RTN or Just Bleaching?

fred fishstone

Premium Member
This is about three days worth. Is this thing a goner, or should I try to save it?

web.jpg
 
cant tell for sure from the picture

3 days, if the skin and polyps are gone - it's likely an STN event

STN and RTN (slow or rapid) is the loss of tissue

bleaching = the skin stays but expels the zooanthella and turns white without the pigment

both are signs of stress

If the flesh is gone - I'd cut the STN areas off but into the healthy coral, there is no guarantee that you can save it but this seems to help more often then not. If left as is the issue will likely continue to spread, cut to un affected flesh you may be able to stop the spread of what ever is causing the STN event

if the flesh and polyps are still there it's bleaching. This may be caused by tank temperature being higher then the coral is use to or too much light. I had a coral bleach form changing old bulbs, the increased light intensity stressed the rather large montepora confusa I had and 80% of it expelled the zooanthella starting around the edges and worked it's way in. The coral actually survived the initial event for several months but eventually starved
to death without the zooanthella providing the needed sugars

best of luck
 
Last edited:
Thanks. It appears that the flesh is gone, so I think I'll pull it out tonight and cut it way back

It may have to do with an increase in alkalinity, as I didn't notice the calcium level dropping. My current supply of Reef Crystals is high in alk, but not so high in calcium. Anyway, alk went from 8 to 11 over the course of about a month. I've been dosing vodka for a while, so 11 may have really been too high for this guy. He's the only one that's showing any stress so far.
 
Its RTNing. I would cut some pieces of that are not affected and glue them on plugs. If you leave it the way it is, chances are you will lose the whole coral.
 
Do you think I should dip the pieces in anything? I don't have any experience with that -- this is the first time I've had a problem like this.
 
Dipping it would cause further stress on the coral as of now and would probably kill it. I would frag it up and wait a few weeks before I would dip it.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15125312#post15125312 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Joeareef
Ive had the same thing happen!
Any success saving your coral(s)?

I cut this one waaaaaaay back last night, hoping to save the central part (and it's crab.) If I see more tissue loss, I'll follow sixtygallon212's advice!

I'm also cutting back on the vodka and raising calcium (to lower alk.)
 
Back
Top