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Old July 25th 07, 03:54 PM posted to rec.aquaria.marine.reefs
Huey
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Posts: 10
Default Birds Nest Coral Dying

On 25 Jul, 09:27, Wayne Sallee wrote:
First, it's recommended that you fragment your
corals so that you have several colonies, so that if
something happens to one, you still have the other.

I would recommend that you do several water changes,
increase lighting for the coral by replacing bulbs,
adding more lighting, and/or raising the coral up to
a higher place in the tank. Also check to see if you
need more water flow for the coral. They do need
good water flow. They usually do best when treated
like acripora. However there are different species
of birds nest corals, so their needs are going to vary.

Yes when you get an infection in a coral with many
polyps such as a small polyp coral, cutting off the
infected part by cutting where the colony is still
good, helps save the rest of the coral.

Wayne Sallee
Wayne's Pets


Don Geddis wrote on 7/24/2007 11:00 PM:



George Patterson wrote on Tue, 24 Jul 2007:
The people who are left here (myself included) all think they are fairly
knowledgeable, so we don't have a lot to say if nobody else asks
questions.


OK, I'll try a question.


I had a colony of Bird's Nest coral (Pocillopora damicornis):
http://reef.geddis.org/a/Bird's%20Nest%20Coral/
In the last couple of days, I got that so-called "rapid tissue necrosis" (RTN).


A small piece of the coral starts to die off, turning into a uniform brown
jelly, leaving behind a bleached white skeleton. The infection, or whatever
it is, spreads rapidly, killing inches worth in a few hours.


It seems it can be "fixed" by quickly pruning all the infected parts, along
with a buffer of still-healthy coral. Anything that hasn't yet gotten touched
may well survive. It doesn't seem to travel through the water column.


But on the other hand, any piece of the coral that has been touched by an
infected piece, starts dying off within a few hours (and continues to spread).
It does seem species-specific: killed off all of my (connected) bird's nest,
but didn't seem to bother any other nearby corals.


Anyone have advice or suggestions? This happened to a large colony of mine
before, as you can see from the photos at the link above in Sept 2006.
I regrew the colony over the last six months, to larger than it had been
before. But just lost it all in the last couple of days.


Why does this start? Does the colony just get too big, and maybe I don't have
enough water motion to clean away toxins from the center? I once lost a large
plate coral (Montipora capriconis)
http://reef.geddis.org/a/Plate%20Coral/
in much the same way.


One could always just generally suspect "water quality", but I'm not
stressing the tank with my bioload, and everything else is doing great. For
that matter, the colonies that die all look great right before the few days
of encroaching terminal death kill them. (And actually the extremities
continue to look good, until the brown jelly death infection crawls up the
branches to get to the ends and kill them too.)


Very frustating, a year of growth gone in a day or two.


Comments appreciated.


-- Don
__________________________________________________ _________________________*____
Don Geddis http://reef.geddis.org/
"I think," said Christopher Robin, "that we ought to eat all our provisions
now, so we won't have so much to carry." -- A. A. Milne- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


No one really gives a rats ass about your sick ass corals.........


 




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