I recently got some sps frags. One of the frags base is getting white. What can I do? Water parameters are all good.
I recently got some sps frags. One of the frags base is getting white. What can I do? Water parameters are all good.
Check your phosphates and your nitrates. It might be signs of RTN.. Thats normally the case when they start receeding from the bottom, when they receed from the top is mainly due to alk. If it starts RTNing, i would chop of the bottom half and start fresh with a new base
Jerry
Trying to get back in the hobby... Will be seting up my 75g rr soon
when that would happen to me it was always a heat issue
the same thing is happening to me with my 12g nano, my other tanks never did it. i have checked all parameters with my own api test kits, then took them to the lfs and had them test-all was good.
i am siding with gilbert, i think it is a heat issue. my tank goes from 78-81 depending on time of day. hard to keep these stable. i just took out the 50w heater and removed the glass cover. hopefully this helps.
does anyone know if the corals will recover from this or are the white parts gonna stay...
~alex
My name is AGGman, I am an Aquaholic...
I dont thing that is a big swing in heat. My tank has the same heat range and everyone that I talked to said that a 3-5 degree swing is not that major.
Inspect the frags with a magnifying glass, and look for AcroporaEatingFlatWorm, or redbugs. The symptoms don't sound the same as what you have, but there is a reason for the RTN. How old are the frags? Were they encrusting when you purchased them? Definitely cut them from the base, I doubt the RTN frag will recover after you frag it, but the other may make it.
This is from WWM: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/corldisart.html
Conditions:
RTN (Rapid Tissue Necrosis)
Though sometimes referred to as if it were a disease, RTN is not a disease. It is only what its name implies, rapid tissue death. This is when, for any variety of reasons, a coral's tissue begins to rapidly die off (usually leaving the entire coral dead within a few days if not a few hours). Once it starts, RTN is nearly impossible to stop, especially when the cause is unknown. Sometimes a sudden and drastic shift in tank parameters (such as temperature, salinity, pH, etc...) can cause RTN.
IMMEDIATELY remove any coral you suspect to be suffering from RTN. Though it's not known what causes RTN, it has been shown to spread to other corals. This could be because it is caused by an infectious agent. Or, it could be that when one coral dies so rapidly, a significant amount of toxic chemicals are released into the water causing other corals to start dying (a kind of chain reaction).
Starvation
Unfortunately, many aquarists do not properly feed their corals. Slow tissues recession/death is often a sign of starvation. If you suspect that your coral is starving, please see Coral Care for information on feeding your particular coral.
Stress
Most corals, particularly wild caught colonies, suffer considerable stress before arriving at your local aquarium store and into your tanks. Inappropriate and/or highly unstable tank parameters, excessive handling/falling/moving, and unfriendly tank neighbors are some common causes of stress. Stress can lead to slower tissue recession, poor polyp expansion, slowed growth or just an overall decline in coral health. When severe, stress can cause RTN.
200g-No Corals Yet!
wow, that was great info. i might not be feeding them right because it has been a week and they still have color-minus a few spots here and there and no polyp extension. i have been feeding dt's every other day or so and reef nutrition oysterfeast in between. is this not good? also, might the light be burning them?
~alex
My name is AGGman, I am an Aquaholic...
are you feeding all of that in a 12g? If so, I think you should probably ease up on the feeding as it may very likely be doing more harm than good in such a small tank, unless you are running a large skimmer (in comparison to the tanks total volume).
The API kits are generally good, but from what I've read the PO4 kit is junk. How often do you have to use your mag float to clean your gl***** If it's more than every few days (3 or 4) then you probably have higher than what's generally accepted levels of PO4 in the tank.
Better just bring all of those frags over to me for safe keeping, just in case, lol.
why is gla.ss edited out?
hey glenn, well i feed only a little bit with a medicine dropper. i don't think its enough to mess up my params. also i haven't even put the mag float in the tank. i used some soft filter floss like two weeks ago, and still nothing to clean. if i get close i can see a little stuff here and there but seriously algae isn't growing. but i also have a 225gph return, koralia nano, and an extra fluval 205 canister filter providing flow. this biocube was butchered by the last owner-so i only use the back compartments for a skimmer, and a mini live rock and caulerpa fuge. the fluval is providing most of the mechanical filtration. it probably isn't the most dynamic set up, but my water is crystal clear and all tests are coming up good. i dunno what the problem is. maybe sps is just not my thing...
~alex
My name is AGGman, I am an Aquaholic...