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Soon quarantining will be a thing of the past.
Only once most of the fish we keep are being captive bred. :D
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Soon quarantining will be a thing of the past.
That's true, but it is the healthy immune ones that spawn. :D
Fish with no diseases for their immune system to worry about, have no immune system. :eek:
Where's the balance. Is there one.
Or ones who were QT'd and are in tip top shape because they have no diseases for their immune system to worry about. :D
But it seems to me, our concept and and methodology of QT is in a sense wrong. As most dont really understand the difference between Hosp and qt any way
A qt should be a biologically established tank, but with all the same stress reducers of a normal tank

Edosan, me and Humblefish love each other (In a fish only sort of way, nothing weird) and we are not arguing or anything even close.
So I found out a couple of cool immunity things, plus a bonus, tonight:
1) Fish that get immunity from a prior infection are known as "convalescent carriers".
2) Velvet is not automatically lethal thanks to "histone-like proteins."
BONUS) Scientists have figured out how to measure levels of HLP's as a stress indicator.
Carriers
I haven't found too much on fish so far (still looking), but fish are a lot like people in this matter, so I found this:
http://health.mo.gov/training/epi/Mod2StudentOutline.pdf
Inappropriate treatments can prolong the carrier phase.
Without more some form of positive ID of the targeted pathogen, it seems like most of the treatments we perform on fish are inappropriate treatments.
Why do algae control nuts spend more time behind microscopes than fish nuts?
Velvet
"Histone-like protein: a novel method for measuring stress in fish"
http://www.int-res.com/abstracts/dao/v44/n2/p97-107/
"HLP-1" is a histone like protein generated by fish that is a powerful antibiotic that can control Velvet.
Look what happens to HLP-1 when fish are stressed:
Very interesting for the sick fish we encounter...
Even more interesting for the non-sick fish we want to quarantine "just in case".
After perhaps not even a week in QT there's a chance you've eliminated any resistance a fish might have had left from the wild or built up since then by impairing their HLP production through stress. Seems like elimination of resistance might be a near-certainty after just 2-3 weeks. What about those extended QT's people do?? And TTM's with all that catching and moving of the fish?
Coincidentally:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Histone#Conservation_across_species




I think you might be taking a bit of license regarding the authors results. First histones are highly conserved proteins found in most eukaryotic cells. The main function of these proteins is to act as a scaffold upon which the cells DNA is wrapped and organized for cellular division. HLP proteins were first identified in prokaryotes (bacteria) and serve to help orientate the bacterial DNA during gene expression and regulation. They are only referred as histone like in that they bind to DNA is similar fashion. Eukaryotes have evolved similar protein sequences to HLPs in bacteria that can slow microbes cell division and metabolic activities, thus they are said to have anti-microbial activity. Dinoflagellates are not prokaryotes, but eukaryotic cells and would probably not be affected by HLPs.
Personal experience I do quarantine and what I have observed time and time again is yes a fish may be mildly stressed for the 1 st day or 2 and at an extreme a week in QT. I have always noticed they settle in and show no outward symptoms of ongoing stress.
Dinoflagellates are not prokaryotes, but eukaryotic cells and would probably not be affected by HLPs.
Histones are found in the nuclei of eukaryotic cells, and in certain Archaea, namely Thermoproteales and Euryarchaea, but not in bacteria. The unicellular algae known as dinoflagellates are the only eukaryotes that are known to completely lack histones.