X2I needed that laugh today.
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X2I needed that laugh today.
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Sincerely Lasse
Ha, simply asking if it was a Conch, tiger, fighting, just a loose guess based off the shine the shell seems to have.I do not know exactly whats Conch means - this is one that should be specialised at detritus and organic leftover. Do not remember its name. It could be an Olivia spp
Sincerely Lasse
I spoke to Lasse today at work, but I'll write my theory here as well(plus remind Lasse about the name of the coral..:D)
We have a lot of Seriatopora at the Aquarium, S. hystrix, S. guttatus and S. caliendrum. I believe the colony Lasse had was a S. guttatus.
They often grow fast and when they reach the surface, the branches gets closer and closer in the upper part of the colony. Sometimes after a stressor(like high temp or power break), but also sometimes without any changes that I know of, these colonies gets a brownish slime. Looks the same as when Euphyllia gets brown jelly disease, perhaps it's the same.
The disease spread fast and in a day a 15 cm colony can die. Usually just leaving a white skeleton.
This has mostly happened to large colonies close to the surface, often where there isn't much room left between the colonies/branches. Perhaps low water flow together with high levels of light is a trigger.
So my guess is that the colony got brown jelly disease while you were away. Or maybe it just missed you too much ;)
Now clean the skeleton and bring it to work. We need media for the calcium reactors.