A Closer Look at Goldfish Ick - Part 2 (Treatment)

Before reading this post, it would be advisable to read “A Closer Look at Ick - Part 1 (The Life Cycle)”. Several of the terms and concepts mentioned there will be referred to in this post.

Preparation

Once ick has been discovered in a tank, the first task is to prepare the tank for treatment. If any filters contain activated carbon for chemical filtration, remove it. The activated carbon will remove the medication from the water. UV sterilisers and protein skimmers should also be switched off in order for the treatment to work effectively.

The water in most goldfish tanks is at room temperature (roughly 18 Celsius/65 Fahrenheit), so there is no general requirement for a thermostat. However, using one to gradually increase the water temperature by half a degree celsius every day will reduce the length of treatment. This is because the ick is only treatable during the theront (free swimming) phase of the life cycle. Due to the fact that an increase in temperature speeds up the life cycle, the theront phase will arrive quicker at higher temperatures.

If possible, bring the water temperature up to 26 Celsius (80 Fahrenheit) and the treatment will be over in 10 days. Keeping the temperature low will mean the treatment will need to continue for 6 weeks. One word of caution though - when the ick life cycle takes a week, a new dose of parasitic infection comes round every week. If anything is wrong with the treatment program it could result in heavy infestation, and goldfish dying off quickly.

Finally remove any snails, and check if any aquarium plants present are sensitive to the recommended treatement - malachite green.

Treatment

Malachite green is a widely available chemical treatment for ick. Other chemicals that can be used are formalin, copper, quinine hydrochloride, methylene blue and sodium chloride. However, non of these are any better than malachite green, which has the advantage of been successfully used to treat ick for many years.

Follow the dosing instructions on the label to the letter, taking care to avoid eye and skin contact. Malachite green leaves a stain on almost everything it touches.

At the ideal temperature, continue the treatment for 10 days. This will ensure that the theront phase of the ick life cycle will have been exposed to the malachite green. During the trophozoite and tomont phases, the chemical will have no effect on the parasites. In both cases they are enclosed in protective cysts that are impervious to any known treatment.

Although the life cycle only takes a week at this temperature, the treatment should go on for 10 days in order to make sure that all traces of ick have been removed.

It is worth noting that the treatment for ick treats the water. When treating the vast majority of goldfish diseases it is the goldfish itself that is treated. However ick can only be killed when it is vulnerable, and that is when it is out in the water.

Prevention

As is the case with every goldfish illness, prevention is better than cure. Make sure the water is tested regularly, feed the fish a balanced diet, change the water regularly and don’t put too many goldfish in the tank. These measures should be par for the course in every single goldfish tank and pond.

Also, never buy aquarium plants that are in a tank with fish in the pet shop. Tomonts stick to plants, and a single one provides an easy passage for up to 1000 individual parasites.

When bringing a new fish home for the tank, put it in a quarantine tank for whatever length of time the ick life cycle takes at the water temperature of the quarantine tank.

Ick is common and deadly, but following the advice above will save goldfish from the disease, and bring them back to rude health as quickly as possible.

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6 Responses to “A Closer Look at Goldfish Ick - Part 2 (Treatment)”

  1. Kelly Says:

    Help 2 of my goldfish have come up with white spots all over them which is ick. I cant affard any treatment and i dont even know where to get it from. Will they carry on living without the treatment? if not how long will it take for them to die?

  2. admin Says:

    Use ordinary salt. You will need 3 teaspoons of salt for every gallon of tank water. Dissolve it in some water you have removed from the tank, then pour it in to the flow of the pump.

    When you do your weekly water change, top up the salt levels according to how much water you took out.

    To answer your questions, they will probably not survive if you don’t treat them. Hopefully they will not die if you go with the salt treatment.

    Good luck

  3. Kim Says:

    Hi there,

    I noticed that my fish had little white spots on them a while ago and treated them with a White Spot Cure that I bought at the local aquarium shop. I was told that it may take some time for the treatment to work. However, it did nothing even after full course. I went back and got a ‘Tonic’ which apparently is a treatment for a whole host of diseases including ich, fin rot and fungal skin diseases (contains malachite green). I’m midway through the course and one fish has died from what looks like fin rot and the others have suddenly got cloudy eyes, furry fins and have gone off their food. It pretty much happened overnight!! Do you think that treating them with antibiotics will help or maybe the disease has spread too much?

    Any help would be appreciated as I feel a little helpless!

    Cheers.

    Kim

  4. admin Says:

    Sounds a lot like a bad bacterial infection. Your fish seem to have more than one problem, so you need to get on top of the situation quickly. Your next port of call should be a vet.

    If not all of your fish are affected, remove the ones that are to a treatment tank.

  5. Han Says:

    hello, admin. my goldfish has white spot on it gills few days ago and i do twice seawater treatment to remove it. however, the white spot continue appear and now the white spot is gone. what should i do for following prevention?

  6. admin Says:

    As I mentioned in the article, the best prevention is to keep the water clean and the fish healthy.

    However, it may not have been ick. Have a read at this article about sexing goldfish. The spots may have been breeding tubercles on a male goldfish.

    It’s not the right time of year if you are in the northern hemisphere and your fish are in a pond, but entirely possible if they are in an aquarium.

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