Favia tissue loss

Jeto2004

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Aug 6, 2019
Messages
1,130
Reaction score
7,835
Location
Fairfield County, CT
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have this Favia in my tank for 2 weeks and over this time I seen some receding tissue on one edge.

The affected heads show polyp extension more than the rest of the colony

When I got it I did a iodine dip (Seachem)

Haven’t target feed it yet.

Any suggestions course of recommended action?

parameters:
Tank is 5 month old

Alk 8.0
Cal 462
Mag 1349
pH 7.8
PO4 0.01
NO3 0.2

9DF93742-565C-4EC0-9734-39417D0344E4.jpeg
 
Are you still light acclimating it? If not move it a bit higher for some more flow
 
What other corals are in the tank? What is your fish/invert stocking list? Are you sure isn’t wasn’t like that when you got it? From what I see, I wouldn’t be worried if it doesn’t recede further. They can heal.
 
Flavia sits at 90-110 Par on the sand bed, just recently increase intensity of radions to get my lighting tuned in.

As for corals, currently just a chalice and a small hammer coral and rock flower anemone. These are my first corals overall. They are all a good foot apart.

As for stocking list:
Pair of clown
3 Purple Firefish
Yellow Wathman Goby
Lawnmower Blennie

Clean up crew:
Dwarf Ceriths, Florida Ceriths, Nerites, Nassarius snails, Blue leg hermits, Red leg hermits, 2 Emerald Crabs, 2 Cleaner shrimp.

The coral certainly had rough edge were I know see the tissue loss, but definitely more tissue loss over the last 2 weeks.

Decided to run some carbon just in case - any other action I should take?
 
It looks healthy ,, I am with ScottR ,, I wouldn't worry about it just yet , just keep a eye on it ,, the only thing I would suggest and this maybe a reach ,, if I were trying to reach for something :) the edges you are talking about are closer to the rock side of your scape ,, the edges closer to your glass look fine ,, maybe turn the coral ,, put the effected edge where the good edges are sitting right now ,, see if the bad edge starts to improve ,,
 
Could he be the culprit or is he just grazing because it’s dead tissue?
C432AD2A-663B-46C5-8578-0F2956197825.jpeg
 

Attachments

  • 378DBF2B-D691-45C5-A2F7-2A11445903A4.MOV
    4.3 MB
Last edited:
Humm ,, he would be outa my tank :) I tend to think he is the problem ,, I throw some pellet food in my tank every so often after lights are out in the tank ,, just for my crabs and peppermint shrimp ,, if I have any in the tank to get something to eat ,, kinda keep them full so they leave corals alone,,
 
agree with above. He may not be eating it or anything like that but could be bothering it enough to stress it. Also for me, I have had some LPS do this on the sandbed because the sand was getting on the flesh.
 
I see continued tissue loss on just this one site of the Favia, the rest of the colony looks happy and healthy. Now I have seen these sand tubes with tentacles coming out. There are two of these on the side I see tissue loss! My suspicion is that these are spaghetti worms. While I read that these are good hitchhiker could they still be the root cause of the tissue loss? I have seen the tentacles reaching up onto the coral. Any ideas how I can get read of them? They seem to of a burrow in the underside of the coral skeleton.
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

  • Yes!

    Votes: 32 45.7%
  • Not yet, but I have one that I want to buy in mind!

    Votes: 9 12.9%
  • No.

    Votes: 26 37.1%
  • Other (please explain).

    Votes: 3 4.3%
Back
Top