Yes, I assumed that as well. Just a little strange, as they didn’t used to do this.When you say “breaking” you’re observing them folded over and deflated, compared to peak-day?
I suspect you’re observing a daily cycle of being inflated and deflated. They look good in the pic.
Phosphates, in particulate Polyphosphates, are often used as a preservative for foods, especially for flake, pelleted and ground (coral foods) products.
Are Excess Phosphates Lurking In Your Fish Food | Reef Builders | The Reef and Saltwater Aquarium Blog
At one time or another, it seems like all aquarists deal with excessive phosphates in their tank. Phosphates could be silently lurking in your aquarium causing unsightly algae blooms…reefbuilders.com
I think Randy recommends frozen for higher NO3/PO4 unfortunately! I wonder why pellets tend to be higher in PO4 - bone meal as filler?
Thankfully got my snails for that! Is the idea that the PO4 is taken up by whatever organism that eats them?Pellets are nutrient dense, all the water weight has been pretty much removed. IF left uneaten, they have a great effect then their frozen counterpart,
Love the movement and how active everything is.Recently got a melanarus wrasse, yellow damsels and chromis from @FishForLife. Looks like they're settling in nicely! Those rowdy chromis did manage to break off some monti branches though... Love to see them interact with the coral overhangs and branches.
Yep, not looking too hot... I've tried prazi, does not seem to have done anything. Regrettably planning to euthanize if things turn worse. It's stomach is very pinched, and it's swimming is a little disoriented.probably intestinal worms...
if it won't eat...it won't recover
Not sounding favorablyYep, not looking too hot... I've tried prazi, does not seem to have done anything. Regrettably planning to euthanize if things turn worse. It's stomach is very pinched, and it's swimming is a little disoriented.
Definitely sad for the fishNot sounding favorably
Sorry for your los$ and sad for the fish
Seems odd, and I don't have any good theories. Easy enough to only run the reactor 1/2 or 1/3 time which gets the filtering effect of the carbon while letting the polys open.Seems like the stylo polyp retraction was due to running carbon! I turned off carbon overnight accidentally, and the stylo re-extended it's polyps. I turned the carbon back on, and the stylo retracted. Turned it off for 2 days now, and the stylo is looking much better.
I kind of doubt that this is due to the carbon's anti-yellowing effect causing higher PAR - maybe it's stripping something from the water that the stylo likes?
Thoughts?