Here's that hammer.
So an hour ago, I pulled it out and put it in a bowl of room temperature RO/DI water to see if I could spy some LPS eating nudibranchs. I'll tell you this, that coral stunk before I was able to submerge it. Several baby brittle starfish fell off of it, as did a collonista snail and some asterinas. But I didn't see any sign of predators. Where it was dying, it was dissolving, but I didn't see the tell-tale signs of brown jelly disease either.
So next I grabbed my shears and the dremel, and cut off the last remaining heads. These were then put in my quarantine tank, and the water felt a tad warm. Oops. It was around 86F because today I didn't run the a/c and just let the outdoor air flow through the house. We've had lots of humidity and some rain, but the temperature was in the 70s. Looks like the MH heated up the fishroom enough to cook the q-tank a tad. So if any nudibranchs survived the ro/di dip, and then the surgical procedure, I think getting a 6 degree raise in temp should have scared them out of hiding.
I don't know if the remaining polyps will survive, but I'm going to keep a positive attitude. I put some ice packs in the tank to cool the water. The temp of my reef was 80.5, so it was definitely a shocker.
The rest of the skeleton was disposed of, instead of putting it in the sump or refugium. I didn't want the dying matter to add issues to the water quality. Does anyone have any idea what to do with hammer tissue (polyps that dropped from the skeleton)? Is there a possibility of growing these out into new hammers perhaps, laying them in a tray of gravel under decent lighting perhaps?
On a nicer note, some eye candy...
Bytor Orange Zoos
A. secale - or Melev's Purple Monster.
Lavendar Frilly Mushrooms
The unknown coral again. I'm sure someone told me what it was called, but I forgot to note it anywhere.
And the Tyree frag.