Hi Everyone,
Seems I have the dreaded STN/RTN disease in my tank and I'm considering options in treatment and getting back to a disease-free tank. First of all, tank breakdown including params:
32gal mixed reef biocube, no sump, no filter media whatsoever. Carbon dosing vodka. Tank 3yrs old. Two fishes reactor with biopellets also from two fishes (offlined the other day, as pump died and have to get new one).
NO3: ~5ppm
PO4: 0.04ppm
Alk: 8.2dKh
Calcium: 430ppm
Mag: ~1400ppm
Sp Gravity: 1.026
pH: 8.1-8.5
Brief breakdown of organisms in the display tank:
- Multiple species of sponges, tunicates, coco worms
- NPS: gorgonia, fat head dendro, sun coral
- SPS: birds nest, montipora, acropora, millipora, cyphastrea
- LPS: micromussa, lophyllia
- Soft: kenya trees
Additives:
- vodka, 0.3ml daily
- PNS Probio homegrown, 40ml daily
- Phytofeast, 40 drops daily
- SpongePower, 5 drops daily
- AcroPower, 5ml daily
- Night time Kalkwasser, ESV mag, alk, calcium
Light is Radion XR15 Blue on the AB+ schedule with 8hrs solid light and one hour ramp up on each side.
Water changes bi-weekly @ 15% (~5gal). Salt is ESV Saltwater (recently changed from Tropic Marin Pro Reef). Skimming daily at least 9 hours, although I had dialed this back to only 2 before the problem began to see if I could get more growth out of the sponges.
The problem:
Everything was doing great in the tank, until I added an acro frag about a month and a half ago. Thought it wasn't getting the right flow, so repositioned it. It responded with RTN that looked like brown jelly sloughing off it it. Fragged it to save some small pieces. I didn't realize one of the small pieces landed on my large montipora plate and was hidden from view, so didn't discover it until the next day when there was around a 1" area of bleach on the cap. Discovered and discarded the piece of acro. Thought the bleaching (RTN/STN) would stop, but it kept on spreading and producing the same brown jelly like sloughing off which I basted off. I decided to frag the large montipora and remove the dead area - this worked, for a time. I then noticed the disease had spread to my large setosa colony, so I decided to frag it and remove the dead branches, this worked, but i had lost a lot of the above coral colonies. Then the disease spread to my large bird's nest colony and decimated it, but I again fragged it and saved a few branches. I should mention that during this period I ramped the skimming back up to 9hrs a day. A couple of weeks passed, and I thought the issue was mitigated, until it hit one of my cyphastrea colonies. I could not frag this one since it was encrusted over a piece of live rock, so I decided to do a witch Hazel dip as specified in the Reef Moonshiner's blog. Put it back in the tank, but there was no change and I lost the whole colony. Interestingly enough, the acros have so far been fairly resistant to this disease, but I am getting white tips here and there.
At this point, I am reaching out to see what you guys might recommend I do. I am considering treating the whole tank with the Witch Hazel treatment method method above, but I fear I might lose my filter feeders and sponges if I do this - does anyone know if it is safe to do with tunicates and sponges? Any other people experience the same dire circumstances that have plagued me for the last month? Any advice as to what I should do to fix this dire situation? Any advice appreciated!
Seems I have the dreaded STN/RTN disease in my tank and I'm considering options in treatment and getting back to a disease-free tank. First of all, tank breakdown including params:
32gal mixed reef biocube, no sump, no filter media whatsoever. Carbon dosing vodka. Tank 3yrs old. Two fishes reactor with biopellets also from two fishes (offlined the other day, as pump died and have to get new one).
NO3: ~5ppm
PO4: 0.04ppm
Alk: 8.2dKh
Calcium: 430ppm
Mag: ~1400ppm
Sp Gravity: 1.026
pH: 8.1-8.5
Brief breakdown of organisms in the display tank:
- Multiple species of sponges, tunicates, coco worms
- NPS: gorgonia, fat head dendro, sun coral
- SPS: birds nest, montipora, acropora, millipora, cyphastrea
- LPS: micromussa, lophyllia
- Soft: kenya trees
Additives:
- vodka, 0.3ml daily
- PNS Probio homegrown, 40ml daily
- Phytofeast, 40 drops daily
- SpongePower, 5 drops daily
- AcroPower, 5ml daily
- Night time Kalkwasser, ESV mag, alk, calcium
Light is Radion XR15 Blue on the AB+ schedule with 8hrs solid light and one hour ramp up on each side.
Water changes bi-weekly @ 15% (~5gal). Salt is ESV Saltwater (recently changed from Tropic Marin Pro Reef). Skimming daily at least 9 hours, although I had dialed this back to only 2 before the problem began to see if I could get more growth out of the sponges.
The problem:
Everything was doing great in the tank, until I added an acro frag about a month and a half ago. Thought it wasn't getting the right flow, so repositioned it. It responded with RTN that looked like brown jelly sloughing off it it. Fragged it to save some small pieces. I didn't realize one of the small pieces landed on my large montipora plate and was hidden from view, so didn't discover it until the next day when there was around a 1" area of bleach on the cap. Discovered and discarded the piece of acro. Thought the bleaching (RTN/STN) would stop, but it kept on spreading and producing the same brown jelly like sloughing off which I basted off. I decided to frag the large montipora and remove the dead area - this worked, for a time. I then noticed the disease had spread to my large setosa colony, so I decided to frag it and remove the dead branches, this worked, but i had lost a lot of the above coral colonies. Then the disease spread to my large bird's nest colony and decimated it, but I again fragged it and saved a few branches. I should mention that during this period I ramped the skimming back up to 9hrs a day. A couple of weeks passed, and I thought the issue was mitigated, until it hit one of my cyphastrea colonies. I could not frag this one since it was encrusted over a piece of live rock, so I decided to do a witch Hazel dip as specified in the Reef Moonshiner's blog. Put it back in the tank, but there was no change and I lost the whole colony. Interestingly enough, the acros have so far been fairly resistant to this disease, but I am getting white tips here and there.
At this point, I am reaching out to see what you guys might recommend I do. I am considering treating the whole tank with the Witch Hazel treatment method method above, but I fear I might lose my filter feeders and sponges if I do this - does anyone know if it is safe to do with tunicates and sponges? Any other people experience the same dire circumstances that have plagued me for the last month? Any advice as to what I should do to fix this dire situation? Any advice appreciated!