phender
Active member
I am not posting this as scientific proof, it's just something that has happened twice.
I am not a very high tech reef keeper and I have too many tanks, too little time and too many hobbies. I don't test my water as often as I should, nor do I do water changes very often. I don't have calcium reactor, but instead rely on the addition of 2 part solutions to maintain calcium and hardness levels.
That said, several months ago my gigantea took a nose dive for no apparent reason. It wasn't opening up as much as normal, wasn't very sticky and stopped eating. Everything else in the tank; H. magnifica, H. crispa, leather corals, LPS, zoanthid, mushrooms, ricordia, all looked fine. I did all my tests and I noticed that the magnesium levels were down to around 900 ppm. (For those of you who don't know, they are supposed to be at least 1300) As soon as I started adding magnesium, the anemones started to perk up. After about a week and the Mg levels started to get closer to normal the carpet was back to normal.
Last weekend the gigantea started to look bad again. Guess what, the Mg levels were down around 1100 ppm. I have been adding Mg everyday this week and it is almost back to normal once again. In neither case did I panic and do a bunch of things like a water change or increase flow or light or force feed. All I did was bring up the Mg levels.
I know there are not a lot of gigantea keepers out there, but it is something to check if your carpet that you have had for a while starts to go bad on you.
I am not a very high tech reef keeper and I have too many tanks, too little time and too many hobbies. I don't test my water as often as I should, nor do I do water changes very often. I don't have calcium reactor, but instead rely on the addition of 2 part solutions to maintain calcium and hardness levels.
That said, several months ago my gigantea took a nose dive for no apparent reason. It wasn't opening up as much as normal, wasn't very sticky and stopped eating. Everything else in the tank; H. magnifica, H. crispa, leather corals, LPS, zoanthid, mushrooms, ricordia, all looked fine. I did all my tests and I noticed that the magnesium levels were down to around 900 ppm. (For those of you who don't know, they are supposed to be at least 1300) As soon as I started adding magnesium, the anemones started to perk up. After about a week and the Mg levels started to get closer to normal the carpet was back to normal.
Last weekend the gigantea started to look bad again. Guess what, the Mg levels were down around 1100 ppm. I have been adding Mg everyday this week and it is almost back to normal once again. In neither case did I panic and do a bunch of things like a water change or increase flow or light or force feed. All I did was bring up the Mg levels.
I know there are not a lot of gigantea keepers out there, but it is something to check if your carpet that you have had for a while starts to go bad on you.