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05/01/2018, 06:29 PM | #1 |
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Help! More Corals are Bleaching.
Im at a loss, I had some SPS bleaching about 2 months ago, they appear to be slowly recovering. Figured it was from a T5 Lamp change.
Now I have a Red Monti Cap and War Coral that have started to show bleaching, I also have a Weslo that has been showing its skeleton for the past week and appears to have tissue recession (color loss), and a gaping mouth. I have a dual GFO and Carbon reactor. My water parameters are..... Sal. 1.025 Temp 78.5 PH 8.13 Ammonia 0 Nitrite 0 Nitrate 7 Calcium 435 Phosphate .006 Mag 1410 Alk 8.3 Sorry I cant turn my blues off with the T5 set up I have. Overall Tank Shot 0501181908.jpg Monti Cap 0501181914.jpg Weslo 0501181917.jpg War Coral (Red Circles show spots that are starting to bleach) 0501181918.jpg |
05/01/2018, 07:09 PM | #2 |
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Your parameters appear on point, so I would have to guess too much, or too rapid change in light source. Corals sometimes get angry when their light is changed in colour spectrum or increased intensity. The thrive in stability so each time we make change, they will react unless we slow down the changes...
BTW, very nice tank....so the problem is newly occurred....and not catastrophic. Think light |
05/01/2018, 07:12 PM | #3 | |
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05/01/2018, 07:51 PM | #4 |
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Corals can react quickly or slowly depends on the degree of change and the composite of the change. A low PH for example may take months whereas copper, maybe a day.
Im not sure it's light, but if your water is was good, light is the next parameter, one that has changed. If T5 are used to long, their colour changes, and when the new lamps are installed, both the colour and intensity changes. If you can lower intensity, you could consider that maybe |
05/01/2018, 08:01 PM | #5 |
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05/02/2018, 03:09 PM | #6 | |
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Nope havent changed what I was doing, but I did shut it down.. I caught my Christmas Wrasse picking on the Weslo, so I moved that to my other tank and the Wrasse is going to finding a new home. Im not sure if the other coral bleaching is caused from it or not. |
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05/02/2018, 05:40 PM | #7 |
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You could still be experiencing fallout from the lamp change but looking at your phosphate it seems a little low. Coral still need phosphate as a food source along with nitrate. With a nitrate level of 7 I would try to raise phosphate to about .03 and see if that doesn't help. I believe many have had success with seachem flourish, there's another product but can't recall it atm.
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Knowledge is knowing a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting it into a fruit salad. Philosophy is wondering if that means ketchup is a smoothie. Current tank info: 45g SCA Cube |
05/02/2018, 05:48 PM | #8 | |
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05/02/2018, 07:01 PM | #9 |
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It could be, you may spike nitrate with that. Just like mag, calc, and alk there is a balance between nitrate and phosphate as well. To little or to much of both is a bad thing and to much of one and not enough of the other is bad as well and can cause other problems. Your nitrate isn't bad though, if you can get p04 up a bit and keep it steady see how that does.
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Knowledge is knowing a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting it into a fruit salad. Philosophy is wondering if that means ketchup is a smoothie. Current tank info: 45g SCA Cube |
05/02/2018, 09:51 PM | #10 | |
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The wrasse isn’t eating the coral. It picks at pods. How often do you test. Also phosphates did you mean to say .06. .006 is too low for out test kits to read Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro |
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05/03/2018, 05:32 AM | #11 | |
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I test twice a week, I use the Hanna ULR tester. My last reading was 2, so 2x3/1000=.006 (the way I've read to convert and the charts that I've found online. |
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05/03/2018, 05:53 AM | #12 |
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[QUOTE=Str8linespeed;25429404]Sorry I beg to differ, I believe it was eating the coral. If it was picking then it was doing it aggressively enough to actually pick the weslo up off of the bottom. I find it strange that if it was pods, which I dont believe I have any in that tank, that the Wrasse was picking in the same spot and repeatedly. Regardless I found a new home for the wrasse.
I test twice a week, I use the Hanna ULR tester. My last reading was 2, so 2x3/1000=.006 (the way I've read to convert and the charts that I've found online. If all the stuff in your tank is dying there has to be something wrong with your water chemistry LHow often do you do water changes Also The Hanna ulr phosphates tester the results are the results. Do you use thst one or the other one There is no reason to convert. So your phosphates are 2.00 with is really high. Anyway move the welso to a dark low flow spot. Once they start not puffing up it’s normal means death. So you need to get it to puff up. I Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro |
05/03/2018, 12:01 PM | #13 |
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If your phosphate is .006, that is way to low, and bleach yup...
Nitrate should be in the 2-4ppm range and phosphate in the .02-.04 range or they starve |
05/03/2018, 12:22 PM | #14 |
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Your eyes must be a lot better than mine. Because I can not tell the difference without a shadow of the doubt on salifert or red sea nitrates test kit once you get under 10.
Also op didn’t state if he had phosphates checker or phosphorus Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro |
05/03/2018, 12:46 PM | #15 |
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We can wait for OP to confirm, but based on the conversion it looks like he's using the ULR Phosphorous.
Definitely take the GFO offline if that hasn't already been done. I agree that close to zero is too little phosphate.
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05/03/2018, 12:48 PM | #16 |
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I don’t like to assume anything. When trying to figure out a problem I never assume anything
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05/03/2018, 12:55 PM | #17 |
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There's no way phosphates are 2ppm...especially when GFO has been used.
But, like I said, we can wait for OP to confirm.
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Pat Current Tank Info: 125 in-wall , 40b sump. 6 bulb T5. ASM G2 skimmer. LPS and leathers |
05/03/2018, 01:02 PM | #18 |
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Help! More Corals are Bleaching.
I don’t think they are at 2 if Gfo is used correctly. But maybe it isn’t. Maybe it stopped tumbling after a day. Maybe his test vial is dirty and giving a false reading. Op also never stated how often he tested. We are assuming he is doing everything correctly. But why are we assuming that. He also didn’t state if he does water changes. Also he states he doesn’t have an autotop off. Maybe he gets lazy for a couple days then tops off. This over time will cause problems.
As far as the lights. After 2 months the coral would of gotten used to the increased lights of it was simply stranger lights. And unless he went 2 years without changing his t5 I don’t think that’s an issue but once again we shouldn’t assume We simple don’t know enough Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro Last edited by anthonys51; 05/03/2018 at 01:43 PM. |
05/03/2018, 01:44 PM | #19 |
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Also a reef tank with no pods. Lol. Can we really trust his judgement. If he doesn’t have pods I am the queen of England
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05/03/2018, 04:02 PM | #20 | |
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I use the API test which low scale is .25 But the resulting colour is very very pale which I figured, and yes, it's a guess, is probably a quarter of that number. We are getting no green at all, so likely, we should be at least, close to that range. If green stops, close is good enough for this test. I only ensure that the green colour in the test remains as it was.... |
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05/03/2018, 04:17 PM | #21 |
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Its not bleaching, it looks more like necrosis.
Your nitrate and phosphate are way out of balance and phosphate is too low for that level of nitrate and alk. If you want to keep phosphate that low, you need to reduce nitrate below 1ppm as well and drop alk to NSW levels of 6.7-7dKH. Or a easier way would be the let phosphate go up to ~0.05ppm and keep the other to around current values. It is very stressful for corals to have one of the N, P or Alk low while others are high, or vice versa. As a rule of thumb, never make one of the components limiting or excess (making something excess makes other stuff limiting), this includes light as well. If I were you, I would just remove GFO. There is no need for continuous use for GFO unless you have rock leaching phosphate or if there is massive algae issues. People didnt use to have this kind of weird bleaching events before widespread use of GFO. |
05/03/2018, 04:49 PM | #22 | |||
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05/03/2018, 04:54 PM | #23 | |
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05/03/2018, 05:06 PM | #24 | |
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They come in on frags. Your funny Plus Hanna makes 2 checkers. You didn’t state witch one. Instead of writing a rude respond you could just answer Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro |
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05/03/2018, 05:30 PM | #25 | |
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I've mention multiple times in this thread exactly which Hanna checker I use and how many times I test per week. Again, I use the Hanna ULR, not the phosphate checker for freshwater, but the marine checker for phosphorus. Please tell me how pods survive a coral dip? I use the Bayer method, from what I've understood that kills all critters that could be living on the frags. This is why I believe I have no pods living in my tank and that the wrasse was eating the Weslo. Which today looks puffier in certain sections of its skeleton. Im hoping it recovers. |
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