Two weeks ago I bought a purple bubble tip anemone. It looked great when I put it in, but it has rapidly gone downhill. At the moment it is dying, if not already dead.
I have a lightly stocked 29gallon tank that has been up and running for 8 months. I have a juvenile coral beauty angel and two juvenile snowflake clowns. I have two hermits and a handful of snails as my cleanup crew. There is a 2.5 gallon HOB refugium with a ton of media, sand, and chaeto, as well as a HOB filter, but no skimmer. The light is a reef breeder photon V2. It's primarily an LPS tank and the lighting is tuned to BRS recommendations for LPS corals.
I didn't suspect nitrate or phosphate since none of the corals have shrunken, but I picked up a salifert test anyway...the reading was 0 yesterday. I also picked up a Red Sea foundation kit to test my Alk, Ca, and Mg. The dKH is 8.4-8.7, Mg is over 1600, and Calcium is between 450 and 500 according to Red Sea.
The fish and other corals have great color and are eating and active. What am I missing? I realize the magnesium is high, but is that known to cause such rapid mortality for an anemone? Is there some other water parameter I can check for? And most importantly, is there any chance this anemone could pull through?
Pictures attached are from oldest to most recent. The most recent pictures were just taken a couple of hours ago.
I have a lightly stocked 29gallon tank that has been up and running for 8 months. I have a juvenile coral beauty angel and two juvenile snowflake clowns. I have two hermits and a handful of snails as my cleanup crew. There is a 2.5 gallon HOB refugium with a ton of media, sand, and chaeto, as well as a HOB filter, but no skimmer. The light is a reef breeder photon V2. It's primarily an LPS tank and the lighting is tuned to BRS recommendations for LPS corals.
I didn't suspect nitrate or phosphate since none of the corals have shrunken, but I picked up a salifert test anyway...the reading was 0 yesterday. I also picked up a Red Sea foundation kit to test my Alk, Ca, and Mg. The dKH is 8.4-8.7, Mg is over 1600, and Calcium is between 450 and 500 according to Red Sea.
The fish and other corals have great color and are eating and active. What am I missing? I realize the magnesium is high, but is that known to cause such rapid mortality for an anemone? Is there some other water parameter I can check for? And most importantly, is there any chance this anemone could pull through?
Pictures attached are from oldest to most recent. The most recent pictures were just taken a couple of hours ago.