MatAndPatti
New member
About 2 months ago various corals in our 40BR setup started to die off. At first we had attributed it to a possible return of flatworms and treated with FWE accordingly. (We had treated for flatworms maybe 1-2 months prior with no ill effects, so I don't suspect any type of issues related to this re-treatment). After a couple of weeks it became evident that worms were not the issue. 2-3 very large water changes over the following weeks seemed to be no help. Things will seem to be alright for a few days, then we notice another piece starting to show skeleton. We've lost blastos, acans, chalices, you name it. Palys and zoas seem to be hanging in there for now. Lately our Hollywood Stunner chalice, which has been fairly bulletproof, is starting to show some tissue loss in various places.
This is driving me nuts. It's not a sudden loss at all, this has been over several weeks, a piece or two at a time. It's pretty discouraging, and I'm starting to understand folks who crash and quit the hobby. :headwally:
The tank is a 40BR with a 20-long sump. It's been up for a little over 2 years. Light is a Maxspect Razor. We haven't changed anything regarding lighting or equipment in quite a while.
A Triton test didn't seem to turn up any smoking gun as I was hoping it would. Below are the only 3 elements which came up as non-green, but from what I have read, none seem to be of concern. I would appreciate it if someone could tell me if I should be worrying about these:
Element / Analysis / Setpoint / Deviation
Br / 86.00 mg/l / 62.00 mg/l / 24
Li / 661.00 μg/l / 200.00 μg/l / 461
Mo / 0.00 μg/l / 12.00 μg/l / -12
Perhaps coincident to these problems has been the emergence of a pretty good case of what I think is bryopsis. It's not what I would call an epidemic level, but it's definitely annoying. The algae is not growing on the pieces that have died back, so I don't think it's crowding the corals out. I have some Reef Flux but have hesitated to use it because I'm concerned it could cause a complete tank crash. There is also a small amount of bubble algae, but not what I'd consider to be a problem.
We also have some aiptasia, but none of it is located in a spot where could be stinging pieces that we have lost.
The only tank inhabitants are 2 clown fish and a small population of mini brittle stars.
I run a BRS mini-reactor with mixed GFO and lignite carbon. We dose B-ionic 2 part to keep Alk and Ca in a descent range. Salt is about 75% Reef Crystals / 25% Instant Ocean (been mixing for a while because we've been transitioning from IO to RC, but we've been using this ratio for several months at this point).
Other stats from our last water test:
SG: 1.025
pH: ~8.1
Alk: 8.2 dKH
Ammonia: 0
Nitrite: 0 (API test kit)
Nitrate: 4 ppm
Ca: 440 ppm
Phosphate: 0 ppm
Mag: 1400 ppm
Please, any kind of suggestions would be appreciated! At this point I'm worried about changing anything too quickly, but it's obvious that something needs to be "fixed"... I just don't know what!
This is driving me nuts. It's not a sudden loss at all, this has been over several weeks, a piece or two at a time. It's pretty discouraging, and I'm starting to understand folks who crash and quit the hobby. :headwally:
The tank is a 40BR with a 20-long sump. It's been up for a little over 2 years. Light is a Maxspect Razor. We haven't changed anything regarding lighting or equipment in quite a while.
A Triton test didn't seem to turn up any smoking gun as I was hoping it would. Below are the only 3 elements which came up as non-green, but from what I have read, none seem to be of concern. I would appreciate it if someone could tell me if I should be worrying about these:
Element / Analysis / Setpoint / Deviation
Br / 86.00 mg/l / 62.00 mg/l / 24
Li / 661.00 μg/l / 200.00 μg/l / 461
Mo / 0.00 μg/l / 12.00 μg/l / -12
Perhaps coincident to these problems has been the emergence of a pretty good case of what I think is bryopsis. It's not what I would call an epidemic level, but it's definitely annoying. The algae is not growing on the pieces that have died back, so I don't think it's crowding the corals out. I have some Reef Flux but have hesitated to use it because I'm concerned it could cause a complete tank crash. There is also a small amount of bubble algae, but not what I'd consider to be a problem.
We also have some aiptasia, but none of it is located in a spot where could be stinging pieces that we have lost.
The only tank inhabitants are 2 clown fish and a small population of mini brittle stars.
I run a BRS mini-reactor with mixed GFO and lignite carbon. We dose B-ionic 2 part to keep Alk and Ca in a descent range. Salt is about 75% Reef Crystals / 25% Instant Ocean (been mixing for a while because we've been transitioning from IO to RC, but we've been using this ratio for several months at this point).
Other stats from our last water test:
SG: 1.025
pH: ~8.1
Alk: 8.2 dKH
Ammonia: 0
Nitrite: 0 (API test kit)
Nitrate: 4 ppm
Ca: 440 ppm
Phosphate: 0 ppm
Mag: 1400 ppm
Please, any kind of suggestions would be appreciated! At this point I'm worried about changing anything too quickly, but it's obvious that something needs to be "fixed"... I just don't know what!