Yeah .... So that is a bit of a story ... first of all, the tank is about 3 months old(yeah, a little new)
I noticed the one started looking bad so I measured the parameters. I got a reading of .25 ammonia so I did a bunch of water changes in a few days and dosed seachem prime.
Nitrites, nitrate are zero and the local fish store got almost unreadable phosphates. My PH was a bit low (~7.8). The thing they did notice was my salinity was off. I had 1.022-1.023. looks like my refractometer got out of whack. So I fixed that and it is between 1.025 and 1.026 since yesterday.
Worth noting, I think the ammonia reading was a false positive. I got one of those ammonia badges and it has never registered any ammonia. I am using the API marine test which is apparently notorious for for reading small amounts of ammonia when it doesn't exist.
So, since correcting the salinity the anemones(2) have been moving a bit but settled today. I'll see if they move more. I was considering dosing prime more but don't want to do too many things all at once.
They are still very deflated. I'm not sure what the best next step is but I was thinking to wait for a couple days.
I was also wondering if it might be bacterial. Unfortunately I don't have a separate tank to treat them. Technically I have a tank but no extra powerheads or heater.
Thoughts?
Humans! Ill say this.. Bro these are living animals and before you go out and buy something advanced like a sea anemone....it is your responsible to make sure you are in a position and your tank is as well to support them..........
1. The 1st thing you need to do is get good test kits. i suggest you look at Salifert, nyos, red sea... ext. API test kits are known not to be all that accurate.
2. Make sure you have the lighting, water movement, and stable parameters to keep a sea anemone.
3. Your tank is too new for a sea anemone imo. Unless its a transfer you need much more time and bio diversity to support it. Sea anemones... even bubbletips I would consider on the advanced side of the spectrum.
You need a little Phos and a little Nitrates.
Not in stone but a goal, with that said all tanks are different.
PH peak: 8.1- 8.5 (PH fluctuates through the day, peaking just before lights out)
ALK: 7-9Dkh (Stick to a solid number...really important if you plan keep stoney corals)
Salinity: Natural Sea Water levels (1.025 - 1.026)
Phosphate: .04 - .09
Nitrate: 5-15ppm
You should not have detectable levels of ammonia or nitrite...period.
With that said.... before you change anything understand what's wrong (Test, test, test). But make sure you have the life support systems and the skills and/or research to support what ever you decide to keep.