something like this would work but it would look goofy. Even a simple piece of plastic on either side of the seaswirl nozzel may solve the problem. The nozzels can support their weight but its when they are sleeping near the nozzels path that it gets loose and falls. I have about 1400gph coming out of each nozzel so its a lot of flow being directly down to the LPS - so may have no choice but to make something or relocate the trouble maker snails.Maybe someone can print a cage for it?
I thought about the icp test but gonna wait probably few weeks out to rule this garlic thing. I'm almost certain it's that bc my corals are used to high phosphates. I am hoping it's no some metals creeping out of this dense Marshall Island rockSend out an icp test to just rule out odd things. I lowered my phosphates and things look way better. Every tank is different. Some tanks run fine with some numbers and others don’t.
Yeah I did the same thing as you. I can't believe no one is selling clean aquacultured LR yet. in the past i never had hair algae issues, dinos, bacterias blooms, uglies, etc because I always seeded with at least 10 LB of good Liverock that was taken from the ocean and it spread to the dry rock very quickly, (within 6 months everything looked the same). I honestly feel for newbies right now it can be challenging to have a SPS dominant tank, luckily most newbies dont like SPS and will want Pulsing Xenias and mushroomsTo be honest I figured starting a new tank after having a lot of experience would be easy. But there really is something about the age of the system and the age of the rock. I focused on keeping high nutrients in the beggining to go along with the idea that you can basically mature your system faster with it. So I was dosing nitrates and phosphates to keep them at .1 phosphates and 10 nitrates. Well for whatever reason it is, my corals hate phosphate over .04 so I just said screw the dosing and just do water changes and let it ride. Things are more positive now.
The hidden reef has big vats of rock cycling that you can buy. I’m not sure how long it’s been in the system but it would be worth it to ask. Even if it was originally dry and has been in there only 6 months or so it’s still a 6 months head start over dry rock.Yeah I did the same thing as you. I can't believe no one is selling clean aquacultured LR yet. in the past i never had hair algae issues, dinos, bacterias blooms, uglies, etc because I always seeded with at least 10 LB of good Liverock that was taken from the ocean and it spread to the dry rock very quickly, (within 6 months everything looked the same). I honestly feel for newbies right now it can be challenging to have a SPS dominant tank, luckily most newbies dont like SPS and will want Pulsing Xenias and mushrooms
I would stop feeding garlic. If it’s not in the ocean I don’t feed it to my fish.
I would add a camera to the tank if you don’t have it.
usually it’s a fish or a crab. They eat the corals when you are not in front of the tank.
going back on video is a very good way to see what’s going on in your tank.
if you can get a hold of a par meter I would also see how much par your giving your corals.
Some one in my tank was eating my zoas. I thought I had a bug but when I started looking at my cameras I noticed the pacific blue tang was the one eating it.I stopped feeding garlic as of yesterday. Par range is 100 on the bottom and 200 around top of aquascape.
Good point on the camera, it could just be the Uchin stabbing everyone, which is common but shouldnt be an issue since the corals are experiencing some sensitivity to getting light. I did remove about 7 corals, dipped, inspected, and put back in QT. Mainly the Zoas and goni which I don't have a backup so couldnt watch them die. I am planning on doing a 120 gallon water change. These garlic pieces are sprinkled all throughout the rockwork and I imagine they landed on the corals polyps and caused irritation.