Dennerle Posted July 20, 2021 Share Posted July 20, 2021 Hi guys I need some help here I just introduce a small blue tang..2cm in size Thereafter..I notice white spots appearing on the blue tang and my old adult yellow tang also has white spots appearing. Whereas the rest of fish so far no white spots. 1) when I got the blue tang..it was perfectly healthy. Why suddenly white spots appear? 2) will they self heal? If yes, what are the chances. All are feeding well as of now 3) I do not have a quarantine tank. How can I cure it? I know medication will affect my corals and shrimps Sent from Singapore Reef Club mobile app Quote Equipment • 60cm x 45cm x 50cm tank • Chiller at 25 to 26 Celsius • OASE Biomaster 250 • 75W lighting • Jebao SOW-5M Wavemaker • RODI water with 25% weekly water change • no protein skimmer/ no calcium reactor Livestock ▪︎2 Ocellaris Clown ▪︎1 White Bellied Yellow Wrasse ▪︎1 Yellow Tang ▪︎2 Green-Blue Chromis ▪︎1 Orange Spotted Goby ▪︎1 Tailspot Blenny ▪︎1 Tiger Pistol Shrimp Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SRC Member Kenjitan5285 Posted July 20, 2021 SRC Member Share Posted July 20, 2021 i m using poly medic. it work for me. reefsafeSent from my iPhone using Tapatalk 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SRC Member dtdream Posted July 20, 2021 SRC Member Share Posted July 20, 2021 Assuming the white spots on your fish is "Ich".. 1) LFS usually use therapeutic copper in their tanks. It suppresses white spots so you may not see it in the tank, but usually does not not kill it totally. Even other reefer's tank may have itch, but because fish is healthy, can fight it off. 2) Yep if your fish is healthy and no stress, should be strong enough to fight it off. But your tank will forever have white spot parasite unless you keep your tank fallow for something like 9 weeks? 3) You can try polymedic as above. Most people says they are reefsafe, but I've read other forums not 100% success. Some use UV. Or both polymedic + UV together. Some people like to add "vitamins" to dip their food before feeding, eg. vitachem. Not sure if it really works, but at least shouldn't harm anything. Ich is not so scary, just try to keep fishes healthy. Velvet on the other hand.. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SRC Member mhcraft Posted August 3, 2021 SRC Member Share Posted August 3, 2021 Yea..best wat is to treat with copper in QT tank. See humblefish post in reef2reef, he is a well respected guy in reef community. Polylab will only help maintain it to a low number but ich will forever be in your DT unless u eradicate it properly Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SRC Member Gongon78 Posted August 3, 2021 SRC Member Share Posted August 3, 2021 Tangs r itch magnets . Introduce a UV sterilizer. It's helps to so -called sub-press the ich.As long as yr fishes is healthy,eating.The ich will go off. It's works for me thou. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SRC Member Shyn Posted August 5, 2021 SRC Member Share Posted August 5, 2021 Anyone know can I use GFO (af phosphate minus) during medic treatment? Can I do weekly 5-10% water change? I know it is cannot use carbon and ozone during the treatment, dunno GFO whether can use or not. Thank you. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ReeferYC Posted September 27, 2021 Share Posted September 27, 2021 I have quite a few experiences with ich.. the best foolproof treatment is TTM which you really need a quarantine tank.. my clownfish and tang were saved from this.. feed them with nori with garlic, boost up their immunity, the ich will go away.. https://www.reef2reef.com/threads/tank-transfer-method.192655/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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