On Saturday, I picked up a beautiful 3.5" crocea that looked good at the LFS (expected responses, attached to a small piece of rock, no sign of snails, etc.).
I drip-acclimated it for almost 4 hours, and placed it in my display tank after lights-out, at like 9:30pm.
At lights-on the next morning (8am), I eagerly peaked in on him, to found the clam on its side, detached from the rock, almost completely disintegrated-looking, and a huge mass of stringy white mucus coming off it.
Obviously, it was dead.
I'd never had something die so damn fast. This morning I'd noticed my torch coral polyps releasing large amounts of brown mucus, a hammer coral whose tissue was dissolving right off the skeleton (maybe brown jelly?), trumpet corals that are barely inflating and look rather bleached, and a rose BTA that's gotten quite bleached, too.
Any clues what's happening to my tank?
I did a 20% water change after I cleaned up the clam mess. My params before the change:
Temp: 81
SG: 1.024
pH: 8.3
Alk: 8dKH
Calcium: 380
Ammonia: 0
Nitrates: 0
Has anyone ever seen a clam die so fast?
I drip-acclimated it for almost 4 hours, and placed it in my display tank after lights-out, at like 9:30pm.
At lights-on the next morning (8am), I eagerly peaked in on him, to found the clam on its side, detached from the rock, almost completely disintegrated-looking, and a huge mass of stringy white mucus coming off it.
Obviously, it was dead.
I'd never had something die so damn fast. This morning I'd noticed my torch coral polyps releasing large amounts of brown mucus, a hammer coral whose tissue was dissolving right off the skeleton (maybe brown jelly?), trumpet corals that are barely inflating and look rather bleached, and a rose BTA that's gotten quite bleached, too.
Any clues what's happening to my tank?
I did a 20% water change after I cleaned up the clam mess. My params before the change:
Temp: 81
SG: 1.024
pH: 8.3
Alk: 8dKH
Calcium: 380
Ammonia: 0
Nitrates: 0
Has anyone ever seen a clam die so fast?