So I'm not much of a zoanthid guy. I have a few, and I'm actually picking up a couple more soon, but a few times now I've noticed a mass zoa decline in my tank..
The First Time -- At one point i wanted to really test if nitrate dosing had a positive impact. To my surprise, it absolutely did (for my SPS). I somehow missed the connection between dosing nitrates = Zoa's thinning out and looking sickly. The more temperamental ones shrank away to nothing.. Looking back on it, it all makes sense.
The Second Time -- After awhile I stopped dosing as my nitrates stabilized at a number I liked, slowly, my zoa's came back. Cool! Genuine mystery at that point. So fast forward to getting 3 invasive algae from frag plugs (NEVER trust a frag plug). Water changes, lots of GFO. I didn't notice too much health decline from the zoa's until I started using the large amounts of GFO -- And even then, they were 90% fine! Just a few were a little deflated, no biggie!
Well I remembered that dosing nitrates causes a reduction in phosphates. So lets bring out the ole kn03 again and really take out that p04 issue. Awesome! Well, it wasn't long until my algae stopped growing, my phosphate had dropped to nothing, and all my zoas were looking poor again... Again, total mystery. I assumed it had to do with the algae itself, either robbing the water of nutrients, or physically irritating the Zoa's somehow (algae exploded everywhere almost instantly, it was maddening).
At this point I was thinking the problem could definitely be nutrients. BUT, assumed that it was the algae physically irritating the zoa's due to proximity. Fine. As I regained my ground against the algae and stopped kn03 dosing everything returned to normal.
The Third Time -- Fast forward to a few nights ago. Setting up a new tank, SPS are starting to look good, but the fish are in QT so I decided, "hey, these sticks loved that nitrate. It would probably be a good idea to have a little extra nutrients in the system" Off I go to grab some of that magic juice again.
This time, there were no variables. Tank was algae free. No pests. No irritants. Fish in QT. No annoying shrimp.. And coincidentally, just like the last two times I dosed nitrates, my Zoa's started to.... Bingo.
By this third time I had figured it out. Dosing nitrates dramatically drops phosphates, removing p04 too quickly can absolutely shock zoa's. This is something I've seen mentioned here a few times by others. I hadn't realized just how quickly I was depleting the available p04. This has single handedly, and instantaneously caused many of my zoa's over the past year to suddenly wither. Some of which died, others were just very irritated.
The First Time -- At one point i wanted to really test if nitrate dosing had a positive impact. To my surprise, it absolutely did (for my SPS). I somehow missed the connection between dosing nitrates = Zoa's thinning out and looking sickly. The more temperamental ones shrank away to nothing.. Looking back on it, it all makes sense.
The Second Time -- After awhile I stopped dosing as my nitrates stabilized at a number I liked, slowly, my zoa's came back. Cool! Genuine mystery at that point. So fast forward to getting 3 invasive algae from frag plugs (NEVER trust a frag plug). Water changes, lots of GFO. I didn't notice too much health decline from the zoa's until I started using the large amounts of GFO -- And even then, they were 90% fine! Just a few were a little deflated, no biggie!
Well I remembered that dosing nitrates causes a reduction in phosphates. So lets bring out the ole kn03 again and really take out that p04 issue. Awesome! Well, it wasn't long until my algae stopped growing, my phosphate had dropped to nothing, and all my zoas were looking poor again... Again, total mystery. I assumed it had to do with the algae itself, either robbing the water of nutrients, or physically irritating the Zoa's somehow (algae exploded everywhere almost instantly, it was maddening).
At this point I was thinking the problem could definitely be nutrients. BUT, assumed that it was the algae physically irritating the zoa's due to proximity. Fine. As I regained my ground against the algae and stopped kn03 dosing everything returned to normal.
The Third Time -- Fast forward to a few nights ago. Setting up a new tank, SPS are starting to look good, but the fish are in QT so I decided, "hey, these sticks loved that nitrate. It would probably be a good idea to have a little extra nutrients in the system" Off I go to grab some of that magic juice again.
This time, there were no variables. Tank was algae free. No pests. No irritants. Fish in QT. No annoying shrimp.. And coincidentally, just like the last two times I dosed nitrates, my Zoa's started to.... Bingo.
By this third time I had figured it out. Dosing nitrates dramatically drops phosphates, removing p04 too quickly can absolutely shock zoa's. This is something I've seen mentioned here a few times by others. I hadn't realized just how quickly I was depleting the available p04. This has single handedly, and instantaneously caused many of my zoa's over the past year to suddenly wither. Some of which died, others were just very irritated.