In the interest of full disclosure I'll give ya'll an update on the tank. At this point, the plan was to begin stocking the tank with coral but we are actually going backwards. Basically we don't have a means of tank cooling, cabinets, and to top things off the light in the office is on 24 hours a day.
A week ago today, I walked into the office and immediately noticed something was not right. The AC wasn't on at its fullest and the tank inhabitants looked very very stressed. Upon inspection of the tank room I noticed the temperature of the tank was 84 degrees. I had set the reefkeeper 2 to turn off all the lights at the cutoff of 84 (and it had cutoff the lights) but the damage had been done. At night, the tank normally sat at 79 degrees and the temperature that weekend must have been swinging wildly. I tried to account for all the fish and found that everything had a nasty case of ich.
Mike called me on Monday to let me know that all the fish were seemingly doing better and the one I was most worried about (yellow tang) had recovered and was eating with his normal gusto! To top off that news, the bluestar leopard wrasse (whose name was Jesus at this point as he was seemingly dead) was out and eating.
That was where the good news for the week stopped as we lost quite a few snails due to the temperature problem. The new blonde naso tang developed a bad case of ich (and possibly velvet) and died this Friday. I can't get into the tank to remove anything and thankfully the naso died in the open sandy area and was able to be removed (with the help of a 5 foot stick of PVC with a net on the end of it). Other fish MIA include a McCosker's female, all three royal grammas, and I don't have high hopes for the blackest of the clownfish. A water change is mixing currently but things continue to decline.
We had an incident with the kalk reactor and spilled 3 gallons of water on the floor and it was determined that a floor drain should be added to the tank room. This drain was supposed to be installed yesterday and the construction company's foreman was given SPECIFIC instructions to tarp off the tank and equiptment. I even left a tarp in plain sight for them to use! You can probably guess what happened...they did not tarp off anything and concrete dust was on everything.
I'm going to work on the tank again tomorrow and I hope that in the morning I find everything doing better. If you're dealing with BBL construction and want an aquarium, my advice at this point is to run as far away from them as humanly possible. I'll update again tomorrow.
John