I recently added a rose bubble tip anemone to my tank. The tank has been established for 21 months and stable. It is very light on coral (2 photo-synthetic gorgonians, a toadstool leather, and a finger leather) and has a ton of macroalgae and fish (started as FOWLR). I've seen the anemone catch stuff from broadcast feedings, so I know it seems happy. I'm not planning on adding any more corals to the tank but do have a fish currently in observation. Trying to do all captive bred.
I added the anemone and the 2nd gorgonian a week ago. All was fine. Then on Sunday I noticed the anemone was retracted. Checked parameters and ammonia was high (.25ppm). Did a 10% water change and things were back to normal yesterday. Then tonight before the evening feeding I noticed the anemone was again retracted. The tentacles are still moving, but it's not puffy like normal and the color is darker. Checked parameters and again the ammonia is a tad high (.20 ppm). All other parameters are normal.
I'm doing another 10% water change tonight, but my question is, is it normal to need to monitor ammonia levels closely after introducing an anemone? I'm fine increasing water changes/monitor parameters more closely until things stabilize, but what's surprised me is that only the anemone is showing any signs of distress. I also didn't think the anemone alone would have enough of a bioload to tip things, so I didn't do more frequent testings.
Tank details:
55 gallon
PH 8.2
Ammonia .2-.25 (pre-latest additions 0)
Nitrite 0
Nitrate 10ppm
Temp 78
Inhabitants:
2 clownfish
Blackcap basslet
Pavo damsel
Mandarin
Starry goby
Coral beauty angel
Rainwater killifsh
Tuxedo urchin
2 emerald crabs
giraffe starfish
misc hermit crabs
various snails (astrea, cerith, nassarius)
2 feather duster worms
The photo gives you an idea of what I'm seeing and I know deflation is normal. It typically is about 3-4" across and right now it's tucked a crevice and is about 1/2 normal size. And thanks in advance for any help.
I added the anemone and the 2nd gorgonian a week ago. All was fine. Then on Sunday I noticed the anemone was retracted. Checked parameters and ammonia was high (.25ppm). Did a 10% water change and things were back to normal yesterday. Then tonight before the evening feeding I noticed the anemone was again retracted. The tentacles are still moving, but it's not puffy like normal and the color is darker. Checked parameters and again the ammonia is a tad high (.20 ppm). All other parameters are normal.
I'm doing another 10% water change tonight, but my question is, is it normal to need to monitor ammonia levels closely after introducing an anemone? I'm fine increasing water changes/monitor parameters more closely until things stabilize, but what's surprised me is that only the anemone is showing any signs of distress. I also didn't think the anemone alone would have enough of a bioload to tip things, so I didn't do more frequent testings.
Tank details:
55 gallon
PH 8.2
Ammonia .2-.25 (pre-latest additions 0)
Nitrite 0
Nitrate 10ppm
Temp 78
Inhabitants:
2 clownfish
Blackcap basslet
Pavo damsel
Mandarin
Starry goby
Coral beauty angel
Rainwater killifsh
Tuxedo urchin
2 emerald crabs
giraffe starfish
misc hermit crabs
various snails (astrea, cerith, nassarius)
2 feather duster worms
The photo gives you an idea of what I'm seeing and I know deflation is normal. It typically is about 3-4" across and right now it's tucked a crevice and is about 1/2 normal size. And thanks in advance for any help.