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7 answers

if you are using interpet treatment 6 for white spot you dose on day one then the same dose on day 4 and then you do a water change on day 7,make sure the carbon filters are removed as this stops the medicine working.
if the treatment does not clear the white spot after 7 days do a 30 percent water change and treat again following the two steps,some times the fish become resistant to medications if used all the time,im treating my tank at he moment and you need to make sure you add the right dose and depending on the fish ,some fish cant tolerate the full dose ,like clown loach,i have 2 and they have the white spot and I'm treating at half dose,

2007-07-29 11:22:08 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

To answer your question, it should take between 10 and 14 days to clear up. You want to continue treating for at least 3-5 days after you no longer see any spots on your fish. When the parasite is attached to the fish, it's surrounded by a protective cyst, so it's not affected by the medication. You need to have them release from the fish and be in the water to be killed. If you stop treatment too early, there may still be some parasites left alive in the water to reinfect the fish.

You can speed the process up a little by raising the temperature in the tank to at least 30oC (86oF) by changing your heater a few degrees each hour. This will speed up the development of the parasite so it lets go of the fish sooner.

You can read more about ich in this link: http://www.skepticalaquarist.com/docs/health/ich.shtml

2007-07-29 22:38:52 · answer #2 · answered by copperhead 7 · 0 0

you probable have been given ich from the recent fish. cope with it with meds and be optimistic to persist with the guidelines precisely. Too few days or no longer adequate meds will permit the parasite come back back. you do no longer say how long the tank has been working yet cloudy water is usually a micro organism bloom. it may take place throughout cycling or if too many fish are further at as quickly as inflicting an ammonia spike. do no longer do extensive water alterations simply by fact it throws the stability off much extra. **

2016-10-13 01:15:11 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

treat your fish until the white spots disapear, then it says 2 days after the spots have gone but just to be sure i would do it for 4 days, the treatment that ozzy d reccomended is methylene blue, beware of this, as good as it is it will affect plants and could stain your tank blue permently, it will also affect the bio filter, if you can put the fish into a hospital or quarentine tank

2007-07-30 00:05:32 · answer #4 · answered by al3x1707 2 · 0 0

go to your local aquatic store and buy a bottle of blue liquid, sorry i can't remember the name.
add this to the tank as prescribed, even makes the tank look like a deep blue sea for a short while.
i think about a week should do the trick, if not get rid of the offending fish and hope that it hasn't spread to the other fish

2007-07-29 08:30:19 · answer #5 · answered by Ozzy D 5 · 0 0

If you are using a cheap standard medicine from an average pet shop you are wasting your time, they are not strong enough. You need to go to a proper aquatic shop. They sell very strong medicines for white spot. I can't remember what it's called but it's like ink....it even sends the water green but it does work. Get there asap! before they all get it! Proper aquatic shops will definately have these strong cures...I've used them. Good luck!

2007-07-29 09:00:48 · answer #6 · answered by dexycat 1 · 0 0

On that bottle of blue solution,it gives you the instruction but I would only use one appliance and hope it will do the job. It will not always work if the fish is affected too far.

2007-07-29 08:35:26 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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