Hey all! I'm back! We just moved across the country (about 2000 miles), so I've been out of touch for a while. I moved all corals, fish, and live rock with only a few complete loses (thanks Delta for losing my boxes.) Right now a lot of my corals are back to being "rescues". Ugh. Oh well.
On the bright side, I now have a dedicated 50g system for rescuing dying/diseased corals AND fish. It's a 40g breeder with a 10g sump. I went with a breeder so I could reach everything easier...which makes me more likely to feed properly and give enough care. I didn't want to go any bigger yet since I figure a 40g tank filled with animals in need of lots of treatment may be a bit much.
I still have my QT and main display tank...but I'm just so excited to have a place where I know I can take in corals from anyone...and not have to turn them away due to space.
SaltwaterAdict - I'm sure there will be disagreements with me, but I don't believe most LPS need supplemental food for long-term success. However, I did go about a year and a half without fish, and I found the LPS did need some supplemental feeding. As long as you have a properly stocked tank with good lighting...and the LPS are healthy, they should stay healthy. If your LPS start bleaching, then start feeding ASAP.
540iz4 - I'm sure this response is too late. How's your coral looking now? A snail passing on/by a coral shouldn't cause any issues. What are your water parameters? How's that cynarina doing?
Melonz - Any photos of that scoly?
JC-Reef - Fantastic save! Gorgeous find as well. I'm sure you're extremely proud of that one.
TJ - One of my first "rescues" was a bubble coral. If there's ANY tissue on the skeleton...even if it doesn't inflate, just leave it alone. I found that the bubble corals can turn bits of tissue into full colonies similar to Fungia corals. However, if it is clear there is no tissue, and the healthy tissue is inflating over the dead skeleton, I would remove it. Bubble coral skeletons are very sharp and may cause rips in the healthy tissue if the flow is too much. You can get "bone cutters" through most reef stores/websites, but I prefer to go to Walmart and get the "in-grown toenail" cutters. They're pretty scary looking, and I can't imagine using them on my nails, but eh. They're the exact same thing that reef stores sell, but at a much cheaper cost.
SChriss - yes, you're right, corals will often regrow over dead skeleton, but I've found corals will regrow new tissue with new skeleton much faster than over dead skeleton. My theory is that old skeleton has so many ridges, that a flat smooth surface is easier to add deposits to.
~RuSh~ - very nice Acans!
LadyR - thanks for the encouragement!
ReefSafari - really hope you can save that little guy! He looks beautiful! It's hard to tell his exact condition from the photo, but with low flow and some feeding, you may have a beautiful piece! Keep us posted!
Jarred - wonderful!
rogersb - I think you have a winner there! I have a lot of hope for that one. The brown ring of algae-covered skeleton followed by an inner ring of white (freshly dead) skeleton makes me think that scoly was in a tank with poor water conditions. It looks like slow recession. The mouth still looks healthy & intact. With good water conditions, it should recover well on its own. If you can, I'd make a frozen food mixture blend of things the coral would naturally eat in the wild (like raw shrimp, scallops, clams, seaweed, etc). I've never fed black worms, so I can't say anything about them, but I do know my seafood mixture has really helped my corals recover.