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Those are zoas. They appear to be melting. You have to be careful with placements of coral under LEDs because they can get burnt depending on your lenses. Also if you have those LEDs turned completely up most people don't. What are your parameters and how old is the tank? That can also have something to do with it. I also see cyanobacteria on your sand bed. Cyanobacteria robs your system of oxygen. You need to take care of the cyanobacteria with chemiclean.
Yes I believe you are correctIt's actually flowerpot gonipora. They need to be fed, but you wouldn't notice that after just two days from not eating.
(now looking at it on my laptop...) Hmm. I've fed it mysis and fish roe both days is there something else I should be feeding them?;BoredYes I believe you are correct(now looking at it on my laptop...)
It's starving
This video will tell you what you need to know about these hard to keep flowerpot. Mysis is to big for them... to eatHmm. I've fed it mysis and fish roe both days is there something else I should be feeding them?;Bored
This video will tell you what you need to know about these hard to keep flowerpot. Mysis is to big for them... to eat
[/QUOTE Thanks for the advice, do you think it is too late or is it possible to nurse it back to health?
Parameters:.It's either an alveopora or goniopora, I think alveos have 12 tentacles and gonis have 24. From what I understand care is similar for both however gonis are nowhere near as hardy and they have a reputation for withering away after a few months. I've read varying reports of whether they like low flow/light or med/high. If your having issues with bleaching you might want to try moving into the shade a little bit, depending on what lighting it came from it can take some time to acclimate to the different lighting. They do better with smaller foods such as oyster feast, phyto etc. Can you list here what your parameters are at?
#reefsquad
Ammonia-undetectable
pH- 8.0
Nitrite- undetectable
Calcium- 460
dKH- 10
Nitrate-5
Thanks for the advice I'll see how it goesThey take in powdery foods from the water column, medium light and flow. I would keep it on the sand bed for now and away from the rocks. Anything that flows like these do don't like their polyps smashing into the rocks as it can damage them easily. I would definitely get one or more of these; Reef Roids, oyster feast, coral frenzy, reef chili, live phyto and maybe some live or frozen rotifers.

Best of luck, hopefully it recovers! I think as long as you keep your tank stable and feed twice a week or you can feed small amounts by target feeding it with the power heads off daily or every other day until it starts to recuperate.Thanks for the advice I'll see how it goes![]()
Good eye [emoji2]It's actually flowerpot gonipora. They need to be fed, but you wouldn't notice that after just two days from not eating.
after looking closer it looks like brown jelly disease, dipped in h2o2 hoping there is more than a skeleton in the morning, have you had experience with bjd?I agree that it might be a goniopora/flowerpot coral, the base of it is colored up way to much for me to think it's a zoa.
+1 to what @prsnlty said that cyano should be knocked out.
I run leds on my tank as well, and had noticed that the moment I dimmed the lights down from 100% full spectrum down to 40%, I started seeing less bleaching and more growth.
Best of luck on this!
Yes, it nearly wiped out my Duncan and 2 large hammers overnight. I caught it though. It took the Duncan over 2 years to recover but the Hammers recovered in a month or two. Brown jelly usually gets them pretty quickly IME.after looking closer it looks like brown jelly disease, dipped in h2o2 hoping there is more than a skeleton in the morning, have you had experience with bjd?
after looking closer it looks like brown jelly disease, dipped in h2o2 hoping there is more than a skeleton in the morning, have you had experience with bjd?

