• Why not take a moment to introduce yourself to our members?

Mick Crawford

Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have an Aqua Medic Percula 90 about 70 gals with everything built in, skimmers, filters etc.

The tank is now 6 months old and all the readings are '0' or normal. Calcium is 224, magnesiun 1480. S.G has recently risen to 1.029 and I am correcting this gradually with water changes 10% per week.

I have currently got green mushroom corals and a leather which are very healthy, a bush coral which recently has not opened as fully as it used to and a pulsing xenia which appears okay. I also have a yellow button polyp but the fans on this do not come out as much as they used to.

But I have recently lost 2 finger corals after a temp rise while on holiday, it went up to about 29/30 C. Prior to this I put a hammer coral and a slipper coral in the tank. Both appeared healthy when I bought them. The hammer coral lasted about a week and then shrunk into into its skeleton and has never been out again, the slipper coral lasted about a month but appears to have given up the ghost.

I have asked local dealers who all came up with different answers, I did try marine 'Snow' coral food and I have added a phosphate bag to my filtered water in a seperate area at the back of the tank. Nothing seems to make a difference.

Can anyone help or is my tank just too young.

Mick
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
In case no one has said this yet Mick...
:welcome:

The elevated SG would be my first concern, and I'd lower it quicker than the 10% a week change by adding more freshwater than is evaporated daily and pulling out the excess. For example, if the tank evaporates 1 liter a day, I'd pull out an additional liter of saltwater from the tank and add 2 liters fresh. Also, during water changes you can make the SG a bit lower than the main tank but must add the makeup water slowly so as to minimize the shock.

Secondly, the calcium level ideally should be between 400 - 500 mg/l. Do you test for PH and ALK as well? if so, what are the readings?

What type of substrate, if any do you have and what kind of lights?
 

Mick Crawford

Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Thanks for the reply and for the welcome - the PH is 8.4 and alkalinity on my test kit shows normal to high.
I have aragonite substrate and 150w halide lights.

My apologies, calcium reading was 424 not 224.

I also forgot to mention I have 2 yellow tangs, two Pyjama cardinals, a clown and a blue damsel. All appear absolutley fine. I did lose all my turbo snails but put this down to the temperature. My cerith snails are fine, presumably because they burrow beneath the sand.
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
:D 424 is MUCH better! I'd just stay the course for a while, lower that SG and hope things perk back up. You may want to do greater than 10% changes, as with your fish the bioload might be a bit much for a newer tank. You did get all the decaying things out of the tank, right?

Hopefully someone else will chime in with another idea.
 

Mick Crawford

Reefer
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I am very grateful for your help. By the way when would an experienced aquarist consider a marine tank to be established for the purposes of inserting hard coral?

PS love the changing face icon

Mick
 
A

Anonymous

Guest
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
ChrisRD":irxpf4dv said:
Personally I prefer to give the tank a few months (minimum) before putting any stony corals in.

As usual, I agree with ChrisRD...the more time to stabilize the tank, the better.
 

Sponsor Reefs

We're a FREE website, and we exist because of hobbyists like YOU who help us run this community.

Click here to sponsor $10:


Top