Hi Everyone,
Thanks for the feedback. To summarize your experiences, there are a few options for me to follow, but they all come down to either (1) leaving the plants with the fish and using a combination of salt and heat for a minimum of one week, or (2) removing all the plants to a fish-free tank or moving all the fish to a plant-free tank, then treating the fish with my Rid Ich Plus and allowing the plants to get clean by letting any parasites on them die from fish deprivation.
Since my tetras do spend much time hiding in and swimming through the plants, and since I don't like to use medicine if I don't need to, I'll start by using option (1) and see how it goes - if the fish don't get better, or if the fish don't tolerate the salt and heat as well as I'd like, then I'll use option (2).
TTA, thanks for providing the reference website. Although I haven't seen this specific site, I did read a couple of other sites with similar content.
As an aside, I am fascinated by our (referring to all people, not specifically any of us on PC) general lack of understanding of disease in lower vertebrates (e.g., tropical fish for us on PC, and amphibians for myself at home and at work). For example, there is a meaningful contradiction, or at least ambiguity, expressed in the text of the fins.actwin.com website:
http://fins.actwin.com/mirror/disease-fw.html#ich wrote:... [the Ich parasite] falls off [a host fish] and attaches to gravel or tank glass --> it reproduces to MANY parasites --> these swarmers then attach to other fish.
If the swarmers do not find a fish host, they die in about 3 days (depending on the water temperature).
...
Some people think that ich is probably dormant in most tanks.
According to these statements,
- if there are no fish in the tank, then the parasite would die. Okay, I believe that, and if it's true then it should mean that a fish-free aquarium is also free of Ich parasites after a certain amount of time elapses.
- the parasite may exist in a dormant state in most fish tanks, without infecting the healthy fish that are also present in the tank, with the inference being that it waits until the fish are weakened or stressed to attack and parasitize the fish. Okay, I admit that I've always believed this too, at least about any fish tank that frequently gets new fish (as potential sources of the Ich parasite), even when the average aquarist can look at their fish and the fish look healthy and unstressed, such that the person thinks, "My fish show no signs of Ich."
And there's the ambiguity - If the fish aren't infected, do all the free Ich parasites (i.e., those not attached to fish) die? or do they just lay dormant in the tank waiting for the fish to get stressed?
I suppose that both of these might be conditionally true, given the information in the first statement quoted from the fins.actwin.com website: The website mentions three stages of the life cycle of the Ich parasite: the stage that leaves the fish and swims in the tank, which turns into the stage that attaches to aquarium surfaces after falling off of the fish, and the stage (referred to above as "swarmers") that hatches out from this one and swims around looking for new fish to parasitize. These correspond to stages "B," "C," and "D" in the attached image.
High temperatures help with treatment because high temps accelerate the rate at which the cysts hatch out new swarmers, and it is the swarmers that will die spontaneously in a few days if they don't find any fish to parasitize. But the name "cyst" suggests that this life stage may also be able to go dormant, since lots of other microorganisms which go dormant are able to do this by forming cysts.
So here is what I wonder - Even with high temperatures and salt therapy, will the high heat therapy force all the cysts to hatch out into swarmers which then die in a few days in the fish-free tank, leaving the aquarium free of the parasite? Or will some of these cysts go dormant and survive the heat/salt treatment in order to reinfect fish at a much later time when new fish are added to the tank? Since I've never read anything definitive about this matter, my suspicion is that we just don't know for sure. If someone knows the answer, I'd love to hear it. But otherwise, I refuse to lose sleep over this, waiting for it to be resolved - I'm just going to go on with life.
Again, thank you all. Have a nice day, Eric