The other fish are not new and being bullied, not under stress. Clowns and wrasse and such have survive complete velvet wipeouts. My friend lost every fish in his tank (mostly Tangs as he likes Tangs too) to velvet except all his leopard wrasses just cruising around like nothing going on.
Yes, the fish coming in these days are sometimes not in great shape but it is certainly possible to keep them with proper QT protocols.
I recently set up a invert QT. it is basically a fishless frag tank where inverts hang out for 45 days at 81 degrees before moving them to the DT. It is another tank but even Jay stated recently that the hobby is worse then ever for fish health/disease... so it seems this is the direction we are going if we don't want losses.
I did ich management for 10 years but recently decided to QT instead for the next upgrade. No regrets so far. The hobby is changing and sometimes ya have to change with it. What worked before might not work now.
This is a good read:
Ultimately it is up to you... you can keep tossing in Tangs and hoping you will get a better outcome and maybe you will find one that is resilient enough. You can stop keeping Tangs all together or try something new like peroxide dosing, or better oxygen or better foods, or you can QT.
Yes, the fish coming in these days are sometimes not in great shape but it is certainly possible to keep them with proper QT protocols.
I recently set up a invert QT. it is basically a fishless frag tank where inverts hang out for 45 days at 81 degrees before moving them to the DT. It is another tank but even Jay stated recently that the hobby is worse then ever for fish health/disease... so it seems this is the direction we are going if we don't want losses.
I did ich management for 10 years but recently decided to QT instead for the next upgrade. No regrets so far. The hobby is changing and sometimes ya have to change with it. What worked before might not work now.
This is a good read:
Ich and Acanthurus tangs - Years of experience and ich management
Alright folks I wanted to share some pretty shameful realities about my past and dealing with Acanthurus tangs. To anyone that doesn't know, common Acanthurus tangs include Powder Blue, Powder Brown, Goldrim/white cheek, Achilles, Sohal, Clown...
www.reef2reef.com
Ultimately it is up to you... you can keep tossing in Tangs and hoping you will get a better outcome and maybe you will find one that is resilient enough. You can stop keeping Tangs all together or try something new like peroxide dosing, or better oxygen or better foods, or you can QT.
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