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Pineapple sponge. I highly doubt it was the reason for your zoas demise. Your tank would be the first one here where they did any damage.
1ppm of nitrate is not high in fact its very low. Typically they thrive in higher nitrate and phosphate water with lots of particulate foods to ingest. But I have had them in places that a lot of particulate tends to be concentrated in low nitrate phosphate tanks also, like the overflow and dark parts of my sump. My guess is the zoas are starving if that is truly your nitrate level.They are completely overrunning a few zoa colonies and completely drowning them out. I've lost 2 colonies to them-what params exactly do they thrive off? Params is a pretty broad term when it comes to talking nutrients. Do they like high nitrate? What parameters should I be checking. My nitrate levels are on the high side at 1ppm.
I don't want higher nitrate levels. And with it being below 10ppm nitrates, and me watching these sponges drown them out, im certain of what I'm seeing. Every zoa colony without these sponges are perfectly fine.1ppm of nitrate is not high in fact its very low. Typically they thrive in higher nitrate and phosphate water with lots of particulate foods to ingest. But I have had them in places that a lot of particulate tends to be concentrated in low nitrate phosphate tanks also, like the overflow and dark parts of my sump. My guess is the zoas are starving if that is truly your nitrate level.
Thats fine I didnt say you need them higher its just a fact they will rise in time. Low nutrients can and in a lot of cases does lead to coral loss. If you are somehow able to keep the nutrients low and still feed the corals youll be fine. As for the pineapple sponges scrape them off outside of the tank it is possible that they could irritate the corals just from touching them, they have no sting I am aware of. Its possible they have a chemical component, but I am not sure. Typically they grow in dark spots where corals do not, so I cant say I have had this issue. I can say I have never had nitrate that low in an established tank. How do you achieve it? Is it something you work on or is it just because its a newer tank?I don't want higher nitrate levels. And with it being below 10ppm nitrates, and me watching these sponges drown them out, im certain of what I'm seeing. Every zoa colony without these sponges are perfectly fine.
I appreciate the information. The tank is on the newer side-about 8 months. They just seem to be spreading very fast. I can't say they are stinging or anything, but they spread so fast on a rock that they did indeed drown out an entire colony so I pulled the entire rock. Seeing they feed on organic matter-possibly I'm feeding my coral too much? I do keep a few lobophyllia and I try to spot feed all my coral twice a month with reef roidsThats fine I didnt say you need them higher its just a fact they will rise in time. Low nutrients can and in a lot of cases does lead to coral loss. If you are somehow able to keep the nutrients low and still feed the corals youll be fine. As for the pineapple sponges scrape them off outside of the tank it is possible that they could irritate the corals just from touching them, they have no sting I am aware of. Its possible they have a chemical component, but I am not sure. Typically they grow in dark spots where corals do not, so I cant say I have had this issue. I can say I have never had nitrate that low in an established tank. How do you achieve it? Is it something you work on or is it just because its a newer tank?
Possible over feed of reef roids?Yeah, the pineapple sponges wouldn't be killing your corals - the worst I've seen these do is irritate flesh of corals if they're physically touching them. So, assuming the tank is relatively new and the zoas are relatively new to the tank, I'd really look at the typical suspects of lighting, flow, water quality (parameters), and predation.
Regardless, pineapple sponges tend to boom then bust in population and eventually go away on their own, so I expect you'll see them dying off over the next few/several weeks.
With regards to the sponges and what they like - sponges tend to feed on POM and DOM (Particulate Organic Matter and Dissolved Organic Matter); these don't register on our hobbyist Nitrate and Phosphate test kits, as the kits only test for inorganics. It's possible that your tank is currently high in the right kinds of DOM/bacteria for these sponges to feed on, but I don't know for sure.
Roids will raise phosphates and does not align with these sponges which derive from silicates which often are cause. Can be from new rock, new sand, from tap water if used and expired or leaking Di Resin cartridges.Possible over feed of reef roids?
Please don't use ai as a source here. Randy already showed several times how bad the advise is it gives.
Getting back to topic.I appreciate the information. The tank is on the newer side-about 8 months. They just seem to be spreading very fast. I can't say they are stinging or anything, but they spread so fast on a rock that they did indeed drown out an entire colony so I pulled the entire rock. Seeing they feed on organic matter-possibly I'm feeding my coral too much? I do keep a few lobophyllia and I try to spot feed all my coral twice a month with reef roids
That’s not AIIt is good old fashioned google, you should try it it’s user friendly!Please don't use ai as a source here. Randy already showed several times how bad the advise is it gives.
Also:
Not likely:Possible over feed of reef roids?
Your sponges probably won't feed on Reef Roids, as the food in Reef Roids is too big (I've seen it stated at 150-200 microns, most of the food consumed by sponges is DOM, which is smaller than 1 micron; even the larger foods like the T-Iso are only like 6 microns at the largest).
I run 3 marine 3.0 fluvals..48_60inch. I have most the lighting on maximum, tabk is very lit, not enough light??Getting back to topic.
What's your lighting? I have never seen them grow in bright areas. And someone already commented on the stretched necks of some of your zoas