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#1
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![]() My crustaceans - 1 cleaner shrimp, 1 peppermint shrimp, 4-5 hermit crabs, and as of today, 2 hitch hiker crabs in my live rock are methodically kicking the bucket. Any ideas of what might be amiss?
Tank specs are: 20 gallon long (30"x12"x14"), new set-up (~3.5 weeks old), approx. 30 lbs of live rock. Equipment: AC 70, Rio Nano skimmer, Seio 620 powerhead, 30" 36 watt coralife double linear T5 (10,000k & actinic), and 24" 48 watt Nova Extreme T5 high output (10,000k & actinic) lights. Fish: 2 percula clowns, 1 purple firefish, 1 royal gramma, 1 catalina goby & 1 mandarin dragonet (eats frozen). Other: 6 snails, 1 torch coral, 1 waving hand xenia, 1 fox coral, chunk of star polyp, medium sized rock covered with green hairy mushrooms, other mushrooms, 1 AWOL (though alive) anemone & 2 feather duster worms. Chemistry: NH3/NH4 - 0, NO2 - 0, NO3 - 15-20, pH - 8.4/8.5, PO4 - 0, temp - 77.2 F. Have been doing 10% water changes about twice a week, trying to bring down the nitrates. Also, adding ~15 drops of Aragamilk (calcium & buffer) on a daily basis, along with 2 ml. Reef Solution (minerals, trace elements & vitamins). Everything is thriving - except the crustaceans; mushrooms are growing and spreading, xenia has grown considerably, torch coral & fox coral look great, star polyps are spreading, fish are active, eating well and have excellent colour. Sorry about the long post, but hopefully everything necessary is listed. ...Any ideas??? ![]() |
#2
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![]() Copper get in there somehow? Any brass fittings?
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Brad |
#3
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![]() nope, and nope...
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#4
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![]() High Phosphates???
![]() your water can test ok, but your rock can store high phosphate counts Last edited by dsaundry; 02-26-2008 at 01:51 AM. Reason: addition |
#5
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![]() Hows your salinity?
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Christy's Reef Blog My 180 Build Every electronic component is shipped with smoke stored deep inside.... only a real genius can find a way to set it free. |
#6
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![]() salinity - 1.022 ...knew I'd forget something....
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#7
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![]() I know PO4 will give you a great algae garden, not sure it's ever been reported to kill inverts.
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Brad |
#8
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![]() Quote:
Have you checked the expiry on your test kits? Are you running any kind of chemical or mechanical media? (like carbon, filter floss, etc.) I keep my salinity at 1.025---->I agree with Michika (missed that!) Maybe you could get some kind of nirate sponge to soak it up (nitrate) until you find the source of what is causing it. It is possible it could be overfeeding, could be nitrate/phos stuck in the LR itself, could be in the sandbed. On the other hand it could be you have an invert predator you don't know about? Perhaps a trapdoor snail (found one of those in my tank last night trying to eat my snail! > ![]()
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120g build thread 48g-upgraded to 120g old pics old 48g build thread Pics.... more recent pics seahorse pics Last edited by sharuq1; 02-26-2008 at 03:21 AM. Reason: forgot stuff |
#9
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![]() SG of 1.022 is probably what is doing it. Inverts need a SG of 1.024-1.026.
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#10
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![]() Quote:
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Nitrates were low to start with, therefore I suspect I'm responsible for the rise by trying to make sure the mandarine dragonet is getting his fair share. ![]() Trapdoor snail and/or crab... Hmmm.... Would they leave the bodies lying around? Quote:
...Not trying to be difficult, just trying to figure this out. Thanks for all the input! Any other thoughts? Last edited by pulik; 02-26-2008 at 03:53 AM. |