intricable
New member
First the disclaimer: Its not my tank, I live with the tank but ultimately, the end decisions for the tank are those of the tank's owner. I have expanded my knowledge of saltwater immensely by researching for and interacting with the tank- but details (like what particular type of metal halides light it) are fuzzy. I may not be able to answer all questions, so please forgive me.
The problem: Three weeks ago the tank, the tanks owner, and I moved in together. Long story short, the RO didn't work right at the new house, and the coral, rocks and fish lived within coolers for a week without powerheads or lights. Only a few, very small frags didn't pull through- all fish and all established corals did fine. The rose anemone was ****ed, and subsequently walked in two different directions when it was added to the tank. The piece still visible to the front of the tank healed nicely and its clone, which appeared on the other side of the tank, also healed nicely and was filling out and puffy. Unfortunately, the traveling nem clone decided to settle on top of another coral. To discourage this, powerheads were pointed to convince the nem to walk to the another area. This didn't work- she decided to actually plant herself even more squarely on top of the other coral. The tank owner came to the conclusion that he should move the rock next to the nem (she was stinging the corals on that rock as well now) for the well-being of those corals. To our demise, her foot was also stuck to the rock that was moved- her foot was the size of, say, a tealight candle (maybe bigger)- the piece that ripped is the size of a dime (at best- has about 8 tentacles). Part of the mouth came with the ripped off piece, guts hanging out, some deflated tentacles. The big piece didn't shrink into a ****ed off ball, the clown has been babying the small piece- poking it with her face and tail-fanning away all the sand near the rock it sits on. This happened last night, the lights hadn't come on before I let this morning, so I couldn't see the nems for a progress report.
What are the chances either of these poor mangled RBTA's of making it?
Side note: tank is usually higher than desired in nitrates because of large carnivorous fish.
The problem: Three weeks ago the tank, the tanks owner, and I moved in together. Long story short, the RO didn't work right at the new house, and the coral, rocks and fish lived within coolers for a week without powerheads or lights. Only a few, very small frags didn't pull through- all fish and all established corals did fine. The rose anemone was ****ed, and subsequently walked in two different directions when it was added to the tank. The piece still visible to the front of the tank healed nicely and its clone, which appeared on the other side of the tank, also healed nicely and was filling out and puffy. Unfortunately, the traveling nem clone decided to settle on top of another coral. To discourage this, powerheads were pointed to convince the nem to walk to the another area. This didn't work- she decided to actually plant herself even more squarely on top of the other coral. The tank owner came to the conclusion that he should move the rock next to the nem (she was stinging the corals on that rock as well now) for the well-being of those corals. To our demise, her foot was also stuck to the rock that was moved- her foot was the size of, say, a tealight candle (maybe bigger)- the piece that ripped is the size of a dime (at best- has about 8 tentacles). Part of the mouth came with the ripped off piece, guts hanging out, some deflated tentacles. The big piece didn't shrink into a ****ed off ball, the clown has been babying the small piece- poking it with her face and tail-fanning away all the sand near the rock it sits on. This happened last night, the lights hadn't come on before I let this morning, so I couldn't see the nems for a progress report.
What are the chances either of these poor mangled RBTA's of making it?
Side note: tank is usually higher than desired in nitrates because of large carnivorous fish.