Do your corals suffer from mood disorders?

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Adam1985

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Hi all,

Does anyone else ever have corals randomly get “angry” from time to time, from at least a few days and up to weeks, with no apparent reason, while the rest of your corals are fine?

I’m posting this in SPS but I have this happen on many different species over the years. I’ve always meant to ask others about it but haven’t until now.

For example I’ve had this happen a few times recently. In one case a patch of GSP just closed randomly for a couple of weeks while other patches of GSP in the tank were normal (and close enough that light and flow were similar). I’ve also had my favorite montipora digitata randomly get angry last night, while two other montipora species nearby look as happy as could be.

I’m sure this kind of thing isn’t truly random but so far over the years I’ve been unable to find the root causes.

Thanks for your feedback!

Adam
 
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ScottB

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With softies and LPS, it is generally a little easier to deduce because their reactions are almost contemporaneous to the irritant.

With SPS it can be more difficult as the visible stress could be from a problem a week or two ago. It helps if you keep studious logs of changes & measures.
 
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Adam1985

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ThanWith softies and LPS, it is generally a little easier to deduce because their reactions are almost contemporaneous to the irritant.
With SPS it can be more difficult as the visible stress could be from a problem a week or two ago. It helps if you keep studious logs of changes & measures.

Thanks a lot. Actually I maintain a very detailed tank diary. I did have a significant nutrient spike after using a bad batch of phyto a couple of weeks . And alk got higher than I like. This is referring to my currently angry digitata.

What gets me is how other corals of the same genus are normal.

Do you think it would be worthwhile to take it out, dip it, and move it to a different location l? I’d need to carefully chisel around its base to dislodge it and then glue to a frag plug as it’s encrusted.

No parasites visible night or day, and I just did a 30% water change and loaded up on carbon and purigen in case of chemical contamination.

Would appreciate your feedback as it’s actually my favorite coral.

Adam
 

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ThanWith softies and LPS, it is generally a little easier to deduce because their reactions are almost contemporaneous to the irritant.


Thanks a lot. Actually I maintain a very detailed tank diary. I did have a significant nutrient spike after using a bad batch of phyto a couple of weeks . And alk got higher than I like. This is referring to my currently angry digitata.

What gets me is how other corals of the same genus are normal.

Do you think it would be worthwhile to take it out, dip it, and move it to a different location l? I’d need to carefully chisel around its base to dislodge it and then glue to a frag plug as it’s encrusted.

No parasites visible night or day, and I just did a 30% water change and loaded up on carbon and purigen in case of chemical contamination.

Would appreciate your feedback as it’s actually my favorite coral.

Adam

In the past, I have cut a struggling piece/colony in half, leaving behind 1/2 and dipping & moving the other half.

That way you can confirm yes/no on pests, lighting preferences, whatever while still keeping a chunk of it where it was once happy.
 
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Adam1985

Adam1985

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In the past, I have cut a struggling piece/colony in half, leaving behind 1/2 and dipping & moving the other half.
That way you can confirm yes/no on pests, lighting preferences, whatever while still keeping a chunk of it where it was once happy.

Thanks for the great advice.
 
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