Something eating skeleton of coral

Nicksal

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Hi everyone,
I had noticed that it looks like my skeleton on my hammer, candycane, and frogspawn coral is disintegrating or something is eating it? The coral flesh is happy and growing heads but the skeleton is falling apart somehow. I only have one green blue chromis, one sea urchin, and one starfish.
The tank has been up for a year now

Water condition are
Ammonia 0
Nitrate. 10
Salinity 1.026
Nitrite 0
Temp 79
Phosphate is .05
Ph 7.9
Dkh 9

20220521_191108.jpg 20220521_191203.jpg 20220521_191029.jpg
 

Wasabiroot

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What kind of urchin? Lol

Tuxedo? Great!

Pencil? Sure I'll eat your leptoseris and favia

I'd agree it's likely above post is correct. Good polyp extension, it's likely not disease


How big is the tank? Starfish a year in is challenge mode. I don't doubt your husbandry but I know I'd avoid most hobby Starfish except in large sandbeds or established biomes.
 

Sean Clark

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I think coral flesh is receding from that skeleton (not bad it's just outgrowing that part of the skeleton) and that makes it look like the skeleton is less smooth than you thought.
This was my first thought too.
 

homer1475

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I love all this new PH talk.

Ever since BRS put out that one video about PH having to be in the 8.0 to 8.3 range, everyone quotes it as the word of god. "OMG your tank will crash if you don't maintain at least 8.0PH!".

7.9PH is absolutely fine for a reef tank in an enclosed house.

I would also agree with @damsels are not mean
 

ZoWhat

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I love all this new PH talk.

Ever since BRS put out that one video about PH having to be in the 8.0 to 8.3 range, everyone quotes it as the word of god. "OMG your tank will crash if you don't maintain at least 8.0PH!".

7.9PH is absolutely fine for a reef tank in an enclosed house.

I would also agree with @damsels are not mean
My tank is growing like crazy with pH bouncing btwn 7.7 to 7.8. Hydrogen is only detrimental if below 7.5 or higher than 8.3 imo
 

homer1475

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My tank is growing like crazy with pH bouncing btwn 7.7 to 7.8. Hydrogen is only detrimental if below 7.5 or higher than 8.3 imo
I know right.....

In the summer with my AC on constantly, my PH never gets above 7.8, and everything is colorful, and growing just fine.
 

Duncan62

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Hi everyone,
I had noticed that it looks like my skeleton on my hammer, candycane, and frogspawn coral is disintegrating or something is eating it? The coral flesh is happy and growing heads but the skeleton is falling apart somehow. I only have one green blue chromis, one sea urchin, and one starfish.
The tank has been up for a year now

Water condition are
Ammonia 0
Nitrate. 10
Salinity 1.026
Nitrite 0
Temp 79
Phosphate is .05
Ph 7.9
Dkh 9

20220521_191108.jpg 20220521_191203.jpg 20220521_191029.jpg
I had this issue over the years and always found a crab digging for food was the culprit. I have a hammer that a crab fragged off for me. Lol.
 

Steve and his Animals

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For the record, I'm not saying your pH dipping below 8 will cause the seams of your tank to blow out and the world will end. It's just generally a good idea to keep your pH closer to ocean levels (average globally is 8.1). Never said you can't have success if it gets lower, but it can contribute to problems if there are multiple parameters out of wack.
 

MERKEY

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Hi everyone,
I had noticed that it looks like my skeleton on my hammer, candycane, and frogspawn coral is disintegrating or something is eating it? The coral flesh is happy and growing heads but the skeleton is falling apart somehow. I only have one green blue chromis, one sea urchin, and one starfish.
The tank has been up for a year now

Water condition are
Ammonia 0
Nitrate. 10
Salinity 1.026
Nitrite 0
Temp 79
Phosphate is .05
Ph 7.9
Dkh 9

20220521_191108.jpg 20220521_191203.jpg 20220521_191029.jpg
The 1st and second pic are where the frag was originally cut from the mother colony....there is nothing wrong in those areas. The bottom pic looks like the vendor tried to cover the cut with super glue, which is normal practice for vendors now a days.

Your 2nd pic shows where the skeleton used to have the flesh down to at one point. Over time the flesh receded and the skeleton is now thinner in that area.

If those marks are new then you have something strong enough to break the skeleton which would definitely concern me.

You never posted your mag and cal which are really important to keep steady and in balance with alk for skeleton growth.
 

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