Torch barely Surviving

JustPoprocks

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I have recently received a torch in bad condition. The torch was purchased 2-3 weeks ago as it looks now ... it looks like the torch was cut straight down the mouth...any ideas or suggestions to help recover or get ahead of any issues
89E78041-AECB-44DB-A979-8E5081398C14.jpeg
3016A0B3-D8D1-4890-BA1C-1D45F1127894.jpeg
 
First and foremost, don't give up on your frag! I've had far worse frogspawn and torches that were almost completely receding make full recoveries!

Dip you dip the coral when it came in?
What is the flow like at that particular spot?
 
Flow,..its in a 10 gallon grow out with a hydor 240&425, it’s moves with flow but not pushed around at all.
 
I just bought seachem reef yesterday to use on a hammer that wouldn't open up. Its an iodine based disinfectant. I left it in the dip for about 10 minutes. 30 minutes after, in the DT, it was open and happy. Highly recommend
 
Beautiful! I’m fairly new to coral not saltwater and haven’t really fragged much...how do you properly frag a torch I feel like this was done wrong lol
 
Most of the ones I've gotten have an inch or 2 of skeleton (branch), then the polyps. Definitely not cut at the mouth. Ive had some pretty bad cut frags though, not quite that bad
 
I think the LFS was trying to get stuff fast and just cut it where it was splitting before it actually split? With it being cut this way... is there any infection possibility to watch for?
 
I haven’t dipped it personally, the friend I received it from did 2-3 weeks ago when he received it which was probably fresh cut at the time.
 
I'd recommend dipping it yourself. Have you noticed any brown jelly coming out if it? Is it showing any skeleton?
 
here real-time pictures (lights have been off for a few hours)
C157E937-187B-4D51-9322-984FBE2AEA61.jpeg
8F1A7516-9790-44A7-A38D-38C4F5FEC8FC.jpeg
 
Last edited:
here real-time pictures (lights have been off for a few hours)
C157E937-187B-4D51-9322-984FBE2AEA61.jpeg
8F1A7516-9790-44A7-A38D-38C4F5FEC8FC.jpeg
Whoa what a job...
The skeleton is the boney structure of the coral. Pretty much everything that isn't the polyp. When unhappy, the coral polyps retreat into the stalk, (skeleton), and you see sharp bits in a ring around where the polyps were. Give it a dip in an iodine solution, put it in low flow and lower light and leave it for awhile. It should recover
 
Gotcha, so how far down the stalk would still be considered part of the skeleton?
 

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