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magikof7 11-15-2012 12:30 AM

White spots on Favia.
 
Hi all!

My Christmas Favia has been getting these white spots on them, I am not sure what it is.
I will try to get better pics but does anyone know what this is by this pic?

http://i14.photobucket.com/albums/a3...018-1favia.jpg

Proteus 11-15-2012 01:14 AM

Name: White Pox / White Spot

Symptoms: The coral will start to show white spots at random on its surface. Over a short period of time, more and more spots will appear. Most of the time, these spots will come to form a band across the coral’s surface, but this doesn’t happen in all cases. These white spots will increase in size very quickly as the bacteria starts to consume the coral’s tissue. This is most commonly found on SPS and some LPS corals. It is very difficult to tell the difference between this disease and damage due to fish / invert bites. It has been found in both LPS and SPS corals.
Cause: It is caused by a gram negative bacteria called Serratia marcescens

Proteus 11-15-2012 01:41 AM

Just so you know the bacterium is not from the ocean but from human waste. You can try to dip in coral rx. Possibly iodine. But lots of water changes and possibly cuting the infected portions off

There are many other people on here who could probably help more. Ask myka she always seem to know lots

magikof7 11-15-2012 01:49 AM

Thank you Titus,
maybe it would be best to remove it, I hope my other corals wont be infected by it.

magikof7 11-15-2012 01:52 AM

I noticed one little spot after I got it home and didn't think much of it. I thought maybe a bit of damage from the store. Now I'm worried about the rest of my corals.
and human waste? that's kinda gross.

Proteus 11-15-2012 03:18 AM

It's becoming more common in the caribian sea. Elk horn which is the populated coral there is being wiped out from this

I would take it out and dip it. A uv sterilizer may help to get rid of free floating Bacteria. I read that there is benifical bacteria that will out compete this strain for resources. But it's still in the lab and the elimination process is long. You could try loading up on benifical suplemts but its a shot in the dark.

Another reason to wash our hands before dipping them in the water

magikof7 11-15-2012 06:05 PM

Im going to dip it today in Coral RX but upon closer inspection and some reading, It is not White Pox.
Denny helped me out too, it is bleaching. My Reverse Superman Monti was also showing signs of it.

I've reduced my Light further it is down to 40% at 12 inches above the tank. so That will help.

I probably wash my hands almost as much as a Doctor. I have many pets and 3 kids in a small house. I am always washing my hands and dishes. I get sore skin under my rings and Bracelets because my hands are always wet.

Thank you Titus for your help. I did learn something new. :D

Proteus 11-15-2012 06:53 PM

That's a relief.

subman 11-15-2012 07:16 PM

Maybe I read it wrong but I wanted to clarify when nick (Titus99) said human waste he wasn't saying you added it, its happening in the oceans because of humans dumping waste.

magikof7 11-15-2012 07:26 PM

I knew he wasn't saying it was me that added it. :)
I was just saying that I wash my hands a lot in response to his comment that we should wash our hands before sticking them in our tanks.

according to the store I got them from his are not wild corals.

It is a terrible thing humans are doing to our planet. :(


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