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Yes I acclimated it for 30 minutes when adding it to the tankHow did you acclimate it?
Looks like it's in bad recession.
How did you acclimate it?
Looks like it's in bad recession
The clown wasn’t inside the hammer, like i said it was good until one day, I didn’t move it or anything it just randomly didn’t open. The current wasn’t annoying it. I didn’t notice some deadness on the bottom of the coral aswell as the outside of the Hammer when I got him.Acclimation was very short and How did you acclimate it?
Is clown laying in the hammer ? They are known to get too excited and beat the hammer to death.
Avoid extremely bright locations or areas of very high current, and avoid areas that are too dark or with currents that are too low. Fast currents risk damaging the soft, fleshy polyps (and getting an infection). Bright lights will cause bleaching. Insufficient lighting will cause the poor coral to wither away and starve to death.
Hammer corals only require a moderate amount of light for photosynthesis and can grow well in the intermediate regions of your tank. Just about any reef LED lighting should be sufficient for most tanks. Reduce white light intensity and get it off the sand bed which sand can irritate it.
The polyps should sway in the current, but not sustain so much pressure they are constantly bent over their skeleton. Too much flow will tear the polyps (worst case) and cause the polyps do not extend in the first place (best case). So, don’t give them too much flow.
My temp is 24 degrees Celsius and 0.05 ppmWhat are your temp and phosphate level ??
It’s not o believe water quality but likely insufficient lighting, low calcium or tissue stressThe clown wasn’t inside the hammer, like i said it was good until one day, I didn’t move it or anything it just randomly didn’t open. The current wasn’t annoying it. I didn’t notice some deadness on the bottom of the coral aswell as the outside of the Hammer when I got him.
Yeah, the tank is a fluval evo 13.5, I’ve heard the light can be a bit faulty but I’ve seen people have lps with the light.It’s not o believe water quality but likely insufficient lighting, low calcium or tissue stress
Ok I will go and buy that since I don’t have it at home, would overfeeding the tank increase the nitrateNitrate seems low. The coral might be starving.
It is also possible that it was already sick/damaged when you purchased it and is just now showing the effects. While you do want to limit the amount you disturb it, you could try an iodine dip.
Yes, that is one way. Another is to take the skimmer cup off and/or otherwise reduce your filtration.Ok I will go and buy that since I don’t have it at home, would overfeeding the tank increase the nitrate
Thanks for the helpYes, that is one way. Another is to take the skimmer cup off and/or otherwise reduce your filtration.
For iodine, the regular grocery store stuff works fine (might be called povidone-iodine). Add a few drops to a container of tank water until it's the color of tea (you should still be able to see through it) and dip the coral for 10 minutes. You can add it back to the tank without rinsing it off.
Good luck