my hubby just noticed a couple of guppies and a danio floating in the tank, when he removed them he noticed that they are covered in little white spots, just wondered if anyone knew of the best treatment to use??? he looked at the other fish and they seem ok except my angel, he has a few spots so keeping an eye on him.
terminator
20-09-2009, 21:09
Theres many treatments you can use im sure a aqua store will advise red ich is one of the good ones im not sure what other fish you have in there.In no way am i recomending you do this but raising the water temputure the faster the treatment can work. over 85 degrees the white spot should not in theory beable to survive long.BUT BARE IN MIND AGAIN I do not recommend you turn your tank up to that level to just get rid of it.
dumplindeb
21-09-2009, 16:50
you maybe aswell doing partial water change to help things out.
gossygsxr
21-09-2009, 16:57
you maybe aswell doing partial water change to help things out.
turn the temp up to 88 and it will die it self add a good pinch of salt as well and in a few days all will be ok..
tonyp5467
21-09-2009, 16:59
turn the temp up to 88 and it will die it self add a good pinch of salt as well and in a few days all will be ok..
+1
thats all i do
king british white spot treatment is good stuff but i try and avoid using any chemicals at all in all my tanks
killa_ted
21-09-2009, 17:02
dont turn your temp up to that level as it will likely shock your angel and could possibly kill it and any other fsh you have left.
do a 50% water change and go get some whitespot treatment asap then do another 25% water change and mix the treatment into the water to water change as i would'nt advise putting chemicals straight into the tank.
terminator
21-09-2009, 21:18
If you decide to go the temp icrease i would do it slowly over sevaral days keep just below 90
In Uppers
22-09-2009, 11:52
Don't forget if you're putting white spot treatment in the tank to remove the carbon from your filter before.
Good luck
koikeeper
22-09-2009, 16:19
1. Once you see the white spots on the body of your fish, take action quickly, Ich will quickly multiply spreading to other fish in the tank. Using ich medications will stop this from happening for the most part.
2. You will have to treat the entire tank even if only one fish is affected. It may be wise to set up a separate quarantine tank if only one fish has it, but treat both tanks. You may ask why but if you change the water daily in the second aquarium you can help to stop the ich from being as bad. This may also be achieved by doing daily water changes in the main aquarium but this is stressful on fish without ich so isolating the fish that has it.
3. The water temperature of a tropical fish tank normally should be kept at between 68 and 78 degrees. SLOWLY increase the temperature of the tank to a maximum of 86 degrees. Increase by a degree every few hours until you reach the desired temperature. This depends on the type of fish because some fish can handle higher temperatures than others.
4. Vacuum the gravel daily if possible and replace with fresh water. Do this every day until your fish are no longer showing signs of the parasite. Be sure you treat the water for chlorine BEFORE putting it in your tank.
5. Add aquarium salt to the tank. While this does have any direct effect on the parasite and it does aid in gill function, but it is a specific dosage as specified on the box. This can be beneficial with species with high oxygen requirements and aid the fishes osmotic function to replace electrolytes lost during stress. Do not use where scaleless species (eels, loaches, catfish) are present. One dose per entire tank is all you will need until you change the entire tank's water.
6. Remove any charcoal filters being used in the tank. You will replace with new ones after treating your tank. It is a good idea to sterilize all things that came in contact with tank during treatments. Such things as nets, filters, and artificial plants should be run through boiling water.
7. Add the measured dose of a recommended brand of commercial whitespot/ICH treatment. Follow the directions on the back of the bottle carefully making sure not to overdose or miss any part of the course. Because most tanks are not always filled to the brim, take off a drop the recommended dose. Repeat the course if the spots are still visible 4 days after the last dose. Most treatments require you to do daily medications, this is Exactly what you should do to help your fish.
8. Continue the treatment every day until 6 days after the spots have disappeared and the fish are acting normally. The ich parasite goes through a life cycle and another outbreak can occur within a few days if the parasite infestation isn’t completely eradicated. After an outbreak be SCRUTINOUS in checking the fish daily for those dreaded white spots. It is very common for the ich to make a comeback so be scrutinous in checking them.
9. The best way is to feed the fish a vitamin enriched diet- ie. soak food in selcon or zoe. This special diet will boost the fishes immune system and help them fight the disease off. NONE of the brand name medications will be effective. Don't move the infected fish, the excess stress can kill them. if you need to isolate the fish, move all the other tank inhabitants.