Thanks for everyone’s help, Biggest thing I found out is to do a large H2O change, increase temp, and don’t disturb the sandbed. My personal opinion is when I remove my fish I disturbed the sand. I remember watching bubbles roll up. But, I was in the moment of catching fishes. I’m starting to tank cycle again.
Some of the help, people need to read before asking. Never put the rock back in DT, it’s medicated, Duh. All fish out of DT, how can I cure ick with fish still in there. Watched enough YouTube videos on fallow 76 days average. Quarantine tank treated with seachem cupramine.
As far as the tank on transfer. Broke down that day and set it back up the same day. Next day fishes were added after the water cleared up. Fast forward to summer added kole tang got ick. Here we are now.
I again I believe it was my doing. I disturbed the sandbed. Barely fed the DT tank during fallow period. Then I had to disturb everything again to save my purple tang and Hoeven’s wrasse, just not as bad. That’s why I left in the mollies and chromis for tank cycling
For certain, your fish did not die of ich overnight. However, your display can easily still have ich because it was not fallow for the 80 day cycle, if this is true: “That’s why I left the mollies and chromis for tank cycling”.
PSS: If by our questions, we irritate, consider that a detailed chronological log on your part would eliminate some of that. I read your thread more than once. Some things are not very clear, so, we ask questions. I read a lot of threads that can get confusing when I post to someone’s thread.
Moving along. You have been asked some very specific questions. It would help us if you answered them as well as you can.
Only two things kill fish that fast. Lack of oxygen or toxic chemicals such as ammonia or hydrogen peroxide. Your hobby test kit showed ammonia which is easily removed by denitrification bacteria. You were asked several times about how you did your cycle. Do you think that you have denitrification bacteria established. This is easily determined by continuing to test for ammonia & nitrite. The bacteria that perform denitrification are much slower to reach mature populations but you should see a continued gradual decrease as bacteria populations increase. During this process, it is necessary to continue feeding as a source of ammonia & nitrite. Denitrification bacteria operate in the facultative zone which is a low oxygen enviroment in which bacteria that normally consume oxygen from the water column must now work harder for oxygen by consuming oxygen molecule in nitrate molecule reducing nitrate to a free gas which leaves the aquarium as nutrient export.
Is your nitrifying bacteria population healthy & mature to process nutrients?
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