- Location
- Upper East Side
For the last month or so, I've been having a lot of problems with my tank. My corals have been dying slowly, starting with my montipora caps. I lost two orange cap colonies almost entirely. My purple one is bleaching. The yellow and green are browned out but hanging on. After that, I started losing a pink tipped digitata and a tan elkhorn monti and a purple polyped birdsnest colony. Now even MORE recently, I'm getting bleaching on the tips of my green slimer and I lost a head of blue candy cane. I also lost a huge blue turbinaria (not a pagoda cup - the kind like the scroll corals).
The candy cane is the only LPS to have been affected thus far. Some of the SPS haven't been affected - I have three different deepwater acros which are thriving. My tri color acro looks fantastic. My milliporas are fine, and my two other stags seem to be doing well. My two encrusting montis are doing okay (sunset and superman) and my palawensis (spelled wrong) monti is fine.
All fish and inverts are fine.
I have tested all of my levels, all with salifert kits:
SG: 1.025
pH: 8.0
dKh: 9
Calcium: 430ppm
Mg: 1250
phosphates: 0
nitrates: 0
I am running carbon, and two types of GFO. I am using 1 MH (which I switched about 3 weeks ago to a new bulb) for 7 hours/day.
I know I have a really bad flatworm infestation, though I've been trying siphon those out regularly. Is it possible I just have so many flatworms that as they are dying naturally, they are releasing toxins?
Any other ideas for what could be the problem based on the corals that have been affected?
The candy cane is the only LPS to have been affected thus far. Some of the SPS haven't been affected - I have three different deepwater acros which are thriving. My tri color acro looks fantastic. My milliporas are fine, and my two other stags seem to be doing well. My two encrusting montis are doing okay (sunset and superman) and my palawensis (spelled wrong) monti is fine.
All fish and inverts are fine.
I have tested all of my levels, all with salifert kits:
SG: 1.025
pH: 8.0
dKh: 9
Calcium: 430ppm
Mg: 1250
phosphates: 0
nitrates: 0
I am running carbon, and two types of GFO. I am using 1 MH (which I switched about 3 weeks ago to a new bulb) for 7 hours/day.
I know I have a really bad flatworm infestation, though I've been trying siphon those out regularly. Is it possible I just have so many flatworms that as they are dying naturally, they are releasing toxins?
Any other ideas for what could be the problem based on the corals that have been affected?
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