Did you read this who!e thread? Its not JUST anything lol
It just coralline it comes in a variety of colors some only found in the ocean.
It'll plate over itself and is a huge help in preventing hair algae and other nuisance algaes.
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Did you read this who!e thread? Its not JUST anything lol
It just coralline it comes in a variety of colors some only found in the ocean.
It'll plate over itself and is a huge help in preventing hair algae and other nuisance algaes.
Below is a lot of conjecture inferred by reading up on coralline algae. Hopefully someone will eventually chime in that has had an experience like yours .At first thought it was in balance or issue with pest etc. With anything in this hobby u do some change and have to wait to see if it takes effect. So yeah it has taken time to try and figure out what was causing this issue. Then time to see whu this stuff growing so fast to out compete corals.
I have thought about not taking down but starving it out. I am sure have to remove most other inhabinets. Not sure if just removing food for it would do in removing spores. Right now sure looks sick compared to what it was during peak of it growning.
I could always cut only chunks of living tissue from some of my coral like chalice etc that won't have any dead material to spread living CL. But like with chalice could skin or chalice itself have any chance of bring it into qt any spores or cl or annome? I want to save for my old mated set clowns? Also what about things like lps that normally need part dead to start again.
I don't always have time to read wall after wall post some of us have families and would rather spend time with them then a bunch of strangers on forums.Did you read this who!e thread? Its not JUST anything lol
Then don't comment if you cant fully grasp the situation.I don't always have time to read wall after wall post some of us have families and would rather spend time with them then a bunch of strangers on forums.
I scanned over a few and from what i seen it growing over half dead coral which is normal and you're obviously supplying more to the coralline than your corals.
So there an imbalance in chemicals going on.
My initial comment was in jest, but homie came a stompin.be nice to each other. its the holidays
lol!My initial comment was in jest, but homie came a stompin.
no, not really. It takes a lot to scrape it off with a knife. It is some type of calcium build up, but not slippery like a coral IMO. I am going to try and put it under my microscope here in a bit, but I don't have a great way to reference that to anything so it probably won't help me.Is it slippery to the touch? Could it perhaps be Lobophora?
I’m interested too, thanks for the bump! Sadly, the user was last seen June 7, 2019 so don’t get your hopes up too highSorry to bump such an old thread, but I just found it. This is very fascinating to me. Was it ever resolved? Any identification of the type of coralline it was? What about the water parameters?