Thats exactly what we need to see, unique presentations from your reef that set it apart from others. So glad that’s not 295 gallons, whew.
that being said, those corals were brought up carefully and to lose any of them would be devastating and unacceptable. Some very sensitive ones are in tow as well.
no immediate action needed but my ramp up brain storms based on pics are these:
-that is what a real reef looks like to scuba divers. I’ve seen grand cayman down at thirty feet and it’s exactly like that, some dispersed growths tbd on the sandbed, that way conchs have something to eat, and some growths in between corals affixed to rocks that may not be the whorled coralline we want but nonetheless grow in pristine good waters so clean up crews and parrotfish have something to eat. The look we want to attain where those growths are missing is unnatural - params aren’t causing any issues for you at all that’s what a reef grows so grazers will physically cause the balance ideal. There are no parameters we should alter, your params have grown antlers out of sps and caused finicky gonis to open wide. Your feeding, it’s all perfect hold course.
- we can do an effective test model of one removable rock which I think you’ll like since it’s not a whole tank move, we’d save that for last.
if it’s possible lift out one single easy test rock and set it on the counter, if a coral is attached that’s ok just dribble or spray saltwater on it, use a knife point to target dig in and lightly but effectively rasp up and out any attached invaders. ID isn’t particularly important as we should not alter tank params around given various strains of cells, it’s not worth the insult to corals who clearly like being in this setting. We are physically learning about how the invader attaches etc. be rinsing off the dislodged teased out invasion and rinse away down the sink with saltwater, make the test rock physically free of its attachments by metal knife tip scrapes. This mimics effective rasping of ocean grazers we can’t fit in that tank. Last step: find a creative way to dab or dribble common 3% peroxide on the former invasion spots you dislodged, avoiding any coral. This is an ideal and safe spot kill technique for reefing, best I’ve ever seen. Rinse off after a few mins burn and set this one totally cleaned detailed rock back in the tank and we watch to see how well it stays clean or takes on new growths.
-eventually we can decide to rip clean the sand to get it free or perhaps just topically siphon it all out then you run a sterilizer temporarily to catch and burn invader cells before they remass
-that appears to be a very brightly lit system all the way around. Not windex blue but white-heavy spectrum and that too can select for invasions, at some point We can also brainstorm simple light intensity and color changes as a harmless trial.