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FAQs on Quarantine Feeding/Nutrition Related Articles:
To Quarantine or Not To Quarantine-That's a Good Question! By Bob Goemans,
Quarantine, Quarantine
of Marine Fishes, Quarantine of Corals and
Invertebrates, Biological
Cycling, Marine Ich:
Fighting The War On Two Fronts,
Cryptocaryoniasis,
Parasitic Disease,
Related FAQs: Best
Quarantine FAQs,
Quarantine
1,
Quarantine 2, Quarantine
3, Quarantine 4, Quarantine
5, Quarantine 6, Quarantine
7, Quarantine 8, Quarantine
9, Quarantine 10,
Quarantine 11,
Quarantine 12,
Quarantine 13,
Quarantining
Invertebrates, Quarantine Tanks & FAQs, Quarantine Filtration &
FAQs, Quarantine
Maintenance & FAQs,
Acclimation 1, Acclimating
Invertebrates, Acclimation
of Livestock in the Business, Treatment
Tanks, Ammonia,
Nitrites, Nitrates,
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MD.JPG)
Hard to feed organisms are best
quarantined short term... or not at all. |
Going on vacation - feeding
question
Vacation QT Care 3/17/08
Hello!
<Hi>
Thanks again & again for such a wonderful site. Your efforts are greatly
appreciated. Just a quick question (this time). I have my 1st fish - Tomini tang
- in QT for just over a week now (moving into a 125 gal in 3 weeks). He is
eating well & having as much fun in a bare, 20 gal. tank as anyone could. I am
going on vacation for one week next week & am concerned about his feeding.
<To be fairly blunt here, best bet next time is to wait to purchase the fish
till after you return from vacation.>I have read that you can leave the fish for
a week or more w/o feeding instead of having a neighbor come and over feed. I
assume that is the case if the fish is in the display tank, with live rock,
algae, etc. to pick on. In this case, where my fish is in QT, with nothing but
some PVC, what would be best: feed heavily for the week until I leave; feed
normally and ask a neighbor to do the regular feeds, or do nothing & have him
starve for 6 days? He's rather small - 2 inches, so there is not much to wither
away if I don't feed all week.
Thanks again for your efforts & help.
Pavlo
<I would have a neighbor/friend take care of him. In a bare QT tank and such a
small fish with more limited fat reserves a week may begin to be a problem. Also
most likely the QT will need to be topped off with fresh water at some point
over the course of a week. Set up some sandwich baggies with measured amount of
food so the caretaker does not need to worry about overfeeding. Also feed
lightly while you are gone since you will not be able to watch the water
quality.>
<Chris>
Coral Beauty in QT… Feeding
Options, LR in QT 9/2/07
Hi Crew!!
<Hi Jennifer! Mich here.>
Quick question...I read over the FAQs and didn't see an answer. Here goes. I
have a beautiful, healthy coral beauty in a quarantine tank. She's (assumption)
<Heehee!> been in there 5 days now and has hardly eaten. I've offered her Mysis
shrimp and she'll eat 1 shrimp and that's it. I see her nipping at the glass,
like she's trying to eat algae off of it.
<Is Possible.>
I know the rule about not putting live rock in the QT but would that be ok?
<If your not treating with copper or anything, would be fine.>
What else could I offer her?
<Spirulina, dried algae sheets, any variety of foods... is often trail and
error.... though I have heard many wonderful things about Spectrum foods, you
may want to give them a try.>
Thanks crew!! Jennifer
<Welcome! Mich>
Fallow tank, ich, and a hungry
Mandarin 9/1/07
Hello all,
First off, let me say thank you for all that you do. I would've left the hobby
long ago very frustrated were it not for you all and your efforts.
<I might have too. :) >
Let me quickly get to my question. My main tank came down with ich and following
your advice I pulled all fish from the display and am now keeping them in QT.
One of the fish in the main display was a Mandarin Dragonet.
My main tank is chock full of pods for him to eat, but I'm afraid I can't say
the same for his quarantine tank. I've been hatching brine shrimp for him in the
meantime, but I've read that they're not very nutritious. I also started some
stand alone pod cultures but it'll be a while before they really get going and
that is a viable food source for him.
Given how disease resistant the Mandarin can be, can he safely live in the main
tank during the fallow period? By putting him back in am I basically negating
all the time that I have had the tank empty? Basically, will he act as a vector
to keep the parasite population alive, such that after 6 weeks when I repatriate
the other fish they are still likely to get infected all over again. Thanks for
your help!
<Just to be safe, you should probably keep the mandarin in the quarantine tank.
Baby brine may not be completely nutritious, but if he's eating them, they
should keep him going until you can put them all back. Not that it should ever
ever happen, but healthy fish can survive weeks without food (just like how
healthy people can actually go over a month without food). Feeding the mandarin
only baby brine is like feeding a person only cookies and beer for a few weeks.
Granted, it's not healthy or ideal, but it shouldn't be too bad for short turn.>
-Fred
<Best,
Sara M.>
Acclimation/Citron Goby.
Feeding a Citron Goby
8/13/07
Good morning Crew.
<Hello Andy.>
I have a Citron Goby (Gobiodon citrinus) that's in my 30g QT. I have had him a
little over a week. He is very active at feeding time, but I'm not sure he is
eating. He races all around and picks up the food, but he appears to mouth it
for a few seconds and then spit it out. I've tried frozen Mysis, frozen brine
shrimp, cut up pieces of squid, cut up pieces of gulf shrimp, Cyclop-eeze, live
black worms, and, today, live brine shrimp that I hatched. I have read the FAQs
and other sources of info on feeding the guy and (I think) have tried just about
everything I've read. It's hard to see if he's getting skinny because he has
such large pectoral fins, but from what I "think" I see (may be paranoia), he
seems a little thin to me. Any thoughts?
<Well, you are definitely offering foods that he should eat. Mmm, I think I'd
try a 10% water change and see if
that doesn't trigger an appetite, but skip a day of feeding after the water
change. Hopefully he will start eating soon.>
Thanks!
<You're welcome. James (Salty Dog)>
Andy Bulgin
You don’t want your fish to eat? Quarantine 10/6/05
Hi Crew,
<Hi Lynn.>
Can you tell me how long can fish safely go without being fed while in a
bare QT. <Depends on the species, some will go on feeding strikes for 3 weeks
and show no ill effects. Though you should try to induce feeding as soon as
possible.> I quarantine mine in a 40 gal, doing 20 gal changes every 48 hours
and adding Amquel as well. <Sounds good.> Prior to this I always have ammonia
problems, so this time I haven't fed them at all (its now 10 days) Can they go
the duration of 21 days with no ill effects? <Ok, I understand your ammonia
problems, when I have my QT set-up I feed twice daily, and I also execute a
water change immediately after the feeding is complete. Getting fish to eat is
hard enough I would not purposely induce a hunger strike. You want them to be as
strong as possible before leaving the confines of your QT and being added tot he
display. Here’s a scenario for you to consider, let’s say you don’t feed them
and they do survive. You then add the fish to the display and they refuse to
eat do to the induced hunger strike. Lets also say they are too weak to deal
with or compete with tank-mates that are already established in the display…not
a good scenario is it? Please feed your fish. QT is not solely for preventing
disease into your main tank. QT is to be used as a time to make sure a new
inhabitant is eating, alert healthy and strong enough to be added to a display.>
Thanks so much
Lynn
<Adam J.>
To Feed Or Not To Feed (Pt. 2)
Update on Powder Blue Tang. Unfortunately since I am a relative
newcomer to Marine fish I don't have a quarantine tank set-up. I have
however monitored the PBT and it seems quite active and has a good appetite
still. Color seems a bit faded but I haven't seen any other PBT.
<Well, faded color is a sign that something is off- either environmental
conditions are not to the fish's liking, or it is under some other kind of
stress>
Today as a try I started a dip in freshwater with sea cure (copper medication)
for 5 minutes. Do you suggest I continue.
<Well, I would probably dip in the freshwater, but I think that
copper is better utilized in solution on a continuous basis (per manufacturer's
instructions) in a separate treatment tank...>
The spots that were there first have developed into a gash like form running up
and down the PBT body, about a 1/4 inch now. They were originally
small, about a 1/16 inch. They appear almost as a wound that appears
to be healing. Is this possibly my answer.
<Could be...And it could be that, if this "disease" is parasitic in
nature, that these skin traumas are the "collateral damage" caused by
the parasites (which may have been destroyed!)...Continue observation, and
maintain impeccable water quality to assure that the fish has every opportunity
to recover in a healthy environment>
Nitrite is 0, all of reading the same. Do you have any inclinations to this
being a parasite, wound or any thing
other, I'm not worried about a concrete answer, I am just looking for some
ideas.
<Well, I think that this may be the "after effects" of a parasite
of some sort, as I indicated previously>
Suggestions for quarantine tank, size, protein skimmer, filtration.
Thanks again Bill
<Well, Bill- a quarantine tank is so simple to set up- a piece of cake,
really...Nothing fancy required...All the information you need to know about
quarantine of fishes is available on the WWM site. Do a search of the WWM
articles and you'll find some good information. I recently wrote an article
that's on the site and ran in FAMA about the quarantine process which should
answer your questions...Do check it out! Good luck! Regards, Scott F.>
Antiparasitic Food
Would you use the antiparasitic food just as a precaution if the fish in
quarantine were new and showing no signs of disease?
<No, I wouldn't treat with medications unless needed specifically for a
diagnosed problem. Craig>
Feeding A Fussy Fish In The Hospital Tank
OK, Thanks for the great tip, to which I will adhere.
<Scott F. on the follow-up this morning>
My only concern is that one of the fish in this QT (which is bare, except for
two medium-sized formerly-live rocks) is a scooter blenny, who always picks
around among the live rock for little critters to eat. He does not
eat prepared of frozen food. It's almost 4 weeks and he seems to be
doing ok (maybe a little
skinnier), but I'm wondering "what is this poor fish eating? Will
he make it?" So it's on account of him that I feel a little
pressure to get them back in the main tank. Any comment?
Jeffrey M. Zegas
<Well, Jeff- you've done very well so far in getting your fishes to this
stage...Don't rush the process, okay? You have to keep these fishes in the
hospital tank for the full 30 day period, at least...Ich is a very tenacious
disease, and you need to make your stand here and now to beat it! As far as the
Scooter is concerned- at this stage of the game, I'd consider dropping in a
couple of small pieces of live rock for him to forage on for the remaining
period of time. Unfortunately, these rocks will become "hot" after
being in system that has copper, so I would not return them to the
main system after the treatment period. Another idea would be to "go on
safari" in your main system's sump one evening, and try to catch some live
amphipods to feed this little guy. It's kind of tedious, but it works well. The
other option is to purchase a 'pod culture from an e-tailer, like Indo Pacific
Sea Farms (my fave) or Inland Aquatics, and pop in a few 'pods each day...Hang
in there- you're almost home free! Good luck! Scott F>
QT & Compatibility for Crustaceans +
Thank you for you fast reply. To follow up: what will my shrimps/crabs eat while quarantined 2-4 weeks without substrate, etc.
<Just about anything you can get to them; flake food, pellets, sinking wafers, and bits of frozen foods (krill, plankton, formula foods, etc.). -Steven Pro>
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