![]() | Become a Sponsor Our Sponsors |
|
Welcome to the Reef Sanctuary forums. We're a beginner-friendly Reef Aquarium community featuring saltwater fish tank discussion, reef aquarium supply reviews, free photo gallery and more! You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to many of our features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! Want to check the place out first? Take a look at our Beginner's Guide for a quick tour of all the features we have to offer the marine aquarium hobbyist. If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact contact support. |
| |||||||
| Home | Forums | Photo Gallery | Chat | Product Reviews | Live Coral Frags | Register | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| Aquarium Corals For the discussion of reef aquarium corals including SPS, LPS and Soft Corals. |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools |
| | #46 (permalink) |
| Wannabe Guru ![]() | Re: Elegance Coral theory This is what my Elegance looked like in it's hey day, as a matter of fact my B&W Ocellaris was being hosted by it for a period of time. It was on the upper half of the tank under 130w of PC's. ![]() This is a photo of what it looked like towards the end and you can see the tissue recession, this was a slow process and never did it show any swelling or retraction of the tentacles. In this photo it's under 250 12k coralvue bulb in the lower area of the tank. ![]()
__________________ Robert My Cube “A spirit is manifest in the laws of the Universe—a spirit vastly superior to that of man, and one in the face of which we with our modest powers must feel humble.” Albert Einstein |
| | |
| ReefSanctuary Sponsor |
| |
| | #47 (permalink) | |
| Wannabe Guru ![]() | Re: Elegance Coral theory Quote:
__________________ Robert My Cube “A spirit is manifest in the laws of the Universe—a spirit vastly superior to that of man, and one in the face of which we with our modest powers must feel humble.” Albert Einstein | |
| | |
| | #48 (permalink) | ||
| They misunderestimated me ![]() | Re: Elegance Coral theory Quote:
)Quote:
I still want to see a study showing where elegances corals are currently being collected versus where they used to be collected and more detailed facts on water quality and light quality they get in the wild. I think that showing quantitative differences in water and light quality for areas that elegance corals used to be collected in versus areas they are collected in now would give us important information to determine why these guys are so hard to keep now. My other question is, if the elegance corals collected 10-15 years ago in the hobby were so hardy, why do I not see many of these around?
__________________ Mike "The Bandwith Bandit" Help Build Reefpedia Premium Membership Available! Support Reef Sanctuary Sponsors | ||
| | |
| | #49 (permalink) | |
| Fire Coral | Re: Elegance Coral theory Quote:
The only thing I have dosed is iodine, and I only dosed this when I had an infected coral or thought there was a chance of one of my corals becomming infected. Most of my corals are just now getting back to the point where they will eat. I plan on soaking their food in vitamins, but I haven't started this yet. | |
| | |
| | #50 (permalink) | |
| Fire Coral | Re: Elegance Coral theory Quote:
![]() This is a pic of one of my corals that looks very much like yours in its hey day. This is a pic (sorry about the quality, ist a cell phone pic) of the same coral. You can see how the tentacles are getting a little longer in this pic. I am sorry to hear about your coral. In my opinion your coral, like mine, had been burnt at one point. In the first pic your coral was well on its way to recovery. Any of the environmental changes, or a combanation of them, could have caused its downfall. Bright light, high flow, no food. If the coral would have stayed where is was, and you could have kept the clown fish off of him, he most likely would have servived. I'm not supprised that it didn't show the puffed up symptom. It had spent time in your tank acclimating to the lights of you aquarium. They may not have been all that bright, but they were probably brighter than the light it recieved in the wild. The jump from these lights to the bright light of the second aquarium is not as large a leap as it would be from the wild to the lights of the second tank. | |
| | |
| ReefSanctuary Sponsor |
| |
| | #51 (permalink) | |
| Fire Coral | Re: Elegance Coral theory Quote:
| |
| | |
| | #52 (permalink) |
| Fire Coral | Re: Elegance Coral theory Yes we must rely on the hobbyist to advance the hobby. But it is also important to encourage people to keep specimens that will stay alive to minimize this hobby's impact on the reefs. Leave the difficult to keep stuff to the advanced hobbyist (whatever that term means ) I agree 110%. After rereading what I wrote I can see where someone could take it as I am telling everyone to run out and buy an Elegance coral. This was not my intention. If these were easy to care for we would not be having this conversation. If you don't have the experience and aren't willing to put in the time and effort it takes to keep one of these corals alive and healthy you should avoid them. My other question is, if the elegance corals collected 10-15 years ago in the hobby were so hardy, why do I not see many of these around? I think this is our fault. We don't see many 10 to 15 year old aquariums around. My old Elegance I posted a pic of was given away to keep an X wife from getting it in the divorce. She would have mailed me the dead skeleton just because she knew how much it ment to me. I lost track of the person I gave it to and I would be shocked if it were still alive today. |
| | |
| | #53 (permalink) |
| They misunderestimated me ![]() | Re: Elegance Coral theory The reason I ask about why we don't see many of the "old elegance" corals in the hobby is because I don't know if we have a baseline for how long these species live, in captivity or the wild. I know most hermatypic corals can live for decades or centuries if they aren't overgrown or out competed or eaten, but for a species that has evolved to live away from major reef structure we don't have much info on.
__________________ Mike "The Bandwith Bandit" Help Build Reefpedia Premium Membership Available! Support Reef Sanctuary Sponsors |
| | |
| | #54 (permalink) |
| Ricordea | Re: Elegance Coral theory Hi Darrell! I'm glad to see that the self appointed "Experts" didn't manage to drive you away from the rest of us ! "Elegance Disease" is itself a "Theory"! Did I miss something, or has someone out there somehow proved its' cause? For all of the "Experts" theories, I've yet to see one proved yet. This being said, any number of theories can be put forward, discussed, etc., etc., But until someone can show a scientific fact for the cause, NONE of them can be totally ruled out. I'm glad to hear that you're still here to help those who choose to make an attempt to keep these lovely corals. As I said in my first post. I've never attempted to keep an Elegance before, but it has always been at the back of my mind that I would be able to oneday. Please continue trying to make that day a reality for me and the others that would like to try them. I must agree with you that "Scientists" goal is to find an answer for "Elegance disease", and not a way for hobbyists' to keep a healthy specimen flourishing in a home aquarium. I further agree that all of the really useful advances in reefkeeping have been made by hobbyists in the last 40 years. In the 1960s, virtually nobody could keep any kind of coral alive, and at the present time people with no aquarium experience can set up a tank that is hospitable to ALMOST any marine creature. Heck, in the sixties, most people in the SALTWATER hobby couldn't keep FISH alive. I know that I'm speaking dangerously here, but I'll risk being flamed. THIS IS ONLY MY OPINION! A lot of people say that "certain creatures" shouldn't be kept in reef tanks, because of poor survival rates. But if nobody tries, can we ever hope to find a way for people to keep these delicate creatures? If someone is willing (like yourself), to do the environmental experiments necessary to find out what these creatures require for captive care, shouldn't the rest of us support and encourage these experiments? Personally, I think that we should.I know that mine is the minority opinion here, but I think that what you've done is commendable, and I'm hoping that you'll be willing to invest more of your' time and money investigating what is necessary for the captive care of other "Impossible" corals/creatures. I guess the underlying point here, is that progress is only possible when reasonable attempts are being made. Just bringing home a Difficult coral and plopping it into the tank, then watching it die doesn't confirm that it won't live in captivity. If you bring 8 or 10 home, place them in different environments, and most die but some survive, shouldn't the environment(s) that contain the survivors be investigated further? Even if they all die, does this REALLY prove that they are "unkeepable"? Or just that the right environment hasn't been found yet? I applaud the environmental work that you have done with the "Elegance", and encourage you to keep it up! Are you planning to "Aqua-culture" healthy Elegance corals to sell? If you are, please PM me. Thanks again. Dean
__________________ Meandean45 -RELATIVITY: "Sit on a red hot stove for a minute, and it seems like an hour. Sit next to a pretty Girl for an hour, and it seems like a minute. That's Relativity". A.Einstein : "A man's got to know his limitations."- Clint Eastwood in "Magnum Force"
|
| | |
| | #55 (permalink) |
| Brunt of all Jokes~ | Re: Elegance Coral theory Darrell, have you summarized any treatment program, identified a common starting point with a first response action, perhaps that would be a starting point for preservation?Steve |
| | |
| ReefSanctuary Sponsor |
| |
| | #56 (permalink) | |
| Sunshine Reefer ![]() | Re: Elegance Coral theory Quote:
For starters, let me say that I am relatively new to this hobby, but I do read a lot and am getting better at providing a good environment to keep the animals from the sea alive and thriving. A few months ago I had a reef with several frogspawn and hammers that were thriving and doing great. Then I bought a frogspawn that was receeding. Knowing what I know now I should not have bought this coral that was in trouble but I like many thought I could save it. Well, to make a long story short the jelly disease ran through my tank and one by one killed all of my LPS. Could something like that be at play here? Where healthy corals are infected by an ill coral? Just a thought and I certainly could be entirely off base. Perhaps as you stated the seemingly healthy corals were stressed by too much light, but I would think if it was a protozian it would have to come from somewhere. I can't see something like that appearing out of the blue. I guess it could be dormant and then cause the damage when the coral is stressed, but I am thinking of it like a virus that has to come from somewhere and then spreads to other corals by being in the same system. Anyway, just a thought. Like I said, I am new to all of this, but really do want to learn. Oh and here is the bluespot thread if you would like to read it. We have lots of fun on that thread but also are sharing lots of experiences in order to learn from each other. We haven't come to anything resembling good data yet but hopefully we will, and I will improve the care of these beautiful fish. http://www.reefsanctuary.com/forums/...spot-club.html Wow I talk a lot. ![]()
__________________ Peace LYNN You can't change the past but you can change how you view it. A reef tank is like a racecar. The faster you go the harder you crash. Lynn and Franks saltwater adventure Lynn's 20g clown tank Lynn's 90g of sunshine Every 60 seconds you spend upset is a minute of happiness you'll never get back. | |
| | |
| | #57 (permalink) | |
| Wannabe Guru ![]() | Re: Elegance Coral theory Quote:
The Elegance that my LFS has is on the top portion of the tank under a 10k 150w DE bulb and very healthy and I'm certain that was properly acclimated.
__________________ Robert My Cube “A spirit is manifest in the laws of the Universe—a spirit vastly superior to that of man, and one in the face of which we with our modest powers must feel humble.” Albert Einstein | |
| | |
| | #58 (permalink) |
| Manta Ray | Re: Elegance Coral theory ok what up with neg karma meandean45. this was the first neg karma i got and i dont know why. so meandean45 why? does anyone else think i deserve neg karma for anything i posted here?? can i too give neg karma to those that post something i just disagee with. |
| | |
| | #59 (permalink) |
| Fire Coral | Re: Elegance Coral theory Icstorc, You may be new to this but I believe you are right on target. I don't believe that these protozoans are something new. Many organisums survive in saltwater environments and don't pose much of a problem until the right conditions appear and their numbers explode. At this point they can pose a threat to animals that otherwise seem healthy. The key to preventing these outbreaks would be to find out what triggers them in the first place. Once you have determined what the trigger is you can take the necessary steps to prevent this from becomming a problem in the first place. I believe this is exactly what these Elegance corals are going through. |
| | |
| | #60 (permalink) | |
| Sunshine Reefer ![]() | Re: Elegance Coral theory Quote:
IME negative karma is fairly rare on this site, (except Whiskey who likes the negative. )but you do have the option. It is up to each individual why they give the negative karma.
__________________ Peace LYNN You can't change the past but you can change how you view it. A reef tank is like a racecar. The faster you go the harder you crash. Lynn and Franks saltwater adventure Lynn's 20g clown tank Lynn's 90g of sunshine Every 60 seconds you spend upset is a minute of happiness you'll never get back. | |
| | |
| ReefSanctuary Sponsor |
| |