Fighting a losing battle need help

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
Why not take the filters and hook to the 20 and treat the filter?

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All my fish cant fit in a 20 I was concerned about my loaches if I went the medication route


I had a Planaria out break once and while the problem didn't go away quickly I was easily able to rid the tank of them without meds. Just as you figured planaria outbreaks are usually caused by overfeeding and are usually most apparent after a water change. If you clean the filter out and give the substrate a thorough sifting to rid it of built up waste and keep on the reduced feedings they should disappear, you just need to be a little patient. In my opinion it's better then using a med to fix a problem as you'll be fixing the root cause by changing your aquarium maintenance and routines and therefore preventing further outbreaks.


I have tile in the tank. But I agree with the patient part, I was looking for the quick fix. I only feed every 3 days and I immediately remove any uneaten pellets

Just do your maintenance Lorenzo. It'll clear up eventually.

I really do keep up with them. 3x a week religiously

...or you could sell me your loaches and medicate like crazy :)


I knew that line was coming lol
 
Coppersafe or Cupramine...I've used them both in the past in tanks with the fish that you listed above,except the loaches of course.

I will give a little more time for planaria to go away if it doesn't then I will look into those products


Just keep a good cleaning regime - clean out the filter material - and it'll take care of itself over time. Don't risk your fish by medicating for no real good reason.

Do you have adequate filtration ?

180 with an fx5 and 3 ac110s. (had 2 fx5s but one died)
 
It's better to get rid of them slowly than having a mass die off. Stick with the substrate vacuming and filter maint. along with reduced feeding. You reall want to avoid using meds in this case.
 
quit feeding the loaches and they should eat the planaria. and they'd be healthy too, since you've gut loaded them with fish food.
 
Other than contributing to the bioload a bit are those planaria even dangerous? I had them in my tanks before and I just figured they were part of the rest of the slurry of life that lives in the substrate. They never caused any problems as far as I could tell. I figured that most tanks had them.
 
Don't medicate for this. Give it time with good maintenance.
 
I had this issue a few years ago in my 300 gallon and like many of you enthusiast I didn't want to medicate the tank so I did gravel cleaning every other day for 2 weeks. That was roughly 75-100 gallons of water change each time. And also only fed as much as could be eaten in 2 min.
 
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