STN Question

solitude127

Proud user of IO Salt!
If my acro is starting to STN, what are the chances of the STN stopping? Also, what are the chances of the acro recovering?
 
i am not sure what the chances of it recovering are, but i have heard of people using super glue (made for reefs) to glue over the afflicted area to stop it from spreading... i am sure more will chime in who know much more than I... GL friend
 
It sort of depends on what type of coral, why it is stn'g, and your tank conditions. I have had corals recover and grow back over the dead spots after I fixed the cause and had other corals just keep on rtn'g. Sometimes you just have to make a best educated guess as whether to frag or let it be.
 
It sort of depends on what type of coral, why it is stn'g, and your tank conditions. I have had corals recover and grow back over the dead spots after I fixed the cause and had other corals just keep on rtn'g. Sometimes you just have to make a best educated guess as whether to frag or let it be.

good call :thumbsup:
 
It sort of depends on what type of coral, why it is stn'g, and your tank conditions. I have had corals recover and grow back over the dead spots after I fixed the cause and had other corals just keep on rtn'g. Sometimes you just have to make a best educated guess as whether to frag or let it be.

It's STN'ing because I fragged it not because of parameters.
 
I've had STn start and recover before growing over the dead spots if no algae starts to grow on it. If it does, I clipped off the parts with algae and it will usually regrow
 
I've had good success stoping and healing STN with a combination of a Coral Rx dip followed by Medi Coral (iodine dip).
 
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