Help with coralline control please !!!

lllesley

New member
HI, I have just noticed this morning that Coralline is starting to encroach over some of my corals skeletons ?
My Trachy particularly seems to be a problem although some others as well.
I have got some amazing plating coralline which I like the look of, but not if its doing this.
Any suggestions on how to remove from coral skeletons, will it become a problem and take over completely or will the coral be ok ?
We have noticed that the trachy doesn't seem to open as much as he used to.
 

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Be thankful.
Its lovely in the right places.
My trachy probably is not thinking its lovely as well as 2 bubble corals and an encrusting Gonipora.
Love it on the rocks but no so mush all over the skeletons of my corals.
Afraid my tank will end up looking like Pompeii with coralline statues all over the tank. lol
 
You should be able to easily break it. The strain I had was very brittle, so it shouldn't be a problem.

I wish I had some for my new system as that stuff is beautiful.. Just keep an eye on it though..
 
ime allowing coralline to dry kills it, maybe make high tide and try and turkey baster the coral to keep it moist and keep drying off the coralline along with chipping it away on the edges if possible. I'd start fragging this stuff if it was my tank, that wafering type isnt easy to find and super pretty. Nice problem to have.
 
ime allowing coralline to dry kills it, maybe make high tide and try and turkey baster the coral to keep it moist and keep drying off the coralline along with chipping it away on the edges if possible. I'd start fragging this stuff if it was my tank, that wafering type isnt easy to find and super pretty. Nice problem to have.
thanks for the advice.
This is not the only coral effected. I have 2 bubble corals and an encrusting red goni that is going down the same path. If it stays on the skeleton I am ok with that but no none seems to be able to tell me if it will actually close over the coral and kill it ?
Why is it everyone says wow your so lucky, i bet they wouldn't say that if was as out of control as this is !! grrrrrr.....lol
 
not sure if you want to go this route but a pincushion urchin will probably keep it in check. i have 2 in my 75g and they are constantly cruising the rocks. i wish they'd cruise the glass where i have to keep scraping it off with a razor blade!
 
Ive been thinking about this and looking back on my experiences and sometimes you have to let the tank lead you and not the other way around. Since you have this invasive waffering coralline it might mean you cant keep low fleshy corals with skeletons. Acros are tolerant of their bases being encroached. RBTA, fancy clowns and coralline species tank sounds neat. You might also try gel superglue on the leading edges to stop them encroaching or reverse the direction of growth.

Can we see a full tank shot or more closeups of the coralline?
 
Ive been thinking about this and looking back on my experiences and sometimes you have to let the tank lead you and not the other way around. Since you have this invasive waffering coralline it might mean you cant keep low fleshy corals with skeletons. Acros are tolerant of their bases being encroached. RBTA, fancy clowns and coralline species tank sounds neat. You might also try gel superglue on the leading edges to stop them encroaching or reverse the direction of growth.

Can we see a full tank shot or more closeups of the coralline?

Super glue gel will not stop coraline will just grow right over it
 
ime allowing coralline to dry kills it, maybe make high tide and try and turkey baster the coral to keep it moist and keep drying off the coralline along with chipping it away on the edges if possible. I'd start fragging this stuff if it was my tank, that wafering type isnt easy to find and super pretty. Nice problem to have.

If the coral skeleton was the right shape, you could try suspending the tissue part underwater while leaving the skeleton above water long enough to kill the coralline. I don't think that'd work for the Trachyphyllia, though. If the coralline isn't attached to the skeleton maybe try getting the Trachyphyllia to retract 100% and then break the algae away?
 
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