- Joined
- Oct 3, 2019
- Messages
- 48
- Reaction score
- 24
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
That looks like it may also have brown jelly disease. Unfortunately, usually terminal. A few more fresh water dips may help.
Corals are amazingly robust. Hopefully, yours makes it.
It's a bacterial infection that is not uncommon to euphillia corals. The head on the right in the picture has the telltale signs. Brown slimy coating on the head of the coral.Brown Jelly disease ? What’s that?
It's a bacterial infection that is not uncommon to euphillia corals. The head on the right in the picture has the telltale signs. Brown slimy coating on the head of the coral.
To my knowledge, there isn't a tried and true cure. Only ancidotal stories with moderate success.
I think a freshwater dip may help. Or.. cutting the infected head off and tossing it may save the other heads.
Brown jelly seems to move quickly and also seems to be contagious to other euphillia in the tank.
Sometimes cutting (literally) your losses up front prevents a bigger or more widespread problem
Get some flatworm exit. It caused no stress on my corals at all and killed flatwormOn the next day, my coral looks better . Looks like it’s coming back to life. Also, I can still see some flatworms. At the moment, I will leave my coral in peace. Maybe next week I will try again to dip in fresh water. I’m very happy my coral is back, I was worried that it wouldn’t. Any other idea on how to get rid of flatworms?
Get some flatworm exit. It caused no stress on my corals at all and killed flatworm
Run carbon a few minutes after you put in the exit and siphon them upOk but then how do you remove flatworms from the water?