Acro RTN - Please Help

chatyak

New member
I've had an acro frag in my tank for a few weeks now (coral QT) and just in the past 2 days it lost all of its tissue. I have other SPS in my display that are doing fine and growing. I don't understand why it died so suddenly.

I use Reef Crystals salt, and coral QT temp is around 80-81 degrees. There is no sump (just a 10 gallon) so when I add top off water - it drops down about 1 degree. Water changes of about 1 gallon at a time. The tank also has a few snails and 2 blood shrimps in it - so I feed a few pellets each day.

Lighting with a Orphek PR-25 pendant, so PAR is not an issue. I also have a clam in there, pulsing xenia, montipora, and a plating coral... all seem ok....

Acro was in the 200+ PAR range.

Why did this happen? I keep reading that high ALK causes this. Is this true? Reef Crystals has high alk to begin with... It doesn't make sense though - I use the same salt for the display and all is well...


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I noticed the base was white yesterday, and it also ran upwards in a streak behind the coral about an inch or two (where there was little light on that side).... I inspected closely and found this crab. I don't know if it was an acro crab or not so I placed it in a cup for now. It is about the size of a pencil eraser - tiny. What kind of crab is it?

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Then I dipped the coral for 20 minutes in Coral Revive with QT water - then rinsed from fresh display water and put back in QT - now today, almost all of the tissue is gone - not just the base.

At first I thought maybe the crab was slowly eating it over the few weeks.

$60 gone.... :headwally:


Why did this happen and how do I stop it from happening again?
 
20 minutes in Revive is too long for SPS. Directions say up to 15 minutes. Personally, I dip for 10 minutes. For smooth skin acros, I only dip for 5 min.
 
Yea Revive is very strong, and 20 mins is a lot. I usually dip all my corals for 5-10 minutes only. Never more than that
 
There is an article in coral magazine that talks about frags and the percent success rate of them surviving. Simply stating that frags that are smaller than i think 1 inch is mor likely to die that larger frags over 1 inch. It states that if you do go below 1 inch to make sure that the frag was cut and glued under water and never exposed to air. That will give you a much better chance of survival. I dont know if that was your issue but i figured id share that info i read in the mag.
 
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