A thought occurred to me as I was contemplating removing all my fish and putting them through TTM while letting my DT run fallow for 72 days.
I have a giant AquaUV 57-watt sterilizer. I was thinking of getting two large 100 gallon tubs to put my whole fish population into and then use the TTM method to rid them of ich. The thought I had though was instead of wasting that much saltwater each time, to just run all transferred water through my UV at a high enough exposure rate, about 336,000 mW/cm2 (extrapolated exposure rate for marine ich derived from freshwater ich studies) to transfer the water from one tub to the other. Studies performed for aquaculture have shown that UV, if run at the correct exposure level, will completely inhibit the transmission of ich from one body of water to the other if the UV was used on all water being transferred.
So I thought to myself, why not just hook up my UV in between and pump water from one tank to the other and then transfer the fish. I can pump until its low enough to catch all fish easily and then I can ditch the last small amount of water left in the first container. I'll bleach and let it dry and repeat the process every 3 days for 10 days. This will also minimize shock for the fish as its essentially the same water, just minus the ich.
I think the main issue is to just observe ammonia levels since the lack of large scale water changes will be diminished. I may just have to use more amquel or prime than I would with the traditional method. Any other angles I may be missing here?
Again, let's assume that the lab studies are 100% accurate that all ich protists will be irradiated by the UV so there is no risk of transfer. I'd rather not get hung on that discussion point on UV as I trust the studies.
I have a giant AquaUV 57-watt sterilizer. I was thinking of getting two large 100 gallon tubs to put my whole fish population into and then use the TTM method to rid them of ich. The thought I had though was instead of wasting that much saltwater each time, to just run all transferred water through my UV at a high enough exposure rate, about 336,000 mW/cm2 (extrapolated exposure rate for marine ich derived from freshwater ich studies) to transfer the water from one tub to the other. Studies performed for aquaculture have shown that UV, if run at the correct exposure level, will completely inhibit the transmission of ich from one body of water to the other if the UV was used on all water being transferred.
So I thought to myself, why not just hook up my UV in between and pump water from one tank to the other and then transfer the fish. I can pump until its low enough to catch all fish easily and then I can ditch the last small amount of water left in the first container. I'll bleach and let it dry and repeat the process every 3 days for 10 days. This will also minimize shock for the fish as its essentially the same water, just minus the ich.
I think the main issue is to just observe ammonia levels since the lack of large scale water changes will be diminished. I may just have to use more amquel or prime than I would with the traditional method. Any other angles I may be missing here?
Again, let's assume that the lab studies are 100% accurate that all ich protists will be irradiated by the UV so there is no risk of transfer. I'd rather not get hung on that discussion point on UV as I trust the studies.
