- Joined
- Jan 2, 2020
- Messages
- 492
- Reaction score
- 303
We are recovering (I hope) from a mini crash resulting from an out of calibration refractometer, bad RODI water, and consequences of those two core problems.
Most of the acropora casualties make sense. Low salinity + alk swings = dead acro.
We lost a platygyra (again...), and a chalice. The platygyra lost tissue in an unusual way, with the flesh at the peaks of the ridges dying first.
After correcting these issues and doing 4 20% WCs with good RO water so far, now some euphyllia are looking rough, which is really eating me up considering how little trouble theyve been up to this point.
One common factor among the euphyllia and platygyra is that they were all recently moved within 4-6 inches of a lobophyllia. Their new locations had very similar levels of light, and slightly less flow than they were previously getting. I'm starting to wonder if the lobo may have attacking some of these corals with its mesenterial filaments.
Since I havent seen any warfare first hand, I'm wondering if there are patterns that tend to indicate warfare rather than chemistry as a cause for tissue death. I'm also wondering if there are tell tale patterns indicating flow, abrasion, or pests are to blame.
Most of the acropora casualties make sense. Low salinity + alk swings = dead acro.
We lost a platygyra (again...), and a chalice. The platygyra lost tissue in an unusual way, with the flesh at the peaks of the ridges dying first.
After correcting these issues and doing 4 20% WCs with good RO water so far, now some euphyllia are looking rough, which is really eating me up considering how little trouble theyve been up to this point.
One common factor among the euphyllia and platygyra is that they were all recently moved within 4-6 inches of a lobophyllia. Their new locations had very similar levels of light, and slightly less flow than they were previously getting. I'm starting to wonder if the lobo may have attacking some of these corals with its mesenterial filaments.
Since I havent seen any warfare first hand, I'm wondering if there are patterns that tend to indicate warfare rather than chemistry as a cause for tissue death. I'm also wondering if there are tell tale patterns indicating flow, abrasion, or pests are to blame.