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#1
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![]() Quote:
What and how long did you dip it in?
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"Rules are for the obedience of fools and the guidance of wise men." |
#2
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![]() If I see RTN I always make a frag that is at least 1 cm away from the affect tissue and put it in a different spot in the tank. I have been able to stop RTN on established corals, but I have never been able to stop it on new corals. In the case of new corals there isn't much you can do that I know of. STN is much easier to stop since you have a much bigger time frame.
Are you sure it is RTN and not STN? With RTN you will be able to see the skin sloughing off and it spreads rapidly, like 4-6" per day. STN is much slower so you don't usually see the skin sloughing, just peeling up at the very edge of the affected area. STN can be as slow as 1" per month or so. Good question. I have had horrible luck/experiences with iodine-based dips. CoralRx seems to be effective and well-tolerated by all corals that I've used it on. |
#3
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![]() Yes its definitely rtn I've had it before. As for the dip, maybe 10 minutes as per the directions.
Edit dipped in coralrx
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I'm not 'fallow' you must be talking about my tank! Last edited by Nano; 09-16-2012 at 11:46 PM. |
#4
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![]() The piece I fragged off was on the next branch over but appeared unaffected, should I cut more off for saving purposes or leave it be? I definitely won't be buying colonies anymore. I only bought I cause its a beautiful piece and I hate waiting for frags to grow out. Big mistake I think.
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I'm not 'fallow' you must be talking about my tank! |
#5
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![]() I had one very nice sized SPS frag (a green birdsnest, that i recieved from sphelps) take a terrible beating on the way home in my truck (a Superduty 4x4 with very rigid suspension). I was horrified. It lost 50% of its tissue in 24 hours (it had lost some tissue on the way home, which was in the bottom of the bag).
I dipped it in Reef Dip (according to the instructions) as it was all I had, and put it back in my tank. There was some tissue regrowth, but some of the skeleton started getting algae growth. I then dipped it in a solution of 1:10 of H202:tank water for ten minutes. Every single bit of tissue regrew, and it has doubled in size. While I certainly didn't take the "textbook" approach, if the situation was dire, I would do it again. |
#6
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![]() Well its too early to say, but since moving it and trimming it off it seems to be ok. The last one I took the same approach too died with in a few hours. Here's hoping. If it continues to spread I'm just going to cut of more if I can thats healthy.
Sigh. How do you guys do it? All your sps heavy tanks look so beautiful and mine (while new) has just been a head ache some days. ![]()
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I'm not 'fallow' you must be talking about my tank! |
#7
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![]() Well the acro seems to have made it through the night, good polyp extension this morning. I'm sure its too soon to call it ok but I'm glad it made it. Both pieces I fragged off too are alive and well ATM. So if all goes well I'll have my first sps frags for sale.
How long til I know it ok to slowly move it where I want it? I could put it on ky frag rack and slowly raise it to the height I want it over a week or too, would this help acclimate it to the light? What else should i do/know about rtn and sps stress while I'm on the topic? Thanks everyone for the help
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I'm not 'fallow' you must be talking about my tank! |
#8
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![]() Dibs on the frag. Lol
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