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Unread 10/22/2007, 06:35 PM   #26
Playa-1
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Well this is not biological, but an electronic Canary might be an ORP Monitor. It's kinda pricey though. I don't think you want to wait till things get sick and start to die before you take action.


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Unread 10/22/2007, 07:41 PM   #27
krzyphsygy
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I could always tell when something was wong in my tank by how a Digitata looked. Usually there was fill polyp extension, when there was not. I knew some thing was up.
I trust the look of a supposably easy SPS because SPS must have the best water quality. Usually far better than most other corals. So when my SPS corals are happy, I always figured so was everything else.


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Unread 10/22/2007, 08:34 PM   #28
uscharalph
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I allways thought Xenia was a good indicator, but the specimen I had liked the water dirty. i think my water got too clean and it dissolved. LOL!!!


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Unread 10/22/2007, 08:51 PM   #29
LauraCline
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I know this sounds weird but I hardly ever test my tanks anymore, I can just tell by how they smell if something is off. If it smells like anything other than fresh clean ocean water then something is off.


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Unread 10/22/2007, 10:41 PM   #30
fierceseaman
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if you are worried about why you are not able to keep frogspawn, tell us a little more about the frogspawn you are keeping. do you get it shipped? if you have it shipped and it is damaged even slightly in transport the probability of it succumbing to Brown Jelly disease is very large. does the frogspawn just waste away? come over to the LPS keeper forum and you can learn a lot about frogspawn. it is generally a hardy coral as long as your parameters are good. if your water quality is good then i would see where you are getting your specimens from.


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Unread 10/23/2007, 08:41 AM   #31
Savas
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Fierce,

I am not worried about keeping frogspawn - I figure I will eventually be able to keep it.

I am just looking for a reliable early warning system. I have over $1,600 invested in corals in three small tanks. I am just trying to protect my investment.


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Unread 10/23/2007, 10:01 AM   #32
Cheekymonkey
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I've heard great things about open brain corals being great canaries for water changes. I've been told they will tend to shrink as the need for a water change approaches, and puff back up after one.


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Joshua Solomon
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Current Tank Info: 300G in progress, 120G SPS/LPS Reef, 40G Mushroom/Zoa, 50G Zeroedge Clam/Gorgonian Tank

Last edited by Cheekymonkey; 10/23/2007 at 10:06 AM.
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Unread 10/23/2007, 12:57 PM   #33
Cheekymonkey
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I've heard great things about open brian corals beign great canaries for water changes. I've been told they will tend to shrink as the need for a water change approaches, and puff back up after one.


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Joshua Solomon
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Click my red house and help me with my 300G build.

Current Tank Info: 300G in progress, 120G SPS/LPS Reef, 40G Mushroom/Zoa, 50G Zeroedge Clam/Gorgonian Tank
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