Birdsnest acclimation question

reo

New member
Hi all,

A few days ago I got my first SPS frags: orange digi and a green ora birdsnest. I glued both to pieces of LR and placed them at the top, about 6-7 inches below the surface, in the direct flow of a koralia powerhead. The digi extended all its polyps very soon after, and seems to be doing well so far. The birdsnest, however, produced lots of mucus, and its polyps are still barely showing, and mostly just in the top half of the frag. The bottom half mostly doesn't extend at all, and it looks like there is an area in the bottom half that is lighter than the rest of the coral. Should I be concerned and change its location, or should I just wait it out?

The tank is 1 year old, 29g glass, T5HO's 4x31W, params are: temp 82, salinity 1.025, pH 8.4, ammonia/nitrites/nitrates: 0, PO4: <0.1, Alk: 10dKH, Calc: 440.
 
Birdsnest Location?

Birdsnest Location?

Before you move it could yuo sheild it with a piece af rock to see if it is too much flow. Or maybe change the direct flow to a glancing flow off the glass. Di you check the water perameters? How is your PH? Good choices on the types of corals! I hope you can get your birdsnest to open up,,,,,:wildone:
 
there are 2 acclimations that take place. first when you acclimate them by temp., then you could drip them but i never have. i have never had a death by temp acclimating then and then droppign them in. the mucous you see is thier protection when the water levels do down on the reef when tide goes out. nothing abnormal. then the coral must acclimate itself to your parameters, this could take 1-30 days you never know. then the coral is acclimated
 
So from my understanding, I should move it to the bottom and out of direct flow, and then move it up little by little every couple of days, until it's back at the top and in the direct flow? Wouldn't it cause more stress to it now that it has been at the top for a couple of days?
 
You say "direct flow", is it sitting right in front of a powerhead getting blasted or what?

It was about 10 inches in front of a Koralia 750, which creates a lot of turbulence, but I wouldn't call it getting blasted.

I moved the frag down to the bottom, and the polyp extension on the branches is much better. But the lighter area in the lower half of the stem seems to be getting worse, and I haven't seen those polyps extend at all.

I suspect that maybe it's because the guy who fragged it, did it by hand. The lighter area must be where he was applying pressure to snap it off.
 
A pic would help here.

But it sounds like your frag may be in a STN event if the base tissue is receding. My personal procedure is to glue the frag to a small bit of live (or dry) rock. That seems to halt the tissue recession. I'm not saying that you should do this, since I'm not really sure what's going on with your coral, just passing along my process.
 
Here's a photo. The tips are overexposed, so they look bleached here, but in reality they aren't. You can see that the lower half is pretty pale, but does have some life to it.





IMG_5996.jpg
 
It looks like its doing OK to me, the bottom should color back up after a while. I see Polyps all over it, so as long as they are there then the bottom is still alive. If it gets worse, i would break it off so a small chunk of living tissue is still connected to the dead part, so that way you know you broke it in the live part, then try to attach it to a rock.
 
from the pic, it looks fine. dont use direct flow. no need to light acclimate since u have 4 t5 bulbs. most sps r from much stronger light.
 
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