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Chiefmcfuz

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Today

Slimer.JPG


2/26/06


Does it look ok? Kinda looks more brown today than last week. I have it middle-high in tank near powerhead but not directly in front for Mod flow.
 

nanoreefer22

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It's just browned out from the looks of it.

What kind of lighting do you have it under?

Mod-flow means different things to everyone. What someone calls mod flow someone else might call a dead spot.

It could be from the change coming from Davids tank or it could be too much nutrients in your water. Being a green slimer this thing should be hardy as hardy comes, although I'm having trouble keeping the little thing alive.

Keep an eye on it, if its gets any browner it could be nutrients or even nitrate(was my problem I think). If you start seeing the recession or bleaching of tissue something is the tank is astray.
-Kris
 
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Chiefmcfuz

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PC lighting it's about 9 inches from the surface 1 65w 10k and 1 65w actinic. It's near a aquaclear 50 with a hydro rotating water deflector on it. Got it on 2/25 ferom dace. No other SPS in tank just this one.
All water parameters are ok. Never had sps before.
 

nanoreefer22

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Lighting is really low for this piece :(. It could survive it most likely will just stay brown, growth would probably be minimal too. If you could move it closer to the light it would probably be an improvement for it.

Since params are ok, all you can do is wait and see if it changes back:).
-Kris
 

Rborgia

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My piece from Dace is bright green, has been from day one. I am still experimenting with location.... too high no polyps, too low no polyps...

I'm under T5s though...

Rich
 

Dace

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Chiefmcfuz said:
DSCN2253.JPG

Today

Slimer.JPG


2/26/06


Does it look ok? Kinda looks more brown today than last week. I have it middle-high in tank near powerhead but not directly in front for Mod flow.
Well i guess it's my fault. I should be like Montipora and disclaim that you have to have proper lighting for corals i sell. I know that green slimers are hardy as hell, but i've never been a believer of sps corals under anything but MH. It definately looks browned out. sorry. :eek:
 

VJ&POOPS

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My piece was doing well....it was getting some sunlight......but along came my neon damsel and nipped once so I thought nothing of it, the next days it was white and green I don't think it had a chance to turn brown.....I didn't know damsel fish ate corals:eat: ...long story short it's now white as some would say ded = :knockedou
 
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Chiefmcfuz

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I understand it may stay brown but it's not dead right? The places where the other frags were taken from have healed over with tissue it just looks brown. I wasn't sure if it was dead or dying. I will keep an eye on it.
 

masterswimmer

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It could easily still live. What is happening is the symbiotic algae, zooxanthelae (sp?) is being starved for light. The way corals get their color is from the zoox coloring up from the light. When you don't have sufficient light, the zoox don't retain their color, but the coral can still live, not happily though.
Believe me, that's the Readers Digest Condensed version :cheers:

master
 

Deanos

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masterswimmer said:
What is happening is the symbiotic algae, zooxanthelae (sp?) is being starved for light. The way corals get their color is from the zoox coloring up from the light. When you don't have sufficient light, the zoox don't retain their color, but the coral can still live, not happily though.
:scratch: I thought that zoox is naturally brown and will multiply rapidly (brown coral) under 2 conditions: (1) when there's too much light, the zoox's color begins to overshadow the coral's natural color. In this case, the coral may expel the growing zoox population to prevent it from overloading the coral with "energy" or (2) when there's too many nutrients feeding the zoox in the absence of sufficient light, the zoox population will grow, again hiding the coral's true color.

I guess I better go research some of the threads we have in the Advanced Forum on this topic.

Dean
 
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