Euphyllia flesh receding - iodine dip?

Letterkenny

Well-Known Member
View Badges
Joined
Sep 12, 2019
Messages
785
Reaction score
517
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have about 20+ torches, hammers, frogspawn, and octospawn in my tank and noticed my one octospawn and a head of my hammer aren’t opening much and seem to have flesh receding. After further inspection of the Euphyllia collection, I noticed one other that had receding flesh. The Alk, calc, and Mg are always super stable with my trident and DOS so will do a check to see it it’s my phosphates.

Thinking of trying an iodine dip for the corals showing deterioration. The couple threads I saw on this showed what color to aim for but didn’t say how long to leave it in there. Any insight on this or other steps I should try?
 

MERKEY

Cronies
View Badges
Joined
Oct 5, 2019
Messages
9,642
Reaction score
46,634
Location
Washington
Rating - 100%
1   0   0
Definitely re check parameters for a few days to check stability before dipping.

Phos and no3 like you said ;)
 

kartrsu

Well-Known Member
View Badges
Joined
Apr 20, 2019
Messages
708
Reaction score
538
Location
Glendale, CA
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have about 20+ torches, hammers, frogspawn, and octospawn in my tank and noticed my one octospawn and a head of my hammer aren’t opening much and seem to have flesh receding. After further inspection of the Euphyllia collection, I noticed one other that had receding flesh. The Alk, calc, and Mg are always super stable with my trident and DOS so will do a check to see it it’s my phosphates.

Thinking of trying an iodine dip for the corals showing deterioration. The couple threads I saw on this showed what color to aim for but didn’t say how long to leave it in there. Any insight on this or other steps I should try?
After checking parameters, you can do a dip for 10-15 mins. I’ve done it many times at pretty strong iodine concentrations with no losses. May take a day or two to warm up again. Make sure to keep temp up by floating in your tank or small heater.
 

MacKrell

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Jun 16, 2013
Messages
1,090
Reaction score
86
Location
Erie pa
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I have about 20+ torches, hammers, frogspawn, and octospawn in my tank and noticed my one octospawn and a head of my hammer aren’t opening much and seem to have flesh receding. After further inspection of the Euphyllia collection, I noticed one other that had receding flesh. The Alk, calc, and Mg are always super stable with my trident and DOS so will do a check to see it it’s my phosphates.

Thinking of trying an iodine dip for the corals showing deterioration. The couple threads I saw on this showed what color to aim for but didn’t say how long to leave it in there. Any insight on this or other steps I should try?
Any luck with dip? They bounce back?
 

Beck

Community Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 31, 2020
Messages
81
Reaction score
90
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Sounds familiar. I have tons of euphyllia and a super stable tank. I had euphyllia heads not extending as much then just slowly receding from the bottom up. I did iodine dips also hoping it would help, but it didn't. Finally I noticed tiny white bugs using a macro lens on my phone. They are super small take a really close look.
 

MacKrell

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Jun 16, 2013
Messages
1,090
Reaction score
86
Location
Erie pa
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Sounds familiar. I have tons of euphyllia and a super stable tank. I had euphyllia heads not extending as much then just slowly receding from the bottom up. I did iodine dips also hoping it would help, but it didn't. Finally I noticed tiny white bugs using a macro lens on my phone. They are super small take a really close look.
Did any dips work at removing them?
 

Beck

Community Member
View Badges
Joined
Mar 31, 2020
Messages
81
Reaction score
90
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I tried revive and it didn't touch them. I've read interceptor is the best way to kill them. I opened another thread asking for help on how to use it.
20201229_162310.jpg
 

nano reef

Valuable Member
View Badges
Joined
Dec 9, 2019
Messages
1,771
Reaction score
464
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I had a bunch of corals like over 1k come in with those all over the plugs! I almost didint out them in my tank but it was a lot of money to waste although if it wipes out my whole tank then a mistake! Are those bugs or eggs? How didi the interceptor work? They are still all over the plugs so hopefully nothing has hatched and maybe its not to late! is there something else that could be on my plugs that white like that and harmless?
 
Back
Top