New frogspawn won't open.

teddyzaper

New member
All my parameters are within what I'd consider acceptable.

Ammonia 0
Nitrite 0
Nitrate 3
Phosphate 0-.02
Ph8.2
KH 7 (but just added a dose)
Mg 1320 (again, just dosed)
CA 375
Salinity 1.026
Temp 76

It's in a pretty low flow section. Should I try giving it more flow, no flow? My acans, sps, zoa's, and other lps is doing great.

It's in a medium light area.

It extends about half way daily. At the LFS it was fully extended.

Tank is about 3 weeks old.

6d5f3645deca1007f7902e5bdb5f63a1.jpg


In the far back. Best pic I got. I'll try to snap one in the morning if no one has any ideas.
 
I take it down to the bottom of the tank and let it adjust to the lighting.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
If the tank is 3 weeks old, water parameters may not be stable enough for corals. Especially if you are dosing Alkalinity by hand. Best to get an automatic doser and get your alk locked in. Corals really get PO'd when the alk varies.

The front left coral is a chalice.

Dennis
 
If the tank is 3 weeks old, water parameters may not be stable enough for corals. Especially if you are dosing Alkalinity by hand. Best to get an automatic doser and get your alk locked in. Corals really get PO'd when the alk varies.

The front left coral is a chalice.

Dennis

Its a 55g with a sump and i test my alk daily. So far very little fluctuation of alk day to day as i don't have many corals. Once i start seeing larger swings i will be adding a doser. Many people have no issues using no dosing or just dosing by hand. It shouldn't be causing a coral to close up like this (especially since my other corals, sps included, are doing fine)


Also front left isn't a chalice. Its a very thin piece, not encrusting.
 
I take it down to the bottom of the tank and let it adjust to the lighting.


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

I'll try that out, its already pretty close to the sand, but i'll move it over to a shadier area of the tank (i have a kind of spotlight affect in my tank)
 
I think your on the right track bottom of the tank around the fringe for a few days. He may be getting too much light. When I got mine (I had 2 Prime hds on a 55g, now T5) I put him in moderate flow on the sand bed at the edge in the middle of two 'spotlights'. Took a few days but he came around


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
I think your on the right track bottom of the tank around the fringe for a few days. He may be getting too much light. When I got mine (I had 2 Prime hds on a 55g, now T5) I put him in moderate flow on the sand bed at the edge in the middle of two 'spotlights'. Took a few days but he came around


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I think it's already doing better. Maybe too much flow though.

b7a10897fe475d24e393765594ef1bfc.jpg
 
Well I believe one of the heads is dying/dead. The other is hanging in there. Moved it to a lower flow area with low light and it's still barely extending

ea632f0abb09a1e93546d73735f90a57.jpg
 
Anything on the skeleton that could be irritating it? Just saw I had an aiptasia grow on mine I had to pull the frag and scrape it off. Maybe a dip would help revive it?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Anything on the skeleton that could be irritating it? Just saw I had an aiptasia grow on mine I had to pull the frag and scrape it off. Maybe a dip would help revive it?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I dipped it when I put it in. There is nothing that I can see. I just moved it to an even lower flow spot in my tank , but with a gyre nowhere is no flow... It's just odd since all my other corals are doing fine
 
Well I believe one of the heads is dying/dead. The other is hanging in there. Moved it to a lower flow area with low light and it's still barely extending

Low light is good, low flow is not a good idea for LPS. The head died because in low flow infections can spread very fast.

On a side note always start new corals on the sandbed and then slowly move them up as they acclimate to your lighting.
 
Low light is good, low flow is not a good idea for LPS. The head died because in low flow infections can spread very fast.

On a side note always start new corals on the sandbed and then slowly move them up as they acclimate to your lighting.
Oh that's good to know. I'll try giving it a bit more flow. One of the heads fully died off, but the other one is doing alright.

Since I have a spotlight affect in my tank I start the coral on the edge of the spotlight and move it towards center slowly
 
Back
Top