This is truly one of the most bizarre phenonmenons I've witnessed. My cousin essentially abandoned his Nanocube tank about six months ago after several clownfish kept dying in there (needless to say, the condition wasn't even great before the abandonment). He kept the water running and did manage to top off with some fresh water periodically, but the light broke so the tank was in darkness and without any real water change for at least six months. Today, he told me he looked at the tank for the first time in months and realized that a finger leather coral seems to still be alive, clinging onto a rock at an angle and still with some polyps showing.
Is this possible? How could any coral survive under this condition for that long? Basically, he's been reluctant to touch the tank and throw it out because he's afraid that if he opens the hood, a foul stench would permeate the room, so he's elected to just let it sit and ignore the problem. Also, apparently not only is the leather alive, but the other coral in there, a mushroom coral, also may not be dead.
My question is: assuming these guys really aren't dead, is there a safe way for me to try to rescue them into my Aquapod tank? Like should I try to quarantine them for a while in a bucket of fresh saltwater and see what happens first? I'm tempted to test that abandoned tank's water quality and see what I come up with. What if the water quality turns out to be horribly bad, but somehow the corals are still alive? Does that mean they're mutants that can't survive under "normal" conditions? I feel like those poor corals deserve a chance at life after all they've endured, but I also don't wanna screw up my current tank by introducing toxic mutants! Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
Kevin
Is this possible? How could any coral survive under this condition for that long? Basically, he's been reluctant to touch the tank and throw it out because he's afraid that if he opens the hood, a foul stench would permeate the room, so he's elected to just let it sit and ignore the problem. Also, apparently not only is the leather alive, but the other coral in there, a mushroom coral, also may not be dead.
My question is: assuming these guys really aren't dead, is there a safe way for me to try to rescue them into my Aquapod tank? Like should I try to quarantine them for a while in a bucket of fresh saltwater and see what happens first? I'm tempted to test that abandoned tank's water quality and see what I come up with. What if the water quality turns out to be horribly bad, but somehow the corals are still alive? Does that mean they're mutants that can't survive under "normal" conditions? I feel like those poor corals deserve a chance at life after all they've endured, but I also don't wanna screw up my current tank by introducing toxic mutants! Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks
Kevin