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I am thinking that your tank is still very young since it has only been 3 months since you started it. Many reefers wait until 9-12 months before adding coral. Even after your first cycle there may be mini cycles that occur that could affect sensitive corals. That might be why your hardier corals like frogspawn are doing fine.
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I was originally planning on a long-term addition of coral to my new tank, but a couple locals got me started within the first month or so, and away I went I haven't added anything sensitive yet such as 'nems, but I got away with lots of easy SPS and LPS right away Lots of absorbing of knowledge goes a long way Hope the rest of the members get you going in the right direction :smile: |
Hopefully.. lol
I read lots.. But nothing really prepared me for what I was in for I guess! I find it hard to know what it needs by looking at it... I am used to keeping freshwater plants. I know what they need by looking at them. I feel a bit helpless. I can see that they are "not happy" but I keep my levels in check, keep up with waterchanges and try to put them in the right flow areas. What gives.. lol |
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not saying this is your issue but a bit of extra flow couldnt hurt in a six ft tank , two koralias 1400's arent all that much. live rock or dry rock? |
I also have the return. I was thinking of getting some smaller powerheads... But I don't know where to put them. Eventually I'd like to get power powerful powerheads that oscillate but... Budget only so much initially LOL.
Combination of live and dry rock, mostly dry however. |
I would tone down your lighting period. The Dawn / Dusk for 12 hrs is fine and dandy. Your full power lights though are too much. 9 hrs is a LONG time. I have a SPS tank and I only run my full lights for 5 hrs.
For softies and LPS, you really don't need to run any longer than 4 hrs. Those ATI fixtures pump out some serious par levels. |
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My purple poison shortcake took 4 months before it stared growing but know I can count new coralites every couple days |
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I would also agree that flow could be improved. As Denny suggested, on a 6' tank two of those korellias will hardly make a dent. The last pic does look like a candycane to me. There are LOTS of different types of candycane corals. |
I have about 30lbs of "live" rock to 100lbs of dry rock, which was soaked and sorta kinda seeded.
When I put the live rock in... It was all really purple and it turned white in my tank. However it seems to be getting some of the purple back now. I don't know what caused this or it's if normal but it's almost as if I bleached the coraline, if that can happen. Should I turn my skimmer off to improve nutrient levels? Here is a full tank shot.. just dusk/dawn lights http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v7...22/photo48.jpg Here is some nice algae.. lol..gross http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v7...22/photo44.jpg |
Well, it does look like you are getting some growth on your rocks :-). Although the majority of it still appears pristine. I don't think you necessarily need to take your skimmer off line. Since your nutrient levels are reading zero across the board you could look into feeding your tank more. A pair of clowns and a Chromis is a very very light bio load for a 125g tank. Is your skimmer even pulling anything out?? LOL. Maybe start adding more fish or feed your corals more through other methods.
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