missile150
New Member
I have had a 10gal nano up and running for about 4 months now. Everything is great in it. Here are the parameters, quick and short:
calcium - 400
nitrate and nitrate - 0
ph - 8.3
salinity - 1.024 to 1.025
temp - 78 - 79deg
phosphate - o
Inhabitants:
1 yellow clown goby
1 emerald crab
1 torch coral
a bunch of yellow star polyps
1 ricordia mushroom
1 other mushroom
4 candy cane coral heads
several other small star polyps
a small chunk of halimeda
1 tubenastrea coral
Equipment:
200gph hang on filter
80watt compact flourescent light
about 20lbs of live rock
crushed coral substrate
Everything was fine until about a week ago and the yellow star polyps started to not expand all the way. All the other corals are doing well, even growing, but this one has stopped. I had the temp of the tank a little higher for a while, around 82degrees, but did not want to keep it that high, so I lowered it. Should it have stayed that high? I did not want to over heat the corals. Can it have remained that high and not harmed the fish or the corals? I was under the understanding that it may be a little on the high side, but through a bunch of reading, temps can range from 77degrees to 84 degrees. Maybe I should have left it. Do you think that was the cause? Thanks.
calcium - 400
nitrate and nitrate - 0
ph - 8.3
salinity - 1.024 to 1.025
temp - 78 - 79deg
phosphate - o
Inhabitants:
1 yellow clown goby
1 emerald crab
1 torch coral
a bunch of yellow star polyps
1 ricordia mushroom
1 other mushroom
4 candy cane coral heads
several other small star polyps
a small chunk of halimeda
1 tubenastrea coral
Equipment:
200gph hang on filter
80watt compact flourescent light
about 20lbs of live rock
crushed coral substrate
Everything was fine until about a week ago and the yellow star polyps started to not expand all the way. All the other corals are doing well, even growing, but this one has stopped. I had the temp of the tank a little higher for a while, around 82degrees, but did not want to keep it that high, so I lowered it. Should it have stayed that high? I did not want to over heat the corals. Can it have remained that high and not harmed the fish or the corals? I was under the understanding that it may be a little on the high side, but through a bunch of reading, temps can range from 77degrees to 84 degrees. Maybe I should have left it. Do you think that was the cause? Thanks.