July 19, I set up a 28g Low Boy frag tank to house a bunch of zoas that I didn't want in my main tank. I used rock from two established healthy tanks, plus some new MarcoRocks Reef Saver rock. I also used enough sand from my main tank (11 months old) to barely cover the bottom of the tank. I then covered that with brand new sand to a total depth of around 1".
July 21, I moved over 28 zoa frags, most of them on their own small rocks so that there ended up being quite a bit of aged live rock in the system.
July 27, I added a tiny ruby red dragonet to help with the rampant amphipod population. (They swarm at night in my main tank, and plenty came over in the move. The long-term goal is to move him to the main tank.) I also added a bottle of copepods in case the dragonet wasn't keen on amphipods right away.
Somewhere just before or just after July 27 (I know, it's super frustrating that I can't remember) all of the zoas begin struggling to open. For two or three days, maybe half of them would eventually get there. The others wouldn't. Up until that point, they had been thriving. They looked great.
By July 30, none of them were opening at all so I moved them all back to the main tank where they're thriving again. I also noticed that all my stomatellas were dying. (My tanks also teem with stomatellas.)
On that same day, I finally got a controller set up and the pH graph since then might be a clue to what's wrong:
The pH seemed fine (if a little high) when I first got everything set up and got the pH probe calibrated, but it started climbing quickly. When it hit 8.6, I panicked and I turned off the lights.
The next morning I turned the lights on again, and pH climbed from 7.89 to 8.52 in just 6 hours and 20 minutes. At that point I cut two of the light bars from 80% to 40% and turned the third one off completely.
This tank has no corals in it. Just a tiny ruby dragonet, some live rock, live sand, mini nassarius, and a formerly healthy stomatella population that might have all died. There are also diatoms on the sand.
This tank sits in the same 11' x 14' room as two other tanks where the pH is great (after struggling with pH for a long time and eventually determining, thanks to Randy, that it was largely a CO2 problem).
Parameters:
What could be causing pH to jump so high and so fast?? I feel like there's an easy answer that I just don't know.
July 21, I moved over 28 zoa frags, most of them on their own small rocks so that there ended up being quite a bit of aged live rock in the system.
July 27, I added a tiny ruby red dragonet to help with the rampant amphipod population. (They swarm at night in my main tank, and plenty came over in the move. The long-term goal is to move him to the main tank.) I also added a bottle of copepods in case the dragonet wasn't keen on amphipods right away.
Somewhere just before or just after July 27 (I know, it's super frustrating that I can't remember) all of the zoas begin struggling to open. For two or three days, maybe half of them would eventually get there. The others wouldn't. Up until that point, they had been thriving. They looked great.
By July 30, none of them were opening at all so I moved them all back to the main tank where they're thriving again. I also noticed that all my stomatellas were dying. (My tanks also teem with stomatellas.)
On that same day, I finally got a controller set up and the pH graph since then might be a clue to what's wrong:
The pH seemed fine (if a little high) when I first got everything set up and got the pH probe calibrated, but it started climbing quickly. When it hit 8.6, I panicked and I turned off the lights.
The next morning I turned the lights on again, and pH climbed from 7.89 to 8.52 in just 6 hours and 20 minutes. At that point I cut two of the light bars from 80% to 40% and turned the third one off completely.
This tank has no corals in it. Just a tiny ruby dragonet, some live rock, live sand, mini nassarius, and a formerly healthy stomatella population that might have all died. There are also diatoms on the sand.
This tank sits in the same 11' x 14' room as two other tanks where the pH is great (after struggling with pH for a long time and eventually determining, thanks to Randy, that it was largely a CO2 problem).
Parameters:
- Ammonia: 0
- Nitrate: 9 (Sera)
- Phosphate: 0 (Hanna Phosphorus ULR)
- Alk: 7 (Sera)
What could be causing pH to jump so high and so fast?? I feel like there's an easy answer that I just don't know.


