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Again, have you tested for chlorine/chloramine?
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How are you acclimating these new corals? Can you elaborate on your lighting, flow and ATO setup a bit more? Have you inspected for pests at all? When one of your SPS frag(s) dies, how soon do you add another one before it dies as well?
why not add an army of mexican turbos, astrealas, mexican red leg hermits, blue leg hermits, urchins, as well as other inverts? To me the algae is out competing the corals for food, likely why you have low nutrients according to your test kit results. Take down the algae, then work on balance of nutrients. If you research carbon source/ bacteria source dosing, and are able to understand it, you can also have this approach too, but again, do your research first. This approach uses a bacteria to out compete the algae for nutrients, and the carbon source becomes a food for the bacteria. Cheers![]()
Hello.
I am a true believer that if we tamper too much with chemicals....our tanks will die. IMHO, I feel as though your system is constantly trying to recover from your last adjustment and you go throw more chemicals in your system that causes some type of shock.
Have you tried to not touch the tank for about 2 weeks? At this point if Phosphate is an issue, add rowaphos and perform water changes every other week. Also, your beneficial bacteria may not be large enough to consume the bioload waste....meaning you may need more of a rock structure to employ more beneficial organisms.
I have a 20 gallon with more fish, rocks and sand.....which I have sps and lps. I think your 50 gallon is too lean of nutrients for your new sps additions. At this point, my advice would be to leave the chemicals alone and try more live rock or maybe add a deep sand bed to your sump to create a refugium. And that's my TWO PENNIES. Please keep us all posted.
- Larry
Again, have you tested for chlorine/chloramine?
Your salinity is 35ppt? I believe most vender keep 24-26ppt. If this is the case
your sps will be very stressed.... 10 ppt swing in 2 to 3 hr drip and into your qt tank or main tank.
You can have a parasite in that eats the spa corals, like sps eating nudibranchs. Get a six line wrasse, yellow or melenarus. I had these in my tank.... thank god it was only on one coral...
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I am sure that my tank has no parasites, I will inform soon, now there is a hard work to do, I will keep you informed with photos.
Here are the steps that I will carry out:
- My big fish leave on Saturday at their new 150 gallon home
- All my soft corals, snails and my little fish are going to pass to my quarantine aquarium.
- I'm going to brush all the rock out of the tank.
"I'm going to scratch the seaweed from my back glass and from the bottom.
- I am going to turn off my lights for 2 months while the nutrients stabilize and the algae die from the lack of light.
"Every week I'm going to blow my rocks with a water pump, to remove the remains of dead algae.
- after 4 weeks, I will add substrate again, I will use the red sea reef base pink
- In the whole process I will make big changes of water, in case some metal could have in the tank
Later I will begin slowly with my period of light, and I will add my fish and corals from the quarantine tank, I'll start from scratch and make things better with my nutrients.
If after all this, my new sps do not live, definitely the tank is cursed jajajaja
I couldn't tell you, I live close enough to the Pacific Ocean that all of my saltwater tanks are filled with filtered seawater. Just the way Mother Nature intended it to be, without any mixing.Daddy-o - What will chlorine/chloramine do to SPS and is there a kit for testing for it?
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