcomandante Marcos, the question should have been "Is it better to qt a fish or remove all your corals after you introduced an infected fish and do hypo?"
Matt_Wandell":1cgdy7jw said:I think part of the misunderstanding going on here is that a QT tank is thought of as an inferior environment. The QT tank should be a superior environment to the main tank, because the fish will not experience any stress from bullying or competition for food.
In the short run the most important thing is getting your fish eating and building up its immune system and general health. IMO this is usually best accomplished in a quarantine tank. There are only a very few fish I would not quarantine--mandarins, some wrassses, and some anthias.
Matt_Wandell":3o9qg5i5 said:Subcomandante Marcos":3o9qg5i5 said:But getting back to the point: If you stress a fish, it is more likely to develop ich. To avoid the stress, it is best to net it out of the bag and dump it directly into a well-established reef tank, with no mixing of water either in the tank or even in the bag.
Bill, the rest of this thread aside, it is never a good idea to net a fish if you can avoid it. It rips off their scales and usually stresses the hell out of them.