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I started zeo 8 weeks ago and I removed some of my things (sun coral and some other) but my other lps (frogspawn favia trupet and a bunch other) are doing great. But I also ran my reactor 3h on 3h off for the first 3 weeks at low flow so not to shock my corals. And WOW I now have some corals that look like the ones I used to drool over online. You prob. hit it way way to hard.
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I have a bunch of Euphyllia, they are all doing well. Even a Palau Nepthea is doing really well as with a photosynthetic gorgonian. Ricordea, Cyphastrea, clams, Galaxea, GSP, Trumpet, they are all doing well too. The only ones affected are 5 out of 7 brain corals, the Duncan, and the Acans (only one frag).
I think it was a mistake to add the Zeolites without a reactor to monitor the actual flow (instead of guessing with the passive flow). When I try to reintroduce the Zeolites I will start with a smaller amount, do the 3 hours on 3 off cycle, and I will wait until my reactor is built. I don't foresee any issues with a more conservative approach. I really under estimated the power of the Zeolites. :eek: |
I don't see any signs of tissue necrosis or infection of any sort in the photos. Your corals are healthy. They just aren't opening to feed due to the lack of nutrients in the water. SPS and LPS aren't usually found together in nature due to their varying requirements. In other words, you can't please all of the corals all of the time. If you feed the tank phytoplankton it will promote the growth of microfauna that will in turn feed your corals. Bioavailable nutrients will get your corals to open again. Target feeding will speed things along.
The favia lost some of its zooxanthellae by the looks of it. This doesn't fit with a low nutrient problem. It is however something that is caused by other Zeovit products that bleach corals for better colours. I'm not too familiar with their product line, so I'm not sure which ones nave this effect, but zeovit media is not one of them. What else are you putting in the tank? |
There is some tissue necrosis starting now Wilson. The Zeovit "pros" on the Zeovit forums have come to the conclusion that the corals have been shocked by nutrients being taken out too quick, as well as several other people commenting that their LPS have reacted the same way when Zeolites were introduced. So I am definitely believing this right now.
I know a mixed reef is a difficult thing to obtain. I never meant for SPS to get in this tank...don't know how they got there. :lol: I have never been much of a fan of phytoplankton, always found it raised phosphate. Although it do notice it increases pods. My Assessor would like that...she eats ALL the pods. I know there is food in the tank, I have diatoms and a small amount of cyano due to increasing the food type Zeo additives. The tank is dosed with calcium, alkalinity, magnesium, Zeovit food additives (Coral Vitalizer, Sponge Power, Xtra), Zeovit Coral Snow (so-called biological facilitator), ZeoStart (bacteria food). The tank has Kent carbon, and the Zeolites in the sump, both are passively run. The Zeoheads recommended I quit dosing Zeobac (bacteria), but to continue with the Start to feed the current bacteria. At one point they told me to stop dosing Coral Snow as it can be aggressive too, but now they told me I could start again. Maybe I should stop...I dunno. The Zeo product that bleaches the corals is Spur2. I have used this a few times with great results. It affected most SPS (within 48 hours of dosing), but didn't seem to affect any LPS at all. My LPS issues didn't happen anywhere near the dosing of the Spur2. I haven't dosed Spur2 since Oct 18. The Favia started showing signs of trouble on Nov 17, the Symphyllia didn't show signs of distress until Nov 24. I feel like ripping the Zeolites out and tossing them across the room. |
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that realy sucks, but LPS are pretty resiliant so they should bounce back. Steve |
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i might have missed this, but have you tried the amino acid for LPS. they sugguest you use this when starting your zeo system as it allows for some xtra foods to be the water coloum.
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Still missing something, Myka.
If the beautify coral pictures were taken before you started the zeo thing, why did you decide to try the zeo route. Was it just a matter of trying something new? It appears there have been some successes but a lot of failures too and I understand the zeo are very expensive. Is that true? |
And the plot thickens...
~ End of July buy new Salifert calcium test kit, and notice new kit is reading just about 100 ppm higher than the old kit. Old kit was expired, so I assume the new one is closer to accurate. At this point, calcium is reading 520 ppm on the new kit. ~ Mid-August have calcium lowered to 420 ppm with new kit. ~ Yesterday I get my water tested at the LFS with an Elos kit. This is an older Elos kit with only 50 ppm increments. The color change is slight at 300 ppm, and very clear at 350 ppm, so it is likely around 325 ppm with the Elos kit. My Salifert calcium kit reads 420 ppm using the same water. ~ Today I remember that my old Salifert kit read 100 ppm lower than my new one. So...I'm starting to think my new Salifert kit really is reading 100 ppm higher than my actual calcium reading which means my calcium may be as low as 320 ppm since mid-August. I am going to email the batch number into Salifert and find out if there are any complaints. ---------------------------------------- Naesco, I started using a few of the Zeo additives last March (CV and SP). I saw really amazing results. I recently started collecting many SPS and the colors are good, but not great, so I figured why not try out the complete Zeo system? Zeo is expensive to startup, cheap to maintain. So far, the only "additive" I have had any trouble with is the Zeolites. The rest as really quite impressive. The Zeolites are impressive too...but in a different way right now!! :lol: Lobsterboy, I haven't tried the AALPS. Mostly because I'm feeling a budget cramp with Christmas coming on and having to pay someone to look after my dog and tank for 2 weeks. I will go today, and pick up a bottle. *sigh* Mr Wilson, I was waiting for a definite response from the Zeoheads to confirm that removing the Zeolites won't further increase stress on the corals, but I'm going to go ahead and remove the Zeolites right now. |
thats cool, the bottle will go along way with helping those corals out.
they are just hungry, :razz: and what about removing half of the zeolites now and then half later...? its just a thought if you havent done it already. |
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