BowieReefer84 May 5, 2010 May 5, 2010 I think they are getting too much light? I had them up high in the tank, and I got a timer and started running my lights (power compacts) 12 hours a day. I used to only turn my lights on if I felt like it. Some days would get 12 hours some days would get 1-2 hours. They are turning white and curling up. They don't accept mysis like the others either. The color has always been brownish greenish so that's normal.... I appreciate any tips. I have already moved it to the bottom of the tank.
surf&turf May 5, 2010 May 5, 2010 I have some of those, put them lower in the tank, they do fine under lower light.
steveoutlaw May 5, 2010 May 5, 2010 Those look like "Outlaw Stew" Palys........let them die......you're much better off without them!!!
BowieReefer84 May 6, 2010 Author May 6, 2010 My tank is only 29gallons. I only have some mushrooms, gsp's, colt coral, xenia, and some chalice frags. I am just trying to get the hang of reefing before I upgrade. I know they are bottom of the barrel palys, but I want to make them healthy just because. . . .I'll see how they do lower in the tank. Everything else is healthy so they should be ok.
ctenophore May 6, 2010 May 6, 2010 I keep these in full sunlight, about 1200 umol PAR. They can adapt to just about any lighting condition, including no light. I had a rock of them in an unlit sump for about a year and they survived and opened up within a week or two of being lit again.
Glenn May 6, 2010 May 6, 2010 1) keep them where they are (lower light area) and monitor them, or 2) give them a freshwater, RO, bath, then put them back in the low light. After seeing a Zoa nudibranch in my tank, I noticed that some of my Zoas and Palys were 'shriveling' up for a day or two. I have since given a FW bath on two consecutive Friday's (and plan another for tomorrow) and they are looking much better. I believe it was Jan who suggested this stating that 'something could be irritating them.' .. It seems to be working for mine. gds
BowieReefer84 May 6, 2010 Author May 6, 2010 1) keep them where they are (lower light area) and monitor them, or 2) give them a freshwater, RO, bath, then put them back in the low light. After seeing a Zoa nudibranch in my tank, I noticed that some of my Zoas and Palys were 'shriveling' up for a day or two. I have since given a FW bath on two consecutive Friday's (and plan another for tomorrow) and they are looking much better. I believe it was Jan who suggested this stating that 'something could be irritating them.' .. It seems to be working for mine. gds How long should I put them in freshwater for? I have never done this before so explain it to me like I am five years old. Thanks!!!
Glenn May 6, 2010 May 6, 2010 I got a 3g "pet keeper" container, filled it pretty full with RO freshwater but still allowed to float in the DT, and let it sit for the day while I was at work. (My RO water is pretty cold so this allowed the temp to acclimate to the DT temp.) When I got home, I placed as many Zoas in the 3g container as I could fit without stacking them, let them sit for 10 mins, then put them back in the DT. The 3g container with some pods, a spindly little starfish, and quite a few 'small pink bristle worms' was dumped down the laundry tub. Hope that helps.
BowieReefer84 May 6, 2010 Author May 6, 2010 I will give that a try. Never heard of doing a freshwater dip before with corals (only iodine dips). I know some people do freshwater dips to fish for ich maybe? Feel like I've heard that. We shall see. Thanks for the tip.
ctenophore May 6, 2010 May 6, 2010 Zoanthids are one of the few corals that can handle a freshwater dip. Do not dip sps or lps in fresh water!
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now