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Originally Posted by Shurik Very helpful information! Thank you, MatPat!  |
You are very welcome. Pests can be hard to eradicate in shrimp tanks since most meds will also effect the shrimp.
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Originally Posted by Shurik |
That is the one I used. I found it locally (the 4 gm package) for about $13 and saved on shipping

The one gram packet should be plenty for about 100 gallons of water. If you feel like experimenting, you can try splitting one of the 0.1gm doses in half and see how it works. I had success adding 0.2 grams to a 29g tank of Crystal Red Shrimp so a smaller dose may work.
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Originally Posted by Shurik I only wonder how to approximately measure 0.1gm. There is that RedSea Ammonia test with a tiny little plastic spoon for sodium nitroprusside reagent, does anybody knows what that spoon size is?  |
Fenbendazole is very insoluble in water. You should be able to divide a 1 gram dose into ten equal parts and dose one of those parts for each 10g of water in your tank. In the thread I linked to earlier in this post someone followed that same advice and had success. I'm not sure if you can overdose the fenbendazole given it's insolubility but I'm not up for taking a chance to see what the lethal dose is
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Originally Posted by Shurik I had a goldfish in my shrimp tank before and they provided all the factors contributing to planaria population bloom:
Fish's been overfed,
I had Fluval internal filter,
I had ammonia spikes
and to my understanding this is what should be avoided to prevent such a situation. I am at this point when I should just nuke them all.  It is too late for prophylactic method for me. |
I was at the same point and decided to medicate after months of trying to manually remove the planaria. I now feed the shrimp smaller amounts more frequently and I have yet to have a another occurrence of hydra or planaria in my tanks. With a lack of natural predators in shrimp only tanks, plenty of unwanted pests can thrive if we overfeed or slack on the tank maintenance.
Overfeeding the shrimp, too many snails, and air driven sponge filters on the tank seemed to contribute to my problem. One 0.1 gram dose of fenbendazole and they were all gone. If you have any Hydra in there, give the fenbendazole 48 hours to kill them. They seem to die a bit slower than the planaria.