Hyposalinity

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Jay Hemdal

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Hello Jay, Ive begun the hypo process and will achieve 1.009 in the next couple of days. My gramma is starting to flash again and so is my tailspot blenny. Is there anything else I can add to give the fish relief during this time? I added some herbtana but Ive not seem much positive press on that solution. Thanks in advance
No - don’t add anything else. Hypo doesn’t begin work until you reach 1.009, and then it takes a few days after that to show an improvement.
 

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Hyposalinity
Jay Hemdal 2024

This term refers to a long-term bath treatment for marine fishes in which the salt content of the water is lowered and held below the point that certain parasites can survive. The salt level reached, and the time of the treatment are the two variables. Hyposalinity can be used as a primary treatment against certain marine fish diseases (see below) or as a component of an active quarantine for newly acquired fish.

To clarify for beginners: you cannot perform hyposalinity on fish when invertebrates are in the tank. You must isolate the fish to a fish-only situation.

Before instituting a hyposalinity treatment, you need to decide what measurement units you plan on using – salinity or specific gravity. Then, you must have a very accurate measuring device. A laboratory grade hydrometer is best for accurate specific gravity measurements, or to standardize another measurement means. The device employed must be capable of accurately measuring down to one part per thousand, or one specific gravity unit. Better yet is a device that can read to twice that resolution. For example; capable of measuring 16.5 ppt or 1.0125 specific gravity units. Most handheld refractometers are not accurate enough. Swing arm hydrometers can measure this small of a difference, but they must be first checked for accuracy against a laboratory hydrometer.

There are two basic means to administer a hyposalinity treatment: in the display tank or in a quarantine/treatment tank. Invertebrates and some algae cannot survive hyposalinity, so must be removed prior to a hyposalinity treatment (of course, they then need to be cleared of potential disease by use of a proper fallow period). There are benefits and drawbacks to administering hyposalinity in these two modes:

Quarantine tank: Little to no microbiome die-off. Less salt lost. Ability to add other medications during the process if required. System may not be biologically robust enough to manage ammonia levels. Poor pH buffering. Requires a second aquarium and letting the infected display tank go fallow. Ability to use dechlorinated tap water to dilute the seawater, saving time and cost over using reverse osmosis water.

Display tank: Reduces the fallow period and doesn’t require a second tank, unless invertebrates are present. Better pH control in most instances. Usually, more saltwater is lost during the process due to the larger aquarium. In established tanks with much microfauna, there may be a significant die-off of algae and small invertebrates. May need to use reverse osmosis water as the dilutant in order to reduce nutrient loading for algae control.

Hyposalinity is really a targeted treatment for marine ich (Cryptocaryon irritans), marine flukes (including Neobenedenia sp.) and has some control over Turbellarian worms (including “black ich”). It does NOT control velvet (Amyloodinium marinum) or clownfish disease, Brooklynella hostilis. There are reports that hyposalinity actually increases the incidence of Uronema, especially in newly acquired fish. Hyposalinity has no direct affect on bacterial, fungal or any internal infections of marine fishes. In rare cases, fish may be infected with brackish water flukes as they travel through the supply chain. In these rare instances, hyposalinity will actually make the disease worse. Experiments have been tried in these cases with “hypersalinity”, holding the fish at higher-than-normal salinity, but results have been poor. In the case of brackish water flukes, praziquantel should be used.

Begin the hyposalinity treatment by determining the final salinity as well as the time and schedule to reach that level. Full hyposalinity is required in order to treat Cryptocaryon, and that equates to a specific gravity of 1.009 (temperature calibrated at 75 degrees F.) or a salinity of 12 parts per thousand. If only Neobenedenia is being controlled, the target can be set a bit higher, to a specific gravity of 1.012 or a salinity of 16 ppt. The time required to reach these endpoints depends on the starting salinity of the tank, as well as the severity of any disease. If severe disease is present, dropping the salinity more quickly, while stressful, starts the treatment faster. Likewise, starting a tank into hyposalinity from a specific gravity of 1.026 will require more time than if the aquarium is already at a lower specific gravity, perhaps 1.022. There is NO firm rule as to how fast to lower the salinity, and some fish simply do not handle hyposalinity as well as others. Inshore fishes tend to handle hyposalinity much better than do deep reef fishes. A general rule of thumb is to reduce the salinity of the aquarium to hyposalinity over 48 hours, in at least four steps. In cases where there is severe disease, hyposalinity should be reached in 24 hours using four steps. Deep reef fish, showing no overt disease and being held at a salinity of 35 ppt might be best lowered in six steps, over 72 hours. It is vital to understand that marine fish can handle a reduction in salinity very well, but the return to normal salinity at the end of the treatment must be done much more slowly. The general recommendation is to return the fish to normal salinity over five days, in at least ten increments. Smaller fish seem more stressed by a rise in salinity than do larger fish. This is likely due to vastly different surface to volume ratios between large and small fish.

During hyposalinity, always monitor the ammonia level as well as the pH to ensure they remain in the proper range. Don’t try to maintain full reef aquarium pH levels during hyposalinity – a slightly lower pH reduces the toxic affect of any ammonia. As long as the aquarium is well aerated, a pH above 7.6 is adequate. Don't raise the water temperature beyond normal. That is a treatment for freshwater ich, not marine ich. 79 degree F. is a good target temperature.

Exactly how to make the salinity adjustments in an accurate fashion requires some mathematical calculations. You need to decide how many days the transition will take, and then how many adjustments you are able to make each day. You then know the number of dilutions you will be making. After that, you need to calculate the change in salinity (in ppt or specific gravity units). You then divide the change in salinity by the number of changes to be made, and that gives the magnitude of each change. However, you really need to recalculate for each change after the first one. Here is an example:

A 20-gallon aquarium at 35 ppt needs to be brought down to 16 ppt over three days. Four adjustments will be made each day, for a total of 12. The change in salinity totals 16 ppt. To make this change in 12 steps, each drop should be 1.33 ppt. Multiply 1.33 by 100 and divide by 35. That equals about 4%. Removing 4% of the tank water and replacing it with freshwater will drop the salinity to 33.7. Repeat the process for each of the next 11 steps. Raising the salinity works in reverse.

When it is all said and done, most people just eyeball the changes as the math becomes pretty convoluted. Raising the salinity can be pretty wasteful if you drain water out of the tank and replace it with slightly more saline water. Many people end up making strong brine solutions and mix that in slowly. Beware though; if you dissolve sea salt at a salinity higher than about 50 ppt, subtle changes can occur, including precipitation of carbonates.

This post offers a spreadsheet calculator (second tab) that will help with calculations of salt removal/additions:

Fish should remain in hyposalinity for 30 days beyond the date that obvious disease symptoms were last seen. Neobenedenia treatments are best to run for 35 days.

The primary parameter you need to monitor is pH. It tends to drop during hypo. With good aeration, I like to see a pH of above 7.7 during hypo. You may need to adjust alkalinity to buffer it to that level. Other elements aren’t needed by the fish like they are for corals.
Jay
Great article. And I have a question. What should be the saltwater temperature when measuring? I saw tables where there were different salinity readings at different temperatures. Does it matter?
 
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Great article. And I have a question. What should be the saltwater temperature when measuring? I saw tables where there were different salinity readings at different temperatures. Does it matter?

Refractometers are usually temperature compensated. Hydrometers are usually standardized to 75 degrees F. Here is an article I wrote on salinity versus specific gravity:

 

leomia

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Hey. I've read the whole conversation and I don't know if I should keep the fish for 2 weeks on observation after Hipsalonity? Should I do prazipro treatment at this time? (I managed to get general Cure)
 
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Hey. I've read the whole conversation and I don't know if I should keep the fish for 2 weeks on observation after Hipsalonity? Should I do prazipro treatment at this time? (I managed to get general Cure)

Hyposalinity is effective against ich and most flukes. It does not control Amyloodinium (velvet), Uronema, Brooklynella or bacterial diseases.

You don't need to use Praziquantel, that's for flukes. I would hold the fish at normal salinity for at least two weeks after hypo to help ensure they are not carrying one of the other diseases.
 

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Hyposalinity is effective against ich and most flukes. It does not control Amyloodinium (velvet), Uronema, Brooklynella or bacterial diseases.

You don't need to use Praziquantel, that's for flukes. I would hold the fish at normal salinity for at least two weeks after hypo to help ensure they are not carrying one of the other diseases.
Oh! Thank you. It's nice to have you here :))
 

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After the 30-35 day hypo treatment in my display and the extra 5 days to raise the salinity back up to 1.026, do I need to add anything for a cycle? And should I be adding supplemental bacteria while doing the hypo? I have microbacter 7, razor, microbacter clean etc on hand but have not added anything since starting hypo two weeks ago. I ended up removing my trident because I kept getting alerts for all three tests, and didn’t want to keep adding large doses of calcium and magnesium if I don’t have any corals in the display, and I figure I will have to readjust anyways once I start the water changes to increase the salinity back to normal levels.
 
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After the 30-35 day hypo treatment in my display and the extra 5 days to raise the salinity back up to 1.026, do I need to add anything for a cycle? And should I be adding supplemental bacteria while doing the hypo? I have microbacter 7, razor, microbacter clean etc on hand but have not added anything since starting hypo two weeks ago. I ended up removing my trident because I kept getting alerts for all three tests, and didn’t want to keep adding large doses of calcium and magnesium if I don’t have any corals in the display, and I figure I will have to readjust anyways once I start the water changes to increase the salinity back to normal levels.

You shouldn’t run any sort of auto dosing through hyposalinity.

Unless the tank is severely crowded or really new, the biological cycle will handle going from full salinity to hypo and back again.
 

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You shouldn’t run any sort of auto dosing through hyposalinity.

Unless the tank is severely crowded or really new, the biological cycle will handle going from full salinity to hypo and back again.
Thanks. Definitely not overcrowded as I only have 4 fish that survive my ich outbreak in my 150 display. I just wanted to make sure once I added my rock structure back in ( I took it out and bleached it to redo it as it had some hair algae and biofilm starting to grow on it and I wanted to take the opportunity while I had to pull my corals to reset the rockscape). So I wasn’t sure about an algae explosion once everything was back in incase my biome was out of balance from the hypo treatment.
 
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Thanks. Definitely not overcrowded as I only have 4 fish that survive my ich outbreak in my 150 display. I just wanted to make sure once I added my rock structure back in ( I took it out and bleached it to redo it as it had some hair algae and biofilm starting to grow on it and I wanted to take the opportunity while I had to pull my corals to reset the rockscape). So I wasn’t sure about an algae explosion once everything was back in incase my biome was out of balance from the hypo treatment.

Be sure that the rinse the rocks very well, residual bleach can be an issue. Also, you may well see a algae rebound after hypo, but that is more of a nutrient issue than any change in the biome.
 

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What is the low end of salinity for the treatment. Per say am i safe to go down to 1.008? I am wanting to make sure i stay in the proper range.
 
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What is the low end of salinity for the treatment. Per say am i safe to go down to 1.008? I am wanting to make sure i stay in the proper range.

That's the issue with hyposalinity - there is no room for error in measuring the specific gravity - 1.009 is the target. At 1.008, some fish may develop issues and at 1.010, some strains of ich can still survive.

I use a Tropic Marin glass hydrometer. If you use another device, I would suggest using multiple devices and try to figure out which is the most accurate.
 

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That's the issue with hyposalinity - there is no room for error in measuring the specific gravity - 1.009 is the target. At 1.008, some fish may develop issues and at 1.010, some strains of ich can still survive.

I use a Tropic Marin glass hydrometer. If you use another device, I would suggest using multiple devices and try to figure out which is the most accurate.
Oh i was under the impression that the tm hydrometer didnt go that low. Good deal
 

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Yes I bought the tropic Marín hydrometer and it doesn’t go that low. I bought a lab grade hydrometer and kept salinity at 1.0085. At around 1.016 I did not see any more ich and fish looked great and healthy. Going down to 1.0085, I lost a mystery wrasse. Multiple tangs, damsels, gold flake angel, halichores wrasses did well through hyposalinity. I did hyposalinity very slowly to reach 1.0085 over like 3 weeks. I kept it there for 35 days. I took another 3 weeks to reach a salinity of 1.020 and started seeing ich on my blue tang. I’m keeping it here because it seems to be controlled and not terrible. Plan is now dismantle everything and take all the fish through therapeutic copper. My tank is 675 gallons so this really sucks. Hyposalinity worked for me in the past but looks like I have a resistant strain now.
 
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Oh i was under the impression that the tm hydrometer didnt go that low. Good deal

Good Catch! They changed their design at some point. Mine goes down to 1.000, but it is a lot longer than the one they sell now!

I ran a search, it seems like the full range, German Lab hydrometers are no longer (easily) available. The closest I could find was this one: Item # 722570 from Carolina Biological.

 

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What are your thoughts on this one?

 
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What are your thoughts on this one?


Yes - that is standardized and has a usable range.....
 

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