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07/19/2017, 01:15 PM | #1 |
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Old tank (full of aptasia) how to REALLY clean it and start again
Hi,
I have a reef tank that is full of aiptasia. My intention is to take all out and start all over again. My only doubt is if after I clean my tank the possibility of a new bloom of aiptasia could happen (maybe can survive to a regular cleaning). What do I need to do to be sure that Im going to start really "clean"?. Im not going to use nothing from my old tank except 3 fishes, couple of snails and 3 or 4 corals (I will take out the rock that they are attached to of course to avoid risks).. Would like to hear about your experiences Thanks in advance |
07/19/2017, 01:28 PM | #2 |
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Peroxide 30 second dip should handle it: the core of the rock would stay live, and most pests would not survive. Unfortunately you might lose sponges, worms, etc. Your other option would be to get some pep shrimp and just turn them loose for a while, though they will often 'farm' one big one. They prefer the babies.
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07/19/2017, 02:05 PM | #3 |
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Thanks SK8r. This is new for me, how exactly can I do that with no harm to my fishes and corals (a few but I have some). Thanks again
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07/19/2017, 02:11 PM | #4 |
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you remove the rock from the tank and soak it in hydrogen peroxide... and rinse it in saltwater.. and you probably want the rock to sit in a holding bin till the ammonia spike is done from all of the dead stuff..
you can also try a bunch of Berghia Nudibranchs, they eat aiptasia.. i never had luck with peppermint shrimp. then there are copperbands and a few other fish that will eat aiptasia.. depends on the size of your tank.
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07/19/2017, 03:46 PM | #5 |
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+1 on h2o2... Will kill anything / everything at high enough concentration yet used at low concentrations it won't harm fish or corals
Baths for the rock will work as deacribed... however, that won't get rid of any on the glass / sand etc. If you're determined to get rid then I would find all the rock that definitely has no aips, dip this as described and put into a holding tank (QT?), run the tank with flow and skimmer for a week. Then move fish / inverts over to the holding tank. Leave all the sand, rock etc with aips on in the DT. Drain the water, buy the strongest h2o2 you can find (35% food grade is likely the strongest) and pour as much as you can into the DT. Wear gloves and cover your eyes! You can top up with tap water or RODI water, up to you, you're killing everything anyway Run a powerhead to keep the water moving, it'll fizz like mad for hours, move the rocks about and stir the sand up etc to make sure the h2o2 has gotten everywhere. After at least 48 hours, remove everything and rinse in RODI. H2o2 breaks down into h2o after 48 hours, so you can just rinse the tank to get rid of all the dead stuff and then put it all back together. The rock you saved will jump start the cycle for you, just chuck in a bottle of Dr Tim's or some atm colony and off you go... fish, inverts etc can go straight back in. Sent from my SM-G930F using Tapatalk |
07/20/2017, 06:13 PM | #6 |
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If you are convinced that is the route you need to take, I won't argue. It's a drastic step, but it's your tank.
However, if you're open to one last option, you can try what worked for me. It's been said Copperband Butterflies eating aiptasia are hit or miss. But my CBB totally cleaned a heavily infested tank in about 3 months. Prior to adding the CBB, I was doing weekly kalk paste hunting for about 4 months, with limited success. Once I added the CBB, I quit the kalk routine. And now, around 3 months later my reef is aiptasia free. YMMV
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07/20/2017, 07:10 PM | #7 |
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File fish or Berghia Nudibranchs work really well and you can resell then when they are done. You usually only see them when they run out of food and are starving, so keep a rock with aptasia in a QT tank and catch the Berghia's and put them in the QT tank and put them up for sale. If you have a UV light like the ones they use for finding cat urine they glow in the dark.
When you first put them in, they are tiny and you think you have been had, then in about a month you start thinking your seeing less aptasia and then all of a sudden they are wiped out |
07/21/2017, 12:35 AM | #8 |
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Aiptasia
I had a problem once.i added a filefish.aiptasia all gone .havnt seen one since.
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07/21/2017, 07:45 AM | #9 |
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thanks to all for the great ideas.
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07/21/2017, 11:52 AM | #10 |
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If you do as Gweeds states. Don't forget to clean out your overflow. They will be in there too.
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07/21/2017, 12:45 PM | #11 |
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I'd just acid dip the rock. Why take a chance of the peroxide leaving a survivor? Also, if the tank was really neglected for a while I assume the rock is holding phosphates.
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07/21/2017, 04:29 PM | #12 | |
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Quote:
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07/22/2017, 01:43 PM | #13 |
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Understood and .. right about phosphates . Thanks
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07/22/2017, 01:47 PM | #14 | |
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Quote:
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09/17/2017, 06:10 AM | #15 |
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Jorsan, what did you end up doing? How did it work?
I've been fighting an Aiptaisia problem for quite awhile. It is in my sump, overflow, and in sand. Therefore I've decided to just clean the entire system. I'm thinking of pulling all rock cleaning it in a bin letting it cycle, etc... While the rock is in the bin I want to run H202 through the system. I just need to figure out the correct concentration.
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09/17/2017, 07:56 AM | #16 |
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Copperband butterfly worked for me
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09/17/2017, 09:03 AM | #17 |
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Have a plan for control. You will get it again on some frag plug, or some spore somewhere. There is surely some minuscule one on one of the rock that has corals on it. This is almost inevitable. Lots of Peppermints from the Florida Keys work for me along with some butterflies.
If you want to clean the whole tank, Muratic Acid is probably cheaper and easier one all of the livestock and rock/sand is out. You can get H2O2 up to 40% if you find a local chemical supply company that sells to the public - I use it in my hot tub. However, it does not take much water do dilute it back down to the percentage that you get at the grocery store. |
09/17/2017, 04:20 PM | #18 | |
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Quote:
I see food grade H202 on Amazon, as you allude to it is on the expensive side. I'm not in a rush so I was hoping I could identify a dosage amount that I could pour in the tank and let run for several weeks and kill everything.
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150 gal, 40g sump, Constellation T5 Light Fixture, Octo Ext. 200, ACIII, OM-4way Current Tank Info: 150 gal, 40g sump, Constellation T5 Light Fixture, Octo Ext. 200, ACIII, OM-4way |
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