Acros receding

twabatman2004

New member
Half of my acros are receding VERY slowly from the bottom. Nothing has changed and all levels are perfect in essence. My calcium is a little high at like 460-480. Anyone had this happen or any ideas? Half my frags are doing this and the other half are doing great. Lps are doing awesome! It's not like a normal fast rtn like I've seen before.

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Please list your parameters so others can help tell you what's going on. Tissue recession from the base could be from low Alk, pests, low flow, phosphates, etc.
 
Mag 1350
Alk 8
Cal 460-480
Ph 8.1
Nitrite, nitrate, ammonia, phosphate all unditactable.

The location and flow have all been the same months and they have all been fine until just a few weeks ago.
 
Try putting super glue or plumbers putty around the bad section all the way up to the healthy tissue. This sometimes stops the receding. It may be caused be lack of flow, lack of proper light to name a few. Sometimes certain frags or corals just do well in a tank. Dont go chasing parameters if the tank is stabel that will only cause further aggravation. None of the numbers you listed should cause a problem if they are accurate.
 
Try putting super glue or plumbers putty around the bad section all the way up to the healthy tissue. This sometimes stops the receding. It may be caused be lack of flow, lack of proper light to name a few. Sometimes certain frags or corals just do well in a tank. Dont go chasing parameters if the tank is stabel that will only cause further aggravation. None of the numbers you listed should cause a problem if they are accurate.

Thanks, will do
 
Thanks, will do

This did work on one of my stags, It was receding slowly from the base up and once the plumbers putty covered over a bit of good tissue it grew back down over it. I ment to say in my previous post that some corals just DONT do well but Im guessing you figured that out.
 
Alk of 8.0 is not causing this problem. The recession is caused by some sort of stress on the coral. The parameters you have are pretty good. They just need to be kept stable for a while. Have the corals grown to the point where they are starting to block flow to each other?
 
Did you recently do a water change?

Sometimes the exchange of freshly mixed saltwater, lacks beneficial bacteria for the water's ecosystem to stabilize. Many reasons why a system needs to be fully established before high requirement corals are kept.

I've had an instance where I changed entirely too much water (50%) and there were issues of STN. I discovered that the tank water and fresh mix didn't have parameters that matched.
 
Alk of 8.0 is not causing this problem. The recession is caused by some sort of stress on the coral. The parameters you have are pretty good. They just need to be kept stable for a while. Have the corals grown to the point where they are starting to block flow to each other?

Alk is 50% of the issues RTN occurs for me, normally an alk swing.
One day your clams consume 60% so there's a redundant amount for SPS. Another day it consumes only 10% during the winter and you need to lower the bubble count on your reactor.
 
Alk of 8.0 is not causing this problem. The recession is caused by some sort of stress on the coral. The parameters you have are pretty good. They just need to be kept stable for a while. Have the corals grown to the point where they are starting to block flow to each other?

They are all just frags pretty much.
 
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