Hi!
A few weeks ago I did a major rescape of my tank, which caused a terrible ammonia spike. All my euphyllia began to shrink down and die, and I did two large water changes to counteract the parameter shift. Everything has been stable since, and one of my frogspawns fully recovered. However, my Aussie torch and octospawn continue to become worse, and since countless water changes aren’t helping, I am beginning to believe there is some sort of bacterial infection. In the past few days, things have gone from bad to worse, especially for the torch. Additionally, a new indo torch was added, which is 100% fine, which confirms to me that there is some sort of infection, rather than a reaction to parameters. I should note that the two euphyllia in question were never moved at all during the rescape. Does anyone have a similar experience, and what should be done to save them? The octospawn has one head and the torch is two heads, splitting into four. Would an iodine dip be wise, or could that cause further problems? The Aussie torch is one of my first and favorite corals, and I’d hate to lose it...
Thanks in advance!
A few weeks ago I did a major rescape of my tank, which caused a terrible ammonia spike. All my euphyllia began to shrink down and die, and I did two large water changes to counteract the parameter shift. Everything has been stable since, and one of my frogspawns fully recovered. However, my Aussie torch and octospawn continue to become worse, and since countless water changes aren’t helping, I am beginning to believe there is some sort of bacterial infection. In the past few days, things have gone from bad to worse, especially for the torch. Additionally, a new indo torch was added, which is 100% fine, which confirms to me that there is some sort of infection, rather than a reaction to parameters. I should note that the two euphyllia in question were never moved at all during the rescape. Does anyone have a similar experience, and what should be done to save them? The octospawn has one head and the torch is two heads, splitting into four. Would an iodine dip be wise, or could that cause further problems? The Aussie torch is one of my first and favorite corals, and I’d hate to lose it...
Thanks in advance!