H2O2 vs Ich, via nightly dosing in display experiment.
I recently bought some fish and snails from Harry’s Marine Life in LA. My fish went into my H2O2/TTM hybrid QT set up. The snails I basically dumped right in my display. I know I shouldn’t have done, but I was rushing. I usually do some sort of H2O2 bath, display rinse, etc on inverts and corals also usually get some type of dip. Well I skipped that this time, and as a result my reef now has ich. I only have 3 fish in it right now. My blue tang and yellow tang are showing signs. Nothing visible on my flame angel though.
I know the 76 day fallow period is suggested, and I might eventually do that but I’d rather try this experiment first. I also, will be getting a little 10G nano for a coral/invert QT that set up from now on.
According to @Humblefish H2O2 dosing for 30 days in a display might be effective againsvelvet:
“There is some anecdotal evidence that dosing 1 ml per 10 gal (total water volume) may do just that. However, you would need to dose religiously every 12 hours for at least 30 days. Just dosing 2x 6 days apart doesn't work without transferring the fish to a clean/sterile tank.
^^ I will once again stress that the above is highly experimental. Especially dosing in a reef tank where light (and other factors) will quickly break down H2O2.”
For typical H2O2 baths, like in the hybrid TTM/H2O2 method the desired ppl of H2O2 is 150 ppm. There are studies that back this up as an effective treatment for velvet as well. Just check our the hydrogen peroxide thread for the sources.
Dosing instructions: To achieve ~ 150 ppm H2O2 add: 20 ml of 3% H2O2 per 1 gallon of saltwater.
1ml per 1 gallon is 7.5 ppm.
So 1ml per 10 gallons of salt water is ppm of H2O2 is 0.75 ppm, and 2ml of H2O2 per 10 gallons of saltwater is 1.5 ppm.
In the study: “In vitro treatments for the theront stage of the ciliate protozoan Cryptocaryon irritans” they found that 50ppm of H2O2 had a 91%~ Theront mortality rate in 1hr. 10ppm H2O2 had a 86%~ mortality rate in 1hr. Control group had a 7% mortality rate.
This study also had some bad news regarding freshwater Ich: “Ichthyophthirius multifiliis (A. S. Shinn un- publ.). However, daily treatments with 25 mg l–1 over 20 d did not control I. multifiliis infections and led to high mortalities in the treated fish (Tieman & Goodwin 2001).”
https://www.researchgate.net/profil...caryon-irritans.pdf?origin=publication_detail
My test run:
Starting dose is 10ml of H2O2 (1.5ppm) directly into display for my 50g~ tank at 2:30pm 5/29/2020.
Then at 4pm 5/29/2020, 10 gallon water change (20%, wanted to do a water change, and suck up detritus. No other reason. No signs of distress from H2O2).
5ml at 10pm (lights off), and 5ml (0.75ppm) at 8am is dosing schedule will be dosed with a dosing pump into the sump by the return pump at/below the waterline. Lights are on at 9am. Plan is to continue this process until the end of June 2020.
Will be monitoring corals & inverts (LPS, SPS, Zoas, Mushroom, flower nems, and maxi mini nems, tuxedo urchin, snails, and hermits) to check for signs of distress.
If after a few days all is well, I may consider bumping up the dosage to 10ml (1.5ppm) at a time, twice a day with the same schedule.
If this fails I will considering pulling all fish from tank and running a 76 day fallow period while continuing to dose H2O2.
This will be an anecdotal test because I am not going to be running a control test, and I won’t be during any scale scraping. Simply observing my tank.
Here are some pics.
Let me know if you have any questions, comments, concerns, etc.
I recently bought some fish and snails from Harry’s Marine Life in LA. My fish went into my H2O2/TTM hybrid QT set up. The snails I basically dumped right in my display. I know I shouldn’t have done, but I was rushing. I usually do some sort of H2O2 bath, display rinse, etc on inverts and corals also usually get some type of dip. Well I skipped that this time, and as a result my reef now has ich. I only have 3 fish in it right now. My blue tang and yellow tang are showing signs. Nothing visible on my flame angel though.
I know the 76 day fallow period is suggested, and I might eventually do that but I’d rather try this experiment first. I also, will be getting a little 10G nano for a coral/invert QT that set up from now on.
According to @Humblefish H2O2 dosing for 30 days in a display might be effective againsvelvet:
“There is some anecdotal evidence that dosing 1 ml per 10 gal (total water volume) may do just that. However, you would need to dose religiously every 12 hours for at least 30 days. Just dosing 2x 6 days apart doesn't work without transferring the fish to a clean/sterile tank.
^^ I will once again stress that the above is highly experimental. Especially dosing in a reef tank where light (and other factors) will quickly break down H2O2.”
For typical H2O2 baths, like in the hybrid TTM/H2O2 method the desired ppl of H2O2 is 150 ppm. There are studies that back this up as an effective treatment for velvet as well. Just check our the hydrogen peroxide thread for the sources.
Dosing instructions: To achieve ~ 150 ppm H2O2 add: 20 ml of 3% H2O2 per 1 gallon of saltwater.
1ml per 1 gallon is 7.5 ppm.
So 1ml per 10 gallons of salt water is ppm of H2O2 is 0.75 ppm, and 2ml of H2O2 per 10 gallons of saltwater is 1.5 ppm.
In the study: “In vitro treatments for the theront stage of the ciliate protozoan Cryptocaryon irritans” they found that 50ppm of H2O2 had a 91%~ Theront mortality rate in 1hr. 10ppm H2O2 had a 86%~ mortality rate in 1hr. Control group had a 7% mortality rate.
This study also had some bad news regarding freshwater Ich: “Ichthyophthirius multifiliis (A. S. Shinn un- publ.). However, daily treatments with 25 mg l–1 over 20 d did not control I. multifiliis infections and led to high mortalities in the treated fish (Tieman & Goodwin 2001).”
https://www.researchgate.net/profil...caryon-irritans.pdf?origin=publication_detail
My test run:
Starting dose is 10ml of H2O2 (1.5ppm) directly into display for my 50g~ tank at 2:30pm 5/29/2020.
Then at 4pm 5/29/2020, 10 gallon water change (20%, wanted to do a water change, and suck up detritus. No other reason. No signs of distress from H2O2).
5ml at 10pm (lights off), and 5ml (0.75ppm) at 8am is dosing schedule will be dosed with a dosing pump into the sump by the return pump at/below the waterline. Lights are on at 9am. Plan is to continue this process until the end of June 2020.
Will be monitoring corals & inverts (LPS, SPS, Zoas, Mushroom, flower nems, and maxi mini nems, tuxedo urchin, snails, and hermits) to check for signs of distress.
If after a few days all is well, I may consider bumping up the dosage to 10ml (1.5ppm) at a time, twice a day with the same schedule.
If this fails I will considering pulling all fish from tank and running a 76 day fallow period while continuing to dose H2O2.
This will be an anecdotal test because I am not going to be running a control test, and I won’t be during any scale scraping. Simply observing my tank.
Here are some pics.
Let me know if you have any questions, comments, concerns, etc.