fierceseaman
New member
Well, got a reverse hammer coral that was absolutely stunning from a dealer on this past tuesday. I do not think that the coral was damaged in shipping but it might have been. Either way, on wednesday night I believe that a hermit crab might have accidentally damaged it. On thursday when I woke up half of the coral was receded and damaged but the other half was looking fine, tentacles were fully inflated and extended with great color. I was hoping that it would pull through. Friday came and I started to see some things that should have tipped me off but I am still pretty new at this and have never seen the dreaded brown jelly. The coral was sliming and had stringy substances coming off of it, all signs of brown jelly I now know. I left friday evening and the coral still looked like it might pull through with only half of the head being affected. I returned today to find the entire head pretty much dissolved with only a couple bleached pieces of tissue still deep in the skeleton, those pieces still surrounded by what I can definitely identify as brown jelly. As soon as I got home and saw this I did an iodine dip on the coral. Nothing has really changed but I put it back in my tank and am working on a 20% water change.
So where to go now. Should I just remove what is left of the coral? I have a euphyllia dominated tank and desperately don't want it to spread but there is absolutely no evidence of brown jelly on any of my other corals and I'm definitely inspecting them well. Is it possible for the hammer to recover with just 10% of its original tissue after having taken such a bad beating? This hammer was a beautifully neon green and purple and if there was any chance I'd really like to try. Am I being silly though? Thanks, Adam.
So where to go now. Should I just remove what is left of the coral? I have a euphyllia dominated tank and desperately don't want it to spread but there is absolutely no evidence of brown jelly on any of my other corals and I'm definitely inspecting them well. Is it possible for the hammer to recover with just 10% of its original tissue after having taken such a bad beating? This hammer was a beautifully neon green and purple and if there was any chance I'd really like to try. Am I being silly though? Thanks, Adam.