My current tank is a 180 with a 50 gallon sump and 20 gallon fuge.
lights: 3 400 watt mh 20k radiums( just changed) 4 t5 actinics(about 1 year old)
4 mp40s running NTM
rock 200+ pounds
calcium Reactor
Skimmer: MRC orca pro2
heaters and fans
RO and DI
I have had this tank up and running for a little over a year.
everything has been growing great I have a number of sps frags mostly and small colonies about 10 or so fish. the sps has been growing with great ply extension i probably had the tank up and running about 3 months before adding the first frag. I added a new trigger and was feeding a lot of food recently to keep him happy and get him eating and had a nitrate spike up to about 15-20. some cyano has now covered my sand. my corals showed their immediate dislike. The corals plyps retracted over the next few days to no extension. I did several water changes several times a week over the next few weeks. kept testing my water and showed higher than good levels so i took the water to my LFS and had them test and all params looked great. got some more test kits and now.
current test
nitrate 0.1-0.2
ammonia 0
nitrite 0
ph 7.88-8.12
temp 78-79
DKH 8
calcium 440
phosphate 0.2
my corals have gone from pissed looking to downright sad some have turned brown and 1 has started STN in a few spots. a couple of corals have just 0 polyp extension a few have turned brown. even the zoas have little extension. and the frogspawn looks sriveled
The cyano has remained.
I am at a loss on what to do at this time.
I have two theories that caused cyano and coral problems
1) my actinics have reached the end of their life and caused a cyano breakout and this is adversly affecting my corals.
solution: new bulbs on order
2) I caused a spike with my addition of a new fish and feedings. my levels are really higher than i think because the cyano is eating the nutrients.
solution: i am thinking of adding a reactor with carbon and GFO and slowly starting a biopellet reactor.
I know there are a lot of risks with the biopellets but i have to do something soon or my corals will surely die.
any help would be great thanks
lights: 3 400 watt mh 20k radiums( just changed) 4 t5 actinics(about 1 year old)
4 mp40s running NTM
rock 200+ pounds
calcium Reactor
Skimmer: MRC orca pro2
heaters and fans
RO and DI
I have had this tank up and running for a little over a year.
everything has been growing great I have a number of sps frags mostly and small colonies about 10 or so fish. the sps has been growing with great ply extension i probably had the tank up and running about 3 months before adding the first frag. I added a new trigger and was feeding a lot of food recently to keep him happy and get him eating and had a nitrate spike up to about 15-20. some cyano has now covered my sand. my corals showed their immediate dislike. The corals plyps retracted over the next few days to no extension. I did several water changes several times a week over the next few weeks. kept testing my water and showed higher than good levels so i took the water to my LFS and had them test and all params looked great. got some more test kits and now.
current test
nitrate 0.1-0.2
ammonia 0
nitrite 0
ph 7.88-8.12
temp 78-79
DKH 8
calcium 440
phosphate 0.2
my corals have gone from pissed looking to downright sad some have turned brown and 1 has started STN in a few spots. a couple of corals have just 0 polyp extension a few have turned brown. even the zoas have little extension. and the frogspawn looks sriveled
The cyano has remained.
I am at a loss on what to do at this time.
I have two theories that caused cyano and coral problems
1) my actinics have reached the end of their life and caused a cyano breakout and this is adversly affecting my corals.
solution: new bulbs on order
2) I caused a spike with my addition of a new fish and feedings. my levels are really higher than i think because the cyano is eating the nutrients.
solution: i am thinking of adding a reactor with carbon and GFO and slowly starting a biopellet reactor.
I know there are a lot of risks with the biopellets but i have to do something soon or my corals will surely die.
any help would be great thanks