Help Magnesio is went to heaven!

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Any type of decay is going to involve the presence of bacteria. So is the bacteria the cause or the effect?.

An SPS coral is under stress from any one of a multitude of sources in a limited volume reef tank. Is there a specific bacteria that is just waiting to move in when the coral tissue becomes sick, or is the bacteria just there as it is in any type of dying or decaying flesh? Would you find the same type bacteria in a piece of rotting SPS as you would in a decaying fish corpse? Probably.

I personally do not think you can call bacteria the cause of the RTN/STN, as in there is one type specifically causing it. Moreover, I would think the presence of bacteria is the effect of the stressors. I would call the stressors the cause of the STN/RTN, and the bacterial presence the effect.
 
Any type of decay is going to involve the presence of bacteria. So is the bacteria the cause or the effect?.

There is no decay in RTN. The bacteria eats the live tissue.

An SPS coral is under stress from any one of a multitude of sources in a limited volume reef tank. Is there a specific bacteria that is just waiting to move in when the coral tissue becomes sick, or is the bacteria just there as it is in any type of dying or decaying flesh? Would you find the same type bacteria in a piece of rotting SPS as you would in a decaying fish corpse? Probably.

RTN bacteria isn't "any type", but a specific one. Nothing to do with decaying...

I personally do not think you can call bacteria the cause of the RTN/STN, as in there is one type specifically causing it. Moreover, I would think the presence of bacteria is the effect of the stressors. I would call the stressors the cause of the STN/RTN, and the bacterial presence the effect.

The RTN bacteria comes in action when corals are stressed. How many million time do I have to tell you? LOL!! If that specific bacteria isn't present in the system there is no chance for RTN to happen.
Then"¦ if the coral dies and look like RTN it's probably STN or similar. I believe that's more likely to be what we would call "melting". That also happens under the colonies, when tissue doesn't get enough light and dies with the loss of zooxanthellae energy. Not necessarily bacterial infection.

You guys didn't know all that?
What kinda "SPS guys" are you? LOL!!! Just kidding.:thumbsup:

Grandis.
 
There is no decay in RTN. The bacteria eats the live tissue.

RTN bacteria isn't "any type", but a specific one. Nothing to do with decaying...

The RTN bacteria comes in action when corals are stressed. How many million time do I have to tell you? LOL!! If that specific bacteria isn't present in the system there is no chance for RTN to happen.
Then"¦ if the coral dies and look like RTN it's probably STN or similar. I believe that's more likely to be what we would call "melting". That also happens under the colonies, when tissue doesn't get enough light and dies with the loss of zooxanthellae energy. Not necessarily bacterial infection.

You guys didn't know all that?
What kinda "SPS guys" are you? LOL!!! Just kidding.:thumbsup:

Grandis.

Grandis,
Where are you getting your absolute certainty that RTN is caused by bacteria? You talk down to other posters in this thread as if you are the only one that knows this is a fact. It is not a fact, and has not been scientifically verified.

Here is a 1998 article by Eric Bornemann and Jonathan Lowrie that concludes with the hypothesis that RTN is a stress response, and not a response to bacteria, and further dismisses a pathogen causation of RTN due to inconsistent finding of pathogens in RTN affected tissue, with any bacteria only exacerbating the RTN, not causing it. Quotation of article summary below:

Article: http://www.reefs.org/library/aquarium_net/0498/0498_2.html

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Summary

Our hypothesis of an immune mediated response as being of primary importance in the affliction known as RTN is based on its overwhelming occurrence in stressful or recently stressful conditions. The pattern of tissue loss, with tissue often being lost as intact sheets with no gross evidence of bleaching or degradation, suggests that the host tissues have lost adhesion. The ability of corals to lose cell adhesion in response to stress is well documented in the Pocilloporids' poly bail-out response (Sammarco 1982, et. al.) and to thermal stress, etc. (Gates 1982). The lack of consistent findings of associated pathogens in RTN affected corals lends further credence to the theory that stress can cause such a reaction. The presence of potential pathogens in coral mucus would only exacerbate the stress response, with digestive action of autolysis and already present bacteria accounting for further tissue degradation. The physiologic and biochemical attributes required for such a reaction have been shown to be present. Furthermore, many descriptions of coral disease in the wild, especially those studied in conditions of stress, have been often reported to have tissue necrosis at varying rates. The relative levels of stress in the wild are, in most instances, of an order many magnitudes lower than those which are present in the collection, shipping and placement of corals into a new and captive environment. The RTN reaction in both numbers and severity would be fit logically within the confines of an stress related immune reaction hypothesis. Antonius's work, the role of stress in studies and observations of wild disease and necrotic events (Peters, et. al.), as well as the presence of the highly pathogenic V. vulnificus found by Bingman, would be synergistic with the impaired immune function suggested in this paper. We are currently compiling the sum total of experimental data we have to date, and will be working on more studies in the future. These will be published at a later date.
>


If you have proof of your absolute certainty that RTN is bacterial in origin, then cite your proof. The article I have quoted and cited, which in itself cites studies supporting the authors' conclusions, says you are wrong. Saying read page 693 of the Sprung and Delbeek book proves nothing.
 
That is indeed a great article!
Thanks for posting!

I'll take advantage and post here an observation from the same article you posted:

"To be sure, the predatory bacteria, Desulfovibrio and Beggiatoa have been found to destroy the tissue of Platygyra exposed to chemical pollutants (Mitchell, Chett 1975), and theV. vulnificus found by Bingman and Dixon (1997) is hemolytic and capable of causing tissue necrosis. However, other potential pathogenic Vibrio species, such as V. alginolyticus and V. parahaemolyticus, are swarmers that are capable of rapid colonization and form often dominant bacterial aggregates in coral mucus, even in the most inhospitable high flow conditions (Ducklow, Mitchell 1979). Thus, the presence of potentially pathogenic Vibrios in the coral mucus may be viewed as a normal occurrence that does not ordinarily cause disease. The finding of V. vulnificus in RTN affected colonies d it may be significant in both etiology and pathology of certain cases of RTN. However, its presence is not unexpected, nor is it demostratably causative for all cases."

It is clear to me that Eric considered a Vibrio pathogen, even though he suggested otherwise. There was no definitive/total exclusion of a pathogen in the article for RTN, I believe. The article was published more with the intent of a speculation on the subject, trying to find more hypothesis related to the subject. Witch is very welcome to the literature in finding out what was going on. I do believe that we shouldn't exclude other possibilities as well. It could be a combination of factors too.

The problem is that there are basically two (or much more?) hypothesis for the phenomenon and of course that if the scientists didn't figure out what RTN really is, who am I to say what that is? LOL!!! No, I'm not imposing at any level that I do know what causes RTN for sure, but only bringing what the literature expose to us, hobbyists.
So to answer your question, no I do not know if RTN is indeed caused by bacteria. Not with absolutely certainty.

I'm sorry if I gave the wrong impression of talking down to anyone here. That wasn't my intention at all. Sometimes discussions can sound like that, but that wasn't what I wanted. One could come to my side of the boat and perhaps also feel like that. It's just a discussion and that happens sometimes. But I apologize to anyone if they felt mistreated.
It's important to keep the respect among us.

I have a tremendous respect for Eric and in fact want to bring one of his quotes about the subject. Please read:

"Is it possible through shipping we are killing these bacterium. Once in our systems that particular bacteria may not be available.

Yes, and no. There is a lot of work to be done in this area, but if you look at the works which have been done, there are definitely some bacteria genera which are typical - Vibrios and Psuedomonas are very common colonizers, and Ritchie, et. al., showed a trend from Psuedomonas to Vibrios when coral tissue becomes necrotic - Vibrios exploit that material better...Ducklow and Mitchell showed Vibrios (mostly V. alginolyticus and V. parahaemolyticus) to compose over 50% of the flora on healthy corals...others have found similar constituents....at least some species are "swarmers" and use their flagella to actively stay around coral mucus rather than being sort of "drifters"...

Obviously, the ability of the coral to change its mucus content and composition will influence those types that colonize to some degree....as well as the nutritional status of the coral and, hence, the composition of the mucus produced. Shipping plays its role in that mucus is not well flushed and becomes thick...bacteria in logarhythmic growth can quickly become problematic in that they affect coral respiration by their numbers....if anything, shipping doesn't eliminate the bacteria but causes a dangerous amplification of their numbers. Over time, though, we may see the extermination of one species by substrate dominance and without access to potential recruits, yes, we might be eliminating some of these "normal" flora. However, I don't think anyone has (or could) actually get into a repertoire of tanks to analyze the average numbers and types of bacteria available or present. Marine bacteriology is pretty cloaked in mystery yet...Most of the work has been towards those species which show a potential for human pathogenicity and identification of species is very complex and many species are unnamed/unreported. The studies of coral mucus bacteria usually identify only by genera or, sometimes, even less. That is one of the hurdles we are trying to overcome in our RTN bacteria work...Rob Toonen, who has our RTN cultures in perma-storage, has talked to a lot of people, asking for help, and they mostly laugh at the implications...."Impossible," they intimate. We do have a protocol now, and you can do some work via selective platings and antibiotic sensitivity assays, as Jonathan and I did originally, but apparently amplification of DNA using restriction length fragment polymorphism is required for good results and that costs $$$. AH for an aquarium industry grant! LOL"

From:
http://www.reefs.org/library/article/e_borneman2.html

That article is from around 1997 (?). The book I suggested was first published on 2005, so could be that the information on the article you posted isn't current (?). There were many questions, and still are, to answer the phenomenon and I don't think there is really a firm way to look at it yet.

You can also find more info in the Delbeek & Sprung's 2005 book on page 137.
They talk about the bacteria Vibrio coralliilyticus affecting Pocillopora damicornis to support their observations on RTN in closed systems. Such observations were carefully made related to higher temperature (stress) and total tissue loss, in the RTN context. Reference was indicated to Ben-Haim and Rosenberg, 2002; Ben-Haim et al 2003. So it was a more recent scientific study then the 1997 article from Eric.

I hope you could take that into consideration.

This is not to prove my point, but to consider other works with an open mind and respect of the subject. It is so easy to just close for eyes and believe in the stress alone. It's true that it would be practically impossible to isolate such bacteria from reef tanks, but it is important to have an open mind to the great possibility of the presence of a pathogen, in order to possibly isolate the affected colony and prevent further infections.

If the hobbyist doesn't take all that info into consideration he/she will obviously ignore a serious possibility of the cause IMO. That isn't responsible in my point of view. To spread the word that the possibility of a pathogen isn't considerable isn't responsible either. It shouldn't be that way. It's just a matter of considering it as a possibility. My first impression, and after discussion went further, was that nowadays people just look at RTN as a pure and obligated reflection of stress, totally excluding any possibility of pathogen (bacteria) to be present in the system. That was the originated argument, after my first suggestion in this thread (post #14).

So, my point really is not to remove the great possibility of a pathogen.
Again, you might know of many tanks, even large systems, that never had any RTN issues, even when stress cause by temperature was a fact. That could be one of the observations to help us understand the phenomenon.

This is great!
Hope other could join us with their own observations/articles as well!! :beer:

Grandis.
 
Grandis,
Please give others a little credit. You did nothing to encourage any open conversation about the cause of RTN in this thread. You set yourself up as the ad hoc expert on RTN and dismissed any other attempts to explain it causatively except to say that is is caused by a bacteria. Further, you gave the appearance that it was common knowledge that it was bacterial in nature and nothing else. If you forgot this, go read your own posts number 14, 24, 30, 36 and 42.

The simple fact is that you do not know if you are correct or incorrect in what you have stated, cannot prove it one way or the other, and your belief that RTN is strictly bacterial in origin is no more correct or validated than any other cause anyone else has posted in this thread.

Posters like you do not encourage any open discussion. You only serve to feed your own ego because you think you know more than everyone else.

Now that is has been shown to everyone in this thread that you have just another possible cause of RTN rather that the de facto cause as you would like everyone to believe, to try to represent yourself as someone encouraging an open discussion of the cause of the OP's RTN is frankly insulting to all thread participants.
 
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Grandis,
Please give others a little credit. You did nothing to encourage any open conversation about the cause of RTN in this thread. You set yourself up as the ad hoc expert on RTN and dismissed any other attempts to explain it causatively except to say that is is caused by a bacteria. Further, you gave the appearance that it was common knowledge that it was bacterial in nature and nothing else. If you forgot this, go read your own posts number 14, 24, 30, 36 and 42.

The simple fact is that you do not know if you are correct or incorrect in what you have stated, cannot prove it one way or the other, and your belief that RTN is strictly bacterial in origin is no more correct or validated than any other cause anyone else has posted in this thread.

Posters like you do not encourage any open discussion. You only serve to feed your own ego because you think you know more than everyone else.

Now that is has been shown to everyone in this thread that you have just another possible cause of RTN rather that the de facto cause as you would like everyone to believe, to try to represent yourself as someone encouraging an open discussion of the cause of the OP's RTN is frankly insulting to all thread participants.

I'm encouraging you know.
Please go ahead and respond my last post.

Grandis.
 
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"¦ and I just can't believe that you are THAT hurt. LOL!

Grandis.

I am not hurt at all. I have dealt with your type on this Forum many times before now.

You hurt other reefers with erroneous assumptions you post as fact and try to pass off as fact. Unfortunately, some readers will believe that you are the expert you try to pass yourself off as, believe what you post, then further perpetuate the erroneous information they get from you.

Your hurt far more than you help.
 
LOL!!! I'm not an expert in anything.
I don't even have SPS corals in my home systems.
I'll not hear you crying though.
If you don't want to discuss, that's it. LOL!!!

Grandis.
 
Come on guys! this is a forum to discuss no to figth!! we are sharing experience not theory!!! as always the theory says one thing and says another practice.

Just post your experience, and thats it dont quote articles about the year of the dinosaurs LOL!!! Joke!!

but any way in my little expirience whit SPS a stress can cause RTN! im not sure about bacterial attack!!! in fact whats the diference betwen Necrosis and RTN? it is the same?
 
Come on guys! this is a forum to discuss no to figth!! we are sharing experience not theory!!! as always the theory says one thing and says another practice.

Just post your experience, and thats it dont quote articles about the year of the dinosaurs LOL!!! Joke!!

but any way in my little expirience whit SPS a stress can cause RTN! im not sure about bacterial attack!!! in fact whats the diference betwen Necrosis and RTN? it is the same?

No problem...
I'm very sorry if I sounded harsh in any of my messages.
As I've said, no hard feelings.

I would think one of the best definitions for the word necrosis is:
"Death of cells or tissues through injury or disease, especially in a localized area of the body."
RTN is Rapid Tissue Necrosis.
I would substitute the word necrosis by (destruction of the cells).

Grandis.
 
No problem...
I'm very sorry if I sounded harsh in any of my messages.
As I've said, no hard feelings.

I would think one of the best definitions for the word necrosis is:
"Death of cells or tissues through injury or disease, especially in a localized area of the body."
RTN is Rapid Tissue Necrosis.
I would substitute the word necrosis by (destruction of the cells).

Grandis.

Ok here is another question....

How about when you have necrosis.. For any reason... then stops whit out a treatment for the "bacteria" how you explain that?
 
I've had RTN from shock of temperature and after stirring my whole sand bed on a few SPS. I've had STN from shading or lack of flow. When I had low nutrients my corals would just turn pastel color. I increased flow and it stopped STN and coral started encrusting again. It's really hard to say...too many variables, but yep that's my experience with RTN/STN..
 
Ok here is another question....

How about when you have necrosis.. For any reason... then stops whit out a treatment for the "bacteria" how you explain that?

Necrosis can happen for many reasons. Insect bites could give you some necrosis due to the injection of a venom, for example.

Necrosis, as I've said before, occurs when cells die.

One of the reasons for necrosis is bacterial infection.

Different situations, not related, my friend.

Grandis.
 
Necrosis can happen for many reasons. Insect bites could give you some necrosis due to the injection of a venom, for example.

Necrosis, as I've said before, occurs when cells die.

One of the reasons for necrosis is bacterial infection.

Different situations, not related, my friend.

Grandis.

dont you have phobia to baterium? LOL!!

Really? everything has to do with bacteria? how it is possible i cant belive it really.

STN and RTN are produced by bacteria? so you mean the stress of a coral has nothing to do......

seriously?
 
I've had RTN from shock of temperature and after stirring my whole sand bed on a few SPS. I've had STN from shading or lack of flow. When I had low nutrients my corals would just turn pastel color. I increased flow and it stopped STN and coral started encrusting again. It's really hard to say...too many variables, but yep that's my experience with RTN/STN..

I also heard about the stirring sand beds, specially Jaubert systems. Some believe that the bacteria responsible for the RTN would reproduce in higher numbers in the plenum.

Yeah, I agree with too many variables and that is probably the main reason why it is so hard to find out what really plays with RTN.

Thanks very much for sharing.

Grandis.
 
dont you have phobia to baterium? LOL!!

Really? everything has to do with bacteria? how it is possible i cant belive it really.

STN and RTN are produced by bacteria? so you mean the stress of a coral has nothing to do......

seriously?

LOL! Yeah, scary stuff!

Yes, I totally believe that stress is what gives the green sign for the bacteria to act, as I've said before.

Grandis.
 
STN and RTN is just a term for losing tissue not a diagnosis. Lots of reasons for a SPS to lose it's tissue, like leaving your acro frag in a jar of anti bacterial soap.
 
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