Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Red Bug - Sentinel Treatment



Picked up some new coral colonies, but they were infested with red bugs. Contacted my vet for some interceptor, but he said he doesn't stock any but he can give me sentinel instead.

Sentinel is similar to Interceptor, but additional ingredient of lufenuron, a chitin inhibitor (insect development inhibitor). Theoretically, Sentinel should be just as effective as Interceptor in killing the red bugs, provided that the same concentration of milbemycine is supplied. Whether the lufenuron will have any side effects, good or bad, shall be seen. I wonder if the lufenuron might prevent red bug eggs from hatching, and hence, removing the requirement for further treatment.
Dustin Dorton at ORA says he was able to kill the red bugs with Sentinel (source). No additional symptoms were recorded.

The Interceptor normally used by people is the White Interceptor Flavor Tabs for 51-100 lb dogs. One tab contains 23.0 mg of milbemycin oxime. The Sentinel I received is of smaller dosage, for 25-50 lb dogs. One tab contains 11.5 mg of milbemycin oxime and 230 mg of lufenuron.
I believe each tablet weights 1.0 gram (1000 mg). Recommended dose with Interceptor is 25 mg per 10 gallons of water. Some people say 2-4X that dose is better, upwards of even 10X. Since this Sentinel contains half the amount of milbemycin, I will dose twice the amount I should have dosed Interceptor.

My quarantine tank is a half filled 20 gallon long, about 10 gallons of water volume. 0.025 g of Interceptor, meaning 0.050 g of Sentinel.
2X dose - 0.100 g of Sentinal
4X dose - 0.200 g of Sentinal
10X dose - 0.500 g of Sentinal (half the tablet)

Day 1 - 3/18
~1X dose (~0.06 g) given at 3:40pm.
6 hour mark at 9:40 pm.

1 hour mark (4:40 pm) - Tissue necrosis on base of Oregon tort frag. Superglue applied on base to attempt to stem progression of necrosis. Oregon tort frag was one of two most heavily (red bug) infested pieces. (5:10 pm) - Signs of tissue necrosis at top of frag now.
2 hour mark (5:40 pm) - Did a ~30% water change and added a small bag of carbon to attempt to stop necrosis (and prevent any others as well). I will do a big water change tomorrow and try again with another dose. No other SPS show necrosis (yet?).
3 hour mark (6:40 pm) - No further necrosis noted. Majority of red bugs no longer visible; only one bug noted on the oregon tort piece (uncertain if noted bug is dead or alive). Further treatment will be required to ensure complete eradication.

I don't believe the necrosis was caused by the lufenuron per se. The tort and one other piece was flooded with red bugs (at least 20-30 on a 1-2" piece vs the other that had maybe a handful on a ~5" colony), and I have read that red bugs mess with SPS's slime coat. Perhaps it was weakened by the red bugs, stressed by the environmental change, and the addition of medicine just brought it over the edge. Also, the oregon and one other piece didn't have flow for 24 hours, which was additional cause for stress.

6 hours later - 9:40pm: All corals look fine, except for the oregon tort still looking stressed. No further necrosis noted. No red bugs noted.

14 1X doses of Sentinel are left. Will not increase dosage for further treatment. May do further subsequent treatments for select pieces, but will leave some pieces out (no additional treatments) for observation of red bug.

Monday, March 9, 2009

LED Spotlight


Credit of LED bulb to Tom619 at SDReefs


Summary - Ingredient List
- A LED spotlight bulb. $10~20. Here are some options: 120-lumen white bulb from dealextreme, 150-lumen white bulb from dealextreme, blue bulb from ebay.
- LAGRA spotlight from Ikea. ($3.99 + tax)
- E17 to E27 Converter from LEDLight. ($3.99 + SH)
- Dimmer from Ikea. ($7.99 + tax)

Total cost: ~$30 per moonlight setup


For this demonstration, I used the old LED spotlight originally sold by centralpointsecurity on ebay. I do not recommend this bulb, though I have yet to use the newer bulb listed above.
These particular bulbs work quite well as moonlights, though slightly lacking in terms of actinic supplementation. I doubt this would be strong enough as a supplement to T5s to add shimmer. The build quality is also questionable. Would not recommend this particular bulb. The dimmer is not recommended with use with most LED bulbs, but if you plan on using it only as a moonlight, it seems to be ok.

For a cheap way to light the bulb, you can just use a regular socket ($1-2 at your local hardware store; see below for picture), with an extension cord ($1). ($12 total cost for setup).


However, for just $10~15 more, you can have a much nicer looking spotlight moonlight. (Click on images below for online link/source.)
LAGRA spotlight from Ikea. $3.99 + tax

E17 to E27 Converter from LEDLight. $3.99 + SH

The dimmer from Ikea is an option if you have plans to use the bulb as moonlights. However, be aware that they may damage your bulb.

Dimmer from Ikea. $7.99 + tax

Assembly is pretty self-explanatory.

Here are the results:






As a moonlight, I found the dimmer essential.

Birth of a New Tank

Despite the rational reasons against a 36" length tank, desire overtook reason and my final decision was a tank of 36" x 18" x 12" (LxWxH) dimensions.

After attempting to order the tank through Charlie at the Fish Tank Factory, I ultimately chose to place my tank order through Ron at my local fish store, Octopuss Garden. Order was placed on February 3rd (2/3), of the following specs.
   Leemar
   36" x 18" x 12" (L x W x H)
   3/8" glass
   Trimless/Braceless
   Starphire front panel
   Diamond Edge Polishing
   Black Silicone

There were some delays. One of the holes had to be outsourced, due to its unusual size (1.5" schedule 80 bulkhead size). However, ultimately, the company had drilled the wrong panel, and had to redo the tank.

Finally received the tank four weeks later on March 4th (3/4). Everything looked good, with possible exception of the additional 1" hole that was added at the last minute. The edges look a little jagged on the 1" hole, versus the smooth and beautifully crafted outsourced 1.5" hole. Otherwise, no scratches noted, no silicone mishaps noted, and tank spec seems to all be as ordered.

All plumbing parts were ordered from Savko Plastic.
A custom ATO reservoir was built by a local, Jim.


Jim also helped reskin my stand.

On the other hand, the 15" x 15" x 12" tank was ultimately used as a combination nano/fuge/frag tank, and plumbed to the sump. Separate return pump used (Eheim 1000), with a 150w VisiTherm Stealth heater in the overflow section in case of return pump failure. One A grade Picasso clownfish (purchased from Doni), a rose bubble tip anemone, a clam and various frags currently reside in the tank. A 150w Aquamedic Ocean Light (purchased used) with a new 20k Radium bulb was hung on a bent EMT conduit light arm. Two eyescrews were screwed in, and 1/16" wire rope used to hang from the light arm (crimps used).

A DIY LED spotlight is used to light the tank when the main light is off.