When everything goes absolutely to wrack and ruin...FYI

Sk8r

Staff member
RC Mod
Fish and corals share an environment, but---they react differently and have different ills. If you have a tank too large to break down and start over...and have been hit by something that makes you question why you're in this hobby...

If you have somehow contracted a lethal plague that wipes out your fish---go fishless at least 72 days---or more. If you have something that needs fish to live, the longer you have no fish, the less likely you are to see a recurrence. So go corals-only, take proper precautions (dip and observation) and build up that aspect of your tank for whatever time it takes. A year is not too much.

If you have something that takes down your corals, do the other thing: fish-only until whatever got your corals has gone. And quarantine! You don't need both plagues at once.

Fortunately most 'pests' like one or the other.

Of course the OPTIMUM answer is ---take proper precautions with each in the first place. One is not necessarily harder than the other. They are different. They react differently (corals hate nitrate that fish can survive; and fish die of ammonia that corals can survive...but take measures to keep nitrate way down (5%) and don't have ammonia, period.

I offer this as a what-to-do if you're at a point of desperation: it hits people new in the hobby, like, I spent all this money, it should have worked, and it didn't. This either/or gives you a chance to enjoy your tank while you're waiting for whatever-it-is to be done with. And either type of tank changes daily and has plenty to entertain you.
 
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Just went through this except it was total coral death. I spent 12 hours yesterday emptying, cleaning, and fixing a few issues I noticed after the tank was initially setup.

I have like 3 corals, a few rock flower nems, and all my fish still, so not a total loss. Just lots of $$ in corals.
 
I just recently had RTN that wiped out 8 SPS colonies. The biggest colony was about the size of a basketball. I have no idea how I got it or what caused it, etc. So now I have some new SPS frags growing and hopefully whatever caused the RTN won't come back. Oddly though, RTN got on one of the Pavona corals that came on my TBS rock and that coral did suffer some affect but didn't get totally killed. I have yet to figure that one out but maybe mother nature has a defense mechanism that we cannot duplicate in our tanks.
 
Possibly one of the natural defenses is the coral-nibbling fish like angels and parrots, which by grazing and moving on, just might stimulate corals to 'defend' themselves and thus help fend off problems. Or they might prefer the troubled corals to nosh on. Unfortunately unless you're the Seattle aquarium our tanks are too small to allow this natural behavior.
 

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