Need some emergency acclimation advice please!!!

donnievaz

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I picked some stuff locally tonight from a guy that was tearing his tank down because he's traveling for work too much and can't maintain it. That's my problem. I've got a bucket full of corals and a Crocea clam, I just tested the alk and it's 5.3 dKH. What's the recommended course of action to get this stuff into my tank without damage. My alk is 7.7 dKH. ph matches at 8.3 for both.
 
I really don't think that difference is really that significant. I've seen a number of threads where Alk was accidentally overdosed to the tune of going from 8.0 dKH to like 15 dKH and the result was some burnt tips on acros and elevated pH, but nothing disastrous. I would worry more about light acclimation than the Alk. Just put them down on your sand bed and move them to their final positions slowly over a couple of weeks.
 
I really don't think that difference is really that significant. I've seen a number of threads where Alk was accidentally overdosed to the tune of going from 8.0 dKH to like 15 dKH and the result was some burnt tips on acros and elevated pH, but nothing disastrous. I would worry more about light acclimation than the Alk. Just put them down on your sand bed and move them to their final positions slowly over a couple of weeks.

I don't agree or disagree with this. Drip acclimate in the Bucketfor 30 to 45 with maybe with some flow. And hope for the best. I have also had major changes cause no damage. I went from 78 temp to 64 durning a water change. Coral closed and was open next day
 
What kind of corals are there?

Various SPS, couple acros, millepora, I have to ID them, also some aussie acans. On another note does anyone know if it's ok to chisel the rock off with a hammer under the clam? Most of this stuff is on one rock that I don't have room for so it's going to need to come off the rock. The clam wouldn't budge at the guys house so he sold me the whole rock, clam coral and all for $30. How could I pass that up?!
 
I put a small pump and heater in the bucket and set up a drip at about 2 drops per second. I'm making new water to replace the dripped water from the display. I'll just drag this out as long as I can I guess. I'd really hate to lose the corals and especially don't want to lose the clam.
 
Do something, I would do a three hour drip acclamation and drop them in and hope for the best.
 
Various SPS, couple acros, millepora, I have to ID them, also some aussie acans. On another note does anyone know if it's ok to chisel the rock off with a hammer under the clam? Most of this stuff is on one rock that I don't have room for so it's going to need to come off the rock. The clam wouldn't budge at the guys house so he sold me the whole rock, clam coral and all for $30. How could I pass that up?!
Chisel rock away but leave what the clam is attached to alone, do not try to chisel the clam off the rock
 
every time I been in a fish store. I see them open boxes place coral in tanks. No acclimation. Now I don't know if there's ever comes that low. Just throwing it out there
 
every time I been in a fish store. I see them open boxes place coral in tanks. No acclimation. Now I don't know if there's ever comes that low. Just throwing it out there

I just know I had a pretty large alk swing not too long ago that took out a few corals and it didn't happen that fast.
 
Your going to have to drip them. If it helps, about 90% of corals including my clams came from 7.0-7.3 alk, my tank runs around 10. Just take it slow, make sure the temp matches at all times
 
Just plop them in. Alk always drops when you ship corals (probably the main reason sps can lose color after shipping). Get them into good water asap.
 

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