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Green Brain comes back from the dead



 
 
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  #1  
Old July 14th 03, 11:16 PM
TW
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Default Green Brain comes back from the dead

Last year I bought a green brain coral for my reef. It never did well
in my tank and over a period of months slowly died. In the end there
was no green 'flesh' left. At the time I was re- organizing my LR. I
used the brain as a piece of rubble at the back of my tank away from the
lights. It sat there untouched in the dark for almost a year. I was
recently dealing with a bad bout of cyno that required that I move some
LR for cleaning. I could not believe my eyes when I spied the brain was
in fact alive. The colour was much lighter than before. Probably from
the lack of light. Almost of 1/3 of the coral had come back. I moved
it back to the front of my tank and placed it under an overhang to
shield it from direct light. Over a period of weeks I slowly brought
it out into the light. Now it is 3-4 months later and it is about
half covered. The progress is very slow but it is definitely
improving. I now dose with Kalk and frequently use carbon and all my
corals are doing much better.

Just to let you know that sometimes when you think its a goner, there
may be some life left. After several failures over the past few years I
am particularly proud of this little success.

Todd

  #2  
Old July 15th 03, 04:34 PM
rs11
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Default Green Brain comes back from the dead

Same thing happened to me with 2 plate corals, thought they were dead but
was to lazy to take them out of the tank. A year later I noticed that each
one had many "things" on it. Those things turned out to be new plate corals,
now have around 30 new ones. the largest is 3" diamiter. Also a Brian coral
has started to regenerate. Now I do not take dead corals out of the tank.
Rob
"TW" wrote in message
.. .
Last year I bought a green brain coral for my reef. It never did well
in my tank and over a period of months slowly died. In the end there
was no green 'flesh' left. At the time I was re- organizing my LR. I
used the brain as a piece of rubble at the back of my tank away from the
lights. It sat there untouched in the dark for almost a year. I was
recently dealing with a bad bout of cyno that required that I move some
LR for cleaning. I could not believe my eyes when I spied the brain was
in fact alive. The colour was much lighter than before. Probably from
the lack of light. Almost of 1/3 of the coral had come back. I moved
it back to the front of my tank and placed it under an overhang to
shield it from direct light. Over a period of weeks I slowly brought
it out into the light. Now it is 3-4 months later and it is about
half covered. The progress is very slow but it is definitely
improving. I now dose with Kalk and frequently use carbon and all my
corals are doing much better.

Just to let you know that sometimes when you think its a goner, there
may be some life left. After several failures over the past few years I
am particularly proud of this little success.

Todd



  #3  
Old July 15th 03, 05:47 PM
Marc Levenson
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default Green Brain comes back from the dead

Todd and Rob,

That is very cool. My caulastea has been receeding to the point that I expect
death any time. Yet it has been hanging on and I'm ignoring them. And who
knows?

Marc


rs11 wrote:

Same thing happened to me with 2 plate corals, thought they were dead but
was to lazy to take them out of the tank. A year later I noticed that each
one had many "things" on it. Those things turned out to be new plate corals,
now have around 30 new ones. the largest is 3" diamiter. Also a Brian coral
has started to regenerate. Now I do not take dead corals out of the tank.
Rob
"TW" wrote in message
.. .
Last year I bought a green brain coral for my reef. It never did well
in my tank and over a period of months slowly died. In the end there
was no green 'flesh' left. At the time I was re- organizing my LR. I
used the brain as a piece of rubble at the back of my tank away from the
lights. It sat there untouched in the dark for almost a year. I was
recently dealing with a bad bout of cyno that required that I move some
LR for cleaning. I could not believe my eyes when I spied the brain was
in fact alive. The colour was much lighter than before. Probably from
the lack of light. Almost of 1/3 of the coral had come back. I moved
it back to the front of my tank and placed it under an overhang to
shield it from direct light. Over a period of weeks I slowly brought
it out into the light. Now it is 3-4 months later and it is about
half covered. The progress is very slow but it is definitely
improving. I now dose with Kalk and frequently use carbon and all my
corals are doing much better.

Just to let you know that sometimes when you think its a goner, there
may be some life left. After several failures over the past few years I
am particularly proud of this little success.

Todd


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