Trachyphyllia/Scolymia bleaching under certain LEDs?

Had the same effects on my trachys, wellsos and symphyllias when switched over from AI Sol blue to the new Hydras. Turned out I had the reds/greens too high. Colors have come back after lowering these between 20-25% throughout the day.

Good luck!
 
There are loads of coral farms out there that are switching to LEDs, and most of them are using the cheapo 50/50 cool white and blue fixtures from China (which are even more anemic spectrally than the AI fixtures), and if LEDs could possibly cause anything like this, then they would all still be using metal halides - but more and more are switching every day, so it's definitely false.


I personally would love to see what credible information you have to merit this claim....both that "loads" of farms are switching and "most of them are using the cheapo..."



But to the issue of the OP, what is your light acclimation like in the sps dom tank when you add a scoly or trach; you may need to totally shade them for a bit..... and nutrient load could also be an issue as those are both nutrient loving species. I am curious to see what you find.
 
To the OP, I have a similar experience where I lost 3/4 of my chalice collection and I only have my leds max at 38%. My acans are ok, but the chalice died off 1 by 1 slowly bleaching and losing tissue. Also 1 trach looked exactly like yours and ended up in similar bleached colors. SPS are loving the LEDs though
 
I have also had this problem with my Ai Sols/Hydras...... I purchased a Trachy and 3 Fungia corals that seemed happy for about a week, then randomly died, not sure if its because of the leds, but everything was in check at that point in time.

I have 2 Scolymias under them, and haven't had any problems, so I cannot tell if its the Ai's
 
I know this is an old post, but I am having a similar problem. I have a trachy that was big and fleshy for almost a year under an ATI Hybrid T5/LED fixture.

I then added in some fish (kole tang, coral beauty, pair of wrasse, couple clowns) from another tank that was being broken down. To compensate for the increased bioload I then started dosing NOPOx.

Shortly after the fish addition the trachy bleached. Nothing was picking on it. SPS are fine, euphylia are fine, zoas are mostly fine, goniopora are fine, duncan coral is fine

I moved the trachy to my coral QT tank (Radion Xr15 pro) and now it seems to have recolored and puffed back up in like two weeks. I'd like to move it back to the display tank.

Wondering if anyone has any thoughts? Can it be the lights due to increase in clarity from the NOPOx? I moved it to a shady spot it seemed to do nothing, but I can find an even shadier spot. Par on the bottom is 200 to 250 ish.

I also have flatworms though they don't seem to bother anything, I've had them since set up and dip my corals.
 
I know this is an old post, but I am having a similar problem. I have a trachy that was big and fleshy for almost a year under an ATI Hybrid T5/LED fixture.

I then added in some fish (kole tang, coral beauty, pair of wrasse, couple clowns) from another tank that was being broken down. To compensate for the increased bioload I then started dosing NOPOx.

Shortly after the fish addition the trachy bleached. Nothing was picking on it. SPS are fine, euphylia are fine, zoas are mostly fine, goniopora are fine, duncan coral is fine

I moved the trachy to my coral QT tank (Radion Xr15 pro) and now it seems to have recolored and puffed back up in like two weeks. I'd like to move it back to the display tank.

Wondering if anyone has any thoughts? Can it be the lights due to increase in clarity from the NOPOx? I moved it to a shady spot it seemed to do nothing, but I can find an even shadier spot. Par on the bottom is 200 to 250 ish.

I also have flatworms though they don't seem to bother anything, I've had them since set up and dip my corals.

Did you test your phosphates/nitrates before dosing NOPOx? Corals need a tad, too much and you get hair algae. I would stop dosing NOPOx and let the tank do its thing.
 
No, I typically do it by sight, I understand corals need some nitrates and phosphates, if SPS start losing color or i develop dino's I scale the dosing back, if algae starts spreading quickly I scale it up a bit (usually do adjustments on a monthly timescale if needed).

Its a heavily stocked tank based on size, and nothing else is having any issue.
 

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