unboundmind
New member
hi all, i could use some help from the collective mind. the aq was stable meaning water was ok, creatures were happy, corals were happy, aptasia was happy and more contained. no major or minor changes for quite some time.
we moved the aq set up the day b4 our actual move. used as much of the water as we could which was all but approx 10 gallons. aside from a new stand everything was the same meaning: 85 gallon aq tank with 40 gallon sump and external pump; 125 gallon protein skimmer; prefilter in overflow and for the move i included an amonia filter; creatures: star fish, tomatoe clown, yellow tang, huge engineer gobe, maroon and gold clown, 2 mandarins and a red hawkfish, several crabs, pj cardinal, and a clam, corals variety, leathers, nothing exotic.
so what happened is i could not get the water to clear so i water changed, the ps was pulling out good gunk; and i tested everything was within reasonably ok except amonia which was very high details below, so i hunted for death and found one crab body which was removed, everyone else accounted for. i changed 10-15 gallons of water a day. the amonia level would improve for most of the day then go back up; aside from being a little lethargic no one was showing alot of stress. i also dosed the tank with amonia lock. i do not believe i am overfeeding and if you listen to the tang and maroon clown in particular i am underfeeding ;o).
so i talked with hector and he recommended to double the water change efforts and figure out if any corals were dead as opposed to retreating so being less than an expert i decided to remove all of the corals to another 'tank' and see what that did. he also offered to have anyone i needed to move to move to his shop or to determine status of corals. so 2 water changes later levels have improved but amonia is still too high.
parameters from last night (i'm getting ready to retest):
salinity 125; temp 79; ph 8.2, alk 2;ca 450; nitrate 10; phos 5; amonia 2ppm
so i'm wondering whether the ammonia lock worked and levels are showing hi when in reality the amonia was converted into harmless then eventually nitrate which is why that is a little hi?
how do you tell if a coral is retreating temporarily vs dead? :sad1::sad1: these are all leathers and soft corals, names escape me at the moment but they are not opening as they would when white halogen comes on except the candy cane which seems to be fine. the mushroom that is green and clowns like it for a mate is not doing well at all in fact from a colony of 6 different thriving pieces maybe 2 are hanging in the rest just sort of fell apart, wally the maroon is very unhappy about their removal of course
this is being a big challenge for me and scary as we are attached to the little sea world and do not want to lose anyone or do the 'wrong' thing. :sad2:
i have one group of corals on a big rock that i'm pretty sure they have died and how do you get them off then? :worried2:
appreciate any help you can give thanks in advance
we moved the aq set up the day b4 our actual move. used as much of the water as we could which was all but approx 10 gallons. aside from a new stand everything was the same meaning: 85 gallon aq tank with 40 gallon sump and external pump; 125 gallon protein skimmer; prefilter in overflow and for the move i included an amonia filter; creatures: star fish, tomatoe clown, yellow tang, huge engineer gobe, maroon and gold clown, 2 mandarins and a red hawkfish, several crabs, pj cardinal, and a clam, corals variety, leathers, nothing exotic.
so what happened is i could not get the water to clear so i water changed, the ps was pulling out good gunk; and i tested everything was within reasonably ok except amonia which was very high details below, so i hunted for death and found one crab body which was removed, everyone else accounted for. i changed 10-15 gallons of water a day. the amonia level would improve for most of the day then go back up; aside from being a little lethargic no one was showing alot of stress. i also dosed the tank with amonia lock. i do not believe i am overfeeding and if you listen to the tang and maroon clown in particular i am underfeeding ;o).
so i talked with hector and he recommended to double the water change efforts and figure out if any corals were dead as opposed to retreating so being less than an expert i decided to remove all of the corals to another 'tank' and see what that did. he also offered to have anyone i needed to move to move to his shop or to determine status of corals. so 2 water changes later levels have improved but amonia is still too high.
parameters from last night (i'm getting ready to retest):
salinity 125; temp 79; ph 8.2, alk 2;ca 450; nitrate 10; phos 5; amonia 2ppm
so i'm wondering whether the ammonia lock worked and levels are showing hi when in reality the amonia was converted into harmless then eventually nitrate which is why that is a little hi?
how do you tell if a coral is retreating temporarily vs dead? :sad1::sad1: these are all leathers and soft corals, names escape me at the moment but they are not opening as they would when white halogen comes on except the candy cane which seems to be fine. the mushroom that is green and clowns like it for a mate is not doing well at all in fact from a colony of 6 different thriving pieces maybe 2 are hanging in the rest just sort of fell apart, wally the maroon is very unhappy about their removal of course
this is being a big challenge for me and scary as we are attached to the little sea world and do not want to lose anyone or do the 'wrong' thing. :sad2:
i have one group of corals on a big rock that i'm pretty sure they have died and how do you get them off then? :worried2:
appreciate any help you can give thanks in advance