based on the photos, few things to consider:
1. nutrients/elements and lighting. These corals look deficient in something, whether nutrients or some sort of elemental deficiency. Do you monitor elements such as potassium, iodine, and traces etc?
Are you carbon dosing or is there algae, dino or cyano in the system? considering that you need to dose so much phosphate per day?
The corals in the photos look pretty pale. Would help to post or send a few icp results over the past few months.
Lighting may also be too strong at the moment if there is some kind of imbalance.
2. Those vermitid snails near the base in the bare areas may be irritating the coral with their mucus nets, or grabbing food particles that could otherwise go to the coral. Probably not entirely the reason for the stn, but could be a contributing factor
Edit: 3. Blindly adding antibiotics, especially amoxicillin could have serious and devastating results to the system. Be 100% sure you know what you’re treating before medicating…
1. nutrients/elements and lighting. These corals look deficient in something, whether nutrients or some sort of elemental deficiency. Do you monitor elements such as potassium, iodine, and traces etc?
Are you carbon dosing or is there algae, dino or cyano in the system? considering that you need to dose so much phosphate per day?
The corals in the photos look pretty pale. Would help to post or send a few icp results over the past few months.
Lighting may also be too strong at the moment if there is some kind of imbalance.
2. Those vermitid snails near the base in the bare areas may be irritating the coral with their mucus nets, or grabbing food particles that could otherwise go to the coral. Probably not entirely the reason for the stn, but could be a contributing factor
Edit: 3. Blindly adding antibiotics, especially amoxicillin could have serious and devastating results to the system. Be 100% sure you know what you’re treating before medicating…
Last edited: