Help with Quarantining?

TheSheff

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Hello, I will be getting three new fish soon : (1) Longfin clownfish, (1) McCosker's Fairy Wrasse, and (1) Court Jester Goby and I would like to quarantine these fish, but I have never done it before. What process would y'all use to treat these fish? I have a spare 10 gallon, air stone, and heater but nothing else.
 
Hello, I will be getting three new fish soon : (1) Longfin clownfish, (1) McCosker's Fairy Wrasse, and (1) Court Jester Goby and I would like to quarantine these fish, but I have never done it before. What process would y'all use to treat these fish? I have a spare 10 gallon, air stone, and heater but nothing else.
Your quarantine tank has the essentials. You will want a sponge filter preferably seeded from another tank or hang on power filter (remove carbon from the filter cartridge. )
These fish are tolerant of coppersafe but run at 2.0 - 2.25 therapuetic level. Wrasse will require a deep bowl of sand to be comfortable.
I recommend using General Cure over copper for 3-4 weeks at 78 deg
 
To add, try to make sure the sand is non-calcerous (no calcium) to avoid it absorbing copper and thus making dosing more difficult.
 
Your quarantine tank has the essentials. You will want a sponge filter preferably seeded from another tank or hang on power filter (remove carbon from the filter cartridge. )
These fish are tolerant of coppersafe but run at 2.0 - 2.25 therapuetic level. Wrasse will require a deep bowl of sand to be comfortable.
I recommend using General Cure over copper for 3-4 weeks at 78 deg
do you have a guide on using general cure in my size tank? It seems like most people just do copper then observe the fish for a couple weeks.
 
Hello, I will be getting three new fish soon : (1) Longfin clownfish, (1) McCosker's Fairy Wrasse, and (1) Court Jester Goby and I would like to quarantine these fish, but I have never done it before. What process would y'all use to treat these fish? I have a spare 10 gallon, air stone, and heater but nothing else.

It is really best if the quarantine tank is set up well in advance of it being used, with a strong biological filtration system in place. If you cannot do that, you can try moving some biofilter material (not calcium based) from you display tank - filter floss, etc.

Here is our current quarantine protocol:


Jay
 
It is really best if the quarantine tank is set up well in advance of it being used, with a strong biological filtration system in place. If you cannot do that, you can try moving some biofilter material (not calcium based) from you display tank - filter floss, etc.

Here is our current quarantine protocol:


Jay
Thank you, Jay . I'll give it a read. Would you say these treatments at those concentrations would be safe for all three of these fish?
 
do you have a guide on using general cure in my size tank? It seems like most people just do copper then observe the fish for a couple weeks.
Dose initially, then 3 days apart then once a week. Follow package and add aeration.
 
Thank you, Jay . I'll give it a read. Would you say these treatments at those concentrations would be safe for all three of these fish?
The court jester may be a problem if it is wild caught - those need algae and small invertebrates to get them started feeding, and a new quarantine tank will be lacking in that regard.
Jay
 
I think any basic aquarium sand would do the trick - anything made for reefs wouldn’t be good. Others probably know specifics better than me though.

Something like this would work:


Jay
 
Do you think black sand would work? That's the only thing I have right now that isn't branded for aquariums.
I would use suggested as black sand especially not aquarium grade often has magnetic particles with sharp edges on the grains
 
I have been using Humblefish’s HTTM method for a couple of years with excellent results. Personally I do not have or use copper and from my limited knowledge, some fish do not tolerate it as well as others.
The httm process requires more effort I think but it is simple. 2 tanks, 2 heaters and air stones. Other than that it is just 3 day tank transfers while using a couple of baths in h202 and general cure. This lasts 14 days with observation afterwards. Obviously you may need to dose other meds if symptoms show up.

However you decide, I think the biggest thing is to follow the procedure to a T. My friend does copper, I do httm. Both seem to work. Good luck!
 
Do you think black sand would work? That's the only thing I have right now that isn't branded for aquariums.
I’m not sure - depends what it is made from. Black aquarium sand is fine, but black sand for other uses might not be safe.
Jay
 
I have been using Humblefish’s HTTM method for a couple of years with excellent results. Personally I do not have or use copper and from my limited knowledge, some fish do not tolerate it as well as others.
The httm process requires more effort I think but it is simple. 2 tanks, 2 heaters and air stones. Other than that it is just 3 day tank transfers while using a couple of baths in h202 and general cure. This lasts 14 days with observation afterwards. Obviously you may need to dose other meds if symptoms show up.

However you decide, I think the biggest thing is to follow the procedure to a T. My friend does copper, I do httm. Both seem to work. Good luck!
This looks like a good method. I think what I'm going to end up doing is treat all fish with the safety stop rapid quarantine, then put them in the QT I have setup for 2-4 weeks to look for signs of anything wrong.
 

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