Long-Term Assessment

Only 4 months in and I am losing my battle to keep the purple gorgonians alive. Sponges are hanging in there for now.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10369483#post10369483 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Untamed12
Only 4 months in and I am losing my battle to keep the purple gorgonians alive. Sponges are hanging in there for now.




Hmmm, that doesn't sound right. Which ones are you speaking of, can you post a pic?
 
I got my TBS starter package 3-4 years ago now (how the time flies!) and loved it!! Yep, had some hitchhikers - pulled out the gorilla crabs when they were easy to catch until they were finally gone. Caught a mantis that I grew to respect and like in the process of trying to catch him so set up a tank for him, still have him, he's great! (Easiest way I've found to get a mantis out is pull the rock out of the tank, have had two pop right out that way now.) Honestly the worst part of TBS rock to me is that it had so much life on it that I had trouble stacking it without covering some of it up and had trouble adding corals cause the rock already had so much on it!! As with some of the others, some of the life has died off over the years, some my fault, some not. But I sooo enjoyed getting to see that life up close, even if it didn't make it long term, things like barnacles and tunicates are just amazing!!! And some life lives on of course, serpent & brittle stars, purple gorgonian, ... Would I do it again on a new tank startup? Depending what my long term goals for the tank were, yes!
 
I'm sure that I'm losing the purple gorgonians....are you doing anything specific for them such that you've kept them for nearly 4 years?

Sponges are also a challenge. I lost the tall red one's almost immediately...the other ones are hanging in there.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10371535#post10371535 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by HowardW
Hmmm, that doesn't sound right. Which ones are you speaking of, can you post a pic?

The purple ones, with white polyps. The gold ones in this photo are doing excellent, but they clearly have xoanthallae.

100_0201.jpg
 
Yes, I've been trying to target feed them daily...but I'm never sure if they are actually capturing the food. I've used "coral frenzy", as well as some sea-fan food.

What are you feeding that has kept them alive?
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=10423658#post10423658 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Untamed12
Yes, I've been trying to target feed them daily...but I'm never sure if they are actually capturing the food. I've used "coral frenzy", as well as some sea-fan food.

What are you feeding that has kept them alive?


I make up the following mixture for the 5-6 different octocoral species I have and target feed them 2-3 times a week with a small pipette and all pumps and skimmers turned off:


DT's Premium Reef Blend Phyto
Frozen Cyclopeeze
DT's oyster Eggs
Reef Chile
Hikari Frozen Baby Brine
Golden Pearls 100-200

This mixture gives me a huge variety of food sizes from 2 to over 800 microns and there is likely something in the mix that benefits each different species. I also stir up a small part of the substrate 1-2 times a week which the purple sea whips seem to like.
 
I do have the silica additive and have experimented with that. Unfortunately, diatoms went nuts so I stopped for now.

I was trying to achieve a measurable silica level, but I'll try it again at lower (immeasurable) levels.
 
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