melev
Well-known member
My baby Maxima that is over a year old died in the tank. And the second Maxima doesn't look too well either. I guess I'm going to have to put it in my 280g and hope the Copperband ignores it. The water in the Pico is really good except for phosphates, which seems to have transferred over from the main tank.
Temperature: 80 to 82F
pH: 7.9
Salinity: 1.026
Nitrate: 0
Ammonia: 0
Phosphate: 1.5
Alk and Ca would be within normal ranges since the water is newly mixed and added every three days. So unless clams are phosphate intolerate, I don't see a problem. I've fed phyto to the tank, so that can't be the problem. Lighting only 8" should be fine too.
Anyway, that was a doomed experiment. :sad1:
I found a tiny plate coral that had blown off my original colony. It was stuck in a Palythoa, which was apparently hoping to eat it! So I put it in the Pico where it would be ignored.
Then I fed it today with a couple of thawed mysis. I think the Seahorse didn't notice it.
Here is the Ricordia too. It looks pretty happy to me.
Temperature: 80 to 82F
pH: 7.9
Salinity: 1.026
Nitrate: 0
Ammonia: 0
Phosphate: 1.5
Alk and Ca would be within normal ranges since the water is newly mixed and added every three days. So unless clams are phosphate intolerate, I don't see a problem. I've fed phyto to the tank, so that can't be the problem. Lighting only 8" should be fine too.
Anyway, that was a doomed experiment. :sad1:
I found a tiny plate coral that had blown off my original colony. It was stuck in a Palythoa, which was apparently hoping to eat it! So I put it in the Pico where it would be ignored.
Then I fed it today with a couple of thawed mysis. I think the Seahorse didn't notice it.
Here is the Ricordia too. It looks pretty happy to me.