The Survival Guide To Ich
(AKA How to Treat Ich or White Spot Disease in Freshwater Fish)
Top Takeaways
- Ich is one of the most common freshwater fish diseases.
- Ich comes from new fish and plants.
- It takes 2 weeks to eradicate it.
- Some of your fish may die anyway, depending on their immune system and how early you catch it.
What is Ich?
Freshwater ich, also known as ick or white spot disease, is one of the most common diseases in freshwater aquarium fish. It looks like little white spots or grains of salt covering your fish's body. Other symptoms include frayed fins and tail, respiratory distress, low appetite, and "itchy" skin (fish rubs against tank walls and ground).What Causes Ich?
Your fish is infected with a parasitic protozoan called Ichthyophthirius multifiliis. It goes through a multi-stage life cycle:- The protozoan attaches to your fish, forms a white protective cyst, and begins feeding.
- Once it matures, it bursts through the cyst wall, falls to the ground, and divides into hundreds of new protozoans.
- The "baby protozoans" then swim around and attach to a new fish (or the same fish). *
Will My Fish Die of Ich?
Maybe. Unfortunately, by the time you see spots, the fish has already had ich for some time. So it'll depend on the robustness of your fish's immunity system and how early you caught the disease. When my aquarium got ich because of new fish I purchased, 6 out of 7 of the new fish died within the first 5 days of treatment. The other 12 existing fish in the tank were fine and hardly showed any symptoms.P.S. If you need to euthanize any fish, I prefer clove oil using this method. It's very gentle and quick.
The most effective ich treatment involves a combination of medication and increased heat. |
How Do I Treat Fish with Ich?
If one fish has ich, you have to treat the whole tank. Some people prefer gentler methods of increasing the heat only or adding aquarium salt. I prefer the "scorched earth" approach. We're gonna nuke these suckers to orbit.- Raise the water temperature up to 80°F to 86°F, increasing a couple of degrees every hour. The heat does not kill the protozoans, but rather speeds up their life cycle. (Some coldwater fish cannot survive at very high temperatures, so make sure to research first.)
- Increase the oxygen level in the water by maximizing the filter's flow rate and lowering the water level. (Warmer water doesn't have as much oxygen.) An air stone or power head can also help.
- Take out the carbon filter material, shut off the UV sterilizer, and disable anything that will counteract the medication. Also, remove any invertebrates, since they're sensitive to medication. *
- Medicate the tank water using the appropriate amount of Seachem ParaGuard (1 mL per 2 gallons of water). This stuff is great because it doesn't stain your tank, won't kill the beneficial bacteria, and is safe for planted aquariums. **
- Continue dosing every day for the full 14 days, or else the parasite will come back and reinfect your fish. Keep the aquarium lights off because the medication is light-sensitive.
- Do a partial water change every 2 to 3 days to keep the water quality high. Remember to add more medication to the new water as needed.
- Once treatment is complete, you can use Take appropriate measures for new plants as well.
Stressed fish also tend to have lower immunity, so keep your aquarium clean, don't overstock your tank, and avoid fluctuations in water quality.
Backstory: I have always quarantined my fish without medication previously, but my new hatchetfish were wild-caught so I actually thought to add medication while they were in quarantine. Unfortunately I only kept it up for the first week and neglected to continue treatment for the full 14 days. The protozoans were temporarily suppressed, the hatchetfish looked fine, and therefore I introduced both fish and parasites to my community tank. The hatchetfish were the only casualties from the ich, since they were patient zero and probably still stressed from recent transport from South America.
Can Ich Come Back?
Contrary to rumors, ich does not just live in the water like the common cold, waiting to infect you when your immunity is low. Once eradicated, it will not come back unless:
- You do not continue dosing for the full 2 weeks of treatment.
- Something is decreasing the medication's effectiveness (e.g., carbon filter).
- The water temperature is low and the ich life cycle hasn't completed (medication only affects the swimming baby protozoans).
- It is transmitted through infected water back into your tank.
- You bought more new fish or plants that were not properly quarantined and medicated for 2 weeks.
Congratulations! You are officially ich free. You survived, conquered, and learned a lesson or two along the way. Next time you see those white spots (hopefully not), you'll be a pro at annihilating these pesky parasites.
Resources:
Ich in Freshwater Fish - Drs. Foster & Smith
Ich - The Aquarium Wiki
Komentar
Posting Komentar