![]() |
|
|
|
#1
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
Welcome to the club
IME, when one goes poof, it often takes others with it. In my tank I have about 80 pieces of acropora. One day I get up, check tank, all's good. Go out for the day and come home to a large colony completely gone. Just went poof. Everything else was and still is fine. Who knows why this happens, but again, IME, mucking around trying to fix an unknown is just asking for more trouble. Do a good water change, clean your filters/skimmers, etc, and replace carbon. Then hope it stops. I've gone through this and lost half my tank, then everything was fine.
__________________
Brad |
|
#2
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
From my experience, sps rtn isn't caused by pests because no animals can consume a large colony in one day. I had some sps rtn before, some were wild colonies and others was due to heat in the summer with temps rising above 89f. I also had a tank crash because of meds and disturbing the sand bed. But since you don't have wild colonies and run a chiller there's definitely something in the water. Have you been dosing anything new when you started to notice the symptoms of rtn? Something in the water that the sps don't like for them to die off so suddenly. Hope you get the problem rectified soon, I would say like others have suggested maybe some water changes to dissipate whatever is poisoning the sps.
__________________
Always looking for the next best coral... 90g starphire cube/400mhRadium20k/2 XHO/2x27w UV/2x39w T5/ 3 Trulumen led strips |
|
#3
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
Quote:
|
|
#4
|
||||
|
||||
|
Did you dip the SPS that you got off of that somebody with something like Coral RX. I have read from other peoples journals that you should take any remaining bleached corals out, frag out any white spots on existing sps and give them a dip.
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|