For Ich treatment, the most effective way to deal with it is using copper. COpper kills Ich dead. Since you are using a QT, you may treat with copper withour fear of contaminating your main tank.
Ich is a free swimming protozoan parasite that attacks a fish's gills first. It attaches, embeds within the fish, and leeches nutrients. Once it has fed sufficiently, it forms a cyst (the characteristic white spot) that protrudes through the skin. It stays this way for several days, maturing. Eventually, the cyst matures and falls off to the substrate, where it begins dividing into 200-600 new free swimming protozoans. The cyst ruptures, releasing the new parasite into the water colums, where they must find a new host. The whole process takes about 3-4 weeks to complete. The bear of treating for Ich is that the parasite is vulnerable to medication ONLY during the free swimming phase of it's life. Once it encysts, it is more or less invincible. FW dips will help unattach cysts, but it doesn't kill them outright.
Leaving your tank free of fish for a month will rid it of the parasite. Ich cannot live without fish, period. Inverts do not carry it. Meanwhile, in the QT, you can treat with a variety of methods. As I said before copper is highly effective. I have used No-Ich Marine (available at www.drsfostersmith.com) with great success in my own tank. Formulin works very well, too. Since you are treating in the QT, all of these options are open to you.
Treat however you are comfortable, but you MUST keep up treatment for three weeks after Ich symptoms are no longer visible on the fish, otherwise you may miss one. One Ich parasite is all it takes to create 600 more, so be dilligent.
Ich is a free swimming protozoan parasite that attacks a fish's gills first. It attaches, embeds within the fish, and leeches nutrients. Once it has fed sufficiently, it forms a cyst (the characteristic white spot) that protrudes through the skin. It stays this way for several days, maturing. Eventually, the cyst matures and falls off to the substrate, where it begins dividing into 200-600 new free swimming protozoans. The cyst ruptures, releasing the new parasite into the water colums, where they must find a new host. The whole process takes about 3-4 weeks to complete. The bear of treating for Ich is that the parasite is vulnerable to medication ONLY during the free swimming phase of it's life. Once it encysts, it is more or less invincible. FW dips will help unattach cysts, but it doesn't kill them outright.
Leaving your tank free of fish for a month will rid it of the parasite. Ich cannot live without fish, period. Inverts do not carry it. Meanwhile, in the QT, you can treat with a variety of methods. As I said before copper is highly effective. I have used No-Ich Marine (available at www.drsfostersmith.com) with great success in my own tank. Formulin works very well, too. Since you are treating in the QT, all of these options are open to you.
Treat however you are comfortable, but you MUST keep up treatment for three weeks after Ich symptoms are no longer visible on the fish, otherwise you may miss one. One Ich parasite is all it takes to create 600 more, so be dilligent.