Thanks for the feedback. I dont know what LC is? Is it something you have experienced personally. Can you share some details about it?
I agree it is bad to move fast, and I agree it is bad to move slow. It just depends on the situation. Massive water changes save people on a regular basis. I feel like I move slow but that is subjective. I checked back in my notes to get some dates and events if it is of any help for people trying to help diagnose. The ALK and PO4 changes went out of norm fast and I felt like it was ok to move them back really fast.
February 4th I got my ICP tests back. The tank looked better than it ever had as far as color and speed of growth. I was excited to see what the magic formula was.
March 10 th was the water flow overflow change. It was the day before the main pump died and had to be replaced. The flow was running at a different speed and I pulled the extra overflow while I was trying to make the flow match the old pump. I accidentally fragged a bunch of corals in the process . They healed incredibly fast and it left me thinking that the change was for the better.
Looks like march 22 was when I decided to pull the light diffusers off of my lights, I dialed them back 20% to accommodate for it and put them on 2 week acclimation mode. April 3rd was the day I decided that the lights may be burning my coral. I put the light diffusers back on, set the light back to -10% of the previous setting and put them on a 5 week acclimation to come back to normal.
March 24 was the first sign of trouble and one of the first days in San Diego that was hot enough to make my chiller Kick on. The issue was with a coral that had popped off the rocks from bubble algae. I moved it over 2 inches to what looked like a better place. I thought that the damage might have been coming from light color shift. I did nothing and waited. It was some time between that and April 4th that I lost the first colony ever in that tank.
April 3 rd I had a Birdsnest taking damage as well as a ponapi. I fragged the Ponapi and have several chunks that made it. I had Cardinal fry on March 1. I had been feeding live brine to the system for two weeks and knew that there was a risk of increasing my copper levels by doing it. When I saw the tissue loss I added Poly filter to mitigate the risk of copper. I the birds nest came back on its own after that and setting the lights to change back. Metal poisoning seems like you act as fast as possible. I sent out for an ICP test that day to ATI and it still hasn't come back so I am in the dark.
I dont know when I had changed the GFO. My notebook was missing at the time. I would guess it was around March 10th. My test kit showed that it was pushing .05 and that was higher than it had been so I wanted to stop it there. Seemed like regular maintenance. I use very little GFO and rely on my Chaeto to take up the majority of it. It was a new brand, so there was a change. I have never seen a reaction to a GFO change but I wanted to throw it in there.
From April 3rd until now I have been making small changes in the light, and GFO to move my tank back to where it was on Feb 4th. The flow stays as it is.
The alk drop was 4/15 down to 6.1 from 10.5. I got the calcium reactor back online and it is back up to 9.9 today. I am holding it there for now. I have run a shift nearly that dramatic on the same set of corals with no damage.
ICP from feb showed po4 at .05. Same as my testing. When I got the Hanna Checker on 4/19 found out that it was possibly up to .23. Salifert still said >.1 more than .05. I didn't believe the hanna, but decided to act as if. Lanthanum won't take your po4 to zero and I feel comfortable with it. I brought it down over the past 4 days. I dont know how long it had been high, so I dont know how dramatic the correction was. I figure the ICP results will help me out there.
The ALK PO4 seem like a lot of changes really fast when I look at it, I just feel that making corrections back to normal need to happen at least as fast as they went wrong. Some things like temp, or ammonia need to happen right now.
I feel like the excess of phosphate was the issue and expected to see improvements from dialing it back. I am totally willing to be wrong about that or any of it for that matter.
Please give me more feedback if you have had some experience with tissue loss related to any of it.
By LC I meant Lanthanum Chloride which is what you used to lower your phosphate with.
Quick changes in PO4 and alkalinity seem to be things that REALLY upset corals, particularly when the tank is a high light environment. When you want to make a change in those it’s best to make them over a very gradual period. If your tank alkalinity is suddenly very low the best strategy to take is to increase the dosing only slightly to stabilize the tank and stop it from dropping further, then adding slightly more to the daily schedule so that it creeps back up over the period of a week or so. By changing it quick back you are shocking the corals a second time. By gradual we’re ideally talking over the period of weeks instead of days.
PO4 deficiency is poorly understood by most aquarists, and the damage it causes especially when there is ample Nitrate available is exponential. In a high light tank the damage is swift and permanent and looks identical to your photos. Even if the phosphate deficiency is a punctuated event and phosphate levels are restored shortly afterwards, my experience is the damage has already been done and you’ll see tissue death and loss over quite a long period afterwards, (weeks, to months later). But if you keep phosphate available, the corals will continue to grow. It may take a long time for them to grow over the damaged areas in my experience, but it is what it is.
Here’s the catch to all of this, you need to find where your tank is happiest with phosphates being available (but remember too low is a BAD thing), you can’t go by what someone else suggests because they aren’t living in your tank with your lighting and flow etc. You have to let the corals tell you what’s right. So don’t be afraid of having phosphates, and if they get wildly out of control then you can start instituting a good control scheme that makes very gradual changes. I guarantee your tank will turn around. :)
