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  #21  
Old 01-16-2012, 08:59 PM
ScubaSteve ScubaSteve is offline
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Ok, this is just my opinion here, so take it with a grain of salt...

ULNS keep corals "trim and fit" to keep those nice colours, meaning they have little "fat" (aka excess zooxanthellae) to help them ride out system disturbances. With ULNS, we are essentially keeping them on the knife's edge. This is why so many people in the beginning of biopellets were having recession problems: the corals were starving.

The dramatic change in lighting conditions (not just intensity, but spectrum) probably caused the SPS to freak out a little while adjusting. You didn't spike the lighting, so it's not shock, but being at the intensity you are now they might not have enough zooxanthellae or pigmentation to handle the increased photons rates. This can cause photoinhibition (meaning too much light is causing them to shut down) or they're heating up at the skeletons due to the lack of skin pigmentation (ie. coral sunscreen). This can (and does) happen when you swap to new bulbs, new fixtures, etc. The change in intensity from T5 to LED is probably what triggered it. Corals that aren't pushed to the limit by ULNS can usually ride this out without ill effect.

Also, a shift in spectrum (LEDs are narrow spectrum compared to halides and T5) can cause a shift in which zooxanthellae clade is dominant in the coral. Each clade has it's own specific absorption spectrum; if you switch to a different lighting spectrum, you can have a shift in clades as one is no longer being favoured over the other. This transition period might cause issues as there is a change over between the dominant algaes (ie. dominant food source).

If you are seeing basal STN, that signals to me starvation which makes me think the above. Try turning down the lights a little bit and feed a bit more. Try amino acids if you haven't already; I have found them to be particularly good at fighting STN.

Last edited by ScubaSteve; 01-16-2012 at 09:01 PM.
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  #22  
Old 01-16-2012, 09:33 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ScubaSteve View Post
Ok, this is just my opinion here, so take it with a grain of salt...

ULNS keep corals "trim and fit" to keep those nice colours, meaning they have little "fat" (aka excess zooxanthellae) to help them ride out system disturbances. With ULNS, we are essentially keeping them on the knife's edge. This is why so many people in the beginning of biopellets were having recession problems: the corals were starving.

The dramatic change in lighting conditions (not just intensity, but spectrum) probably caused the SPS to freak out a little while adjusting. You didn't spike the lighting, so it's not shock, but being at the intensity you are now they might not have enough zooxanthellae or pigmentation to handle the increased photons rates. This can cause photoinhibition (meaning too much light is causing them to shut down) or they're heating up at the skeletons due to the lack of skin pigmentation (ie. coral sunscreen). This can (and does) happen when you swap to new bulbs, new fixtures, etc. The change in intensity from T5 to LED is probably what triggered it. Corals that aren't pushed to the limit by ULNS can usually ride this out without ill effect.

Also, a shift in spectrum (LEDs are narrow spectrum compared to halides and T5) can cause a shift in which zooxanthellae clade is dominant in the coral. Each clade has it's own specific absorption spectrum; if you switch to a different lighting spectrum, you can have a shift in clades as one is no longer being favoured over the other. This transition period might cause issues as there is a change over between the dominant algaes (ie. dominant food source).

If you are seeing basal STN, that signals to me starvation which makes me think the above. Try turning down the lights a little bit and feed a bit more. Try amino acids if you haven't already; I have found them to be particularly good at fighting STN.
+1 Good call Steve. I think you hit the nail on the head.
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  #23  
Old 01-16-2012, 10:53 PM
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ScubaSteve:

You think that this would happen almost immediately after changing the lights though? (I started them out at 30%) I have been using KZ Amino Acids... but not religiously. I will try to use it daily instead of a couple of times a week. What would you suggest for 'food' for them? I dose much of the KZ line, but no phyto, or food per se. There should be some mulm coming off of the Zeo rocks though. I do have a couple of types of coral food... NLS powder and Acan plus... Acan plus is likely too big..? Maybe the NLS stuff would help?

I appreciate the write up... any opinions are gatefully accepted... I'll try anything.
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Old 01-16-2012, 10:55 PM
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Something else that I should mention... many of the corals that I'm having problems with are towards the bottom of the tank... still lean towards the lights as the issue?
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  #25  
Old 01-16-2012, 11:18 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by doch View Post
Something else that I should mention... many of the corals that I'm having problems with are towards the bottom of the tank... still lean towards the lights as the issue?
I would say it's light related although not intensity and like I said before something else must be at play as well. Many of the SPS I lost were next to LPS corals which seemed unaffected.

As for zeovit IME it doesn't push coral health to edge, when I used it my SPS corals were much healthy and resilient than before. While some products can cause brief coral stress for long term benefit for the most part vitality was increased. I use to change halide bulbs all the time without any adverse effects on the SPS and no acclimatization was required. I even use to be able to kill off algae with controlled kalk overdoses so the corals were the furthest thing from the edge.

I think we have much to learn about the true effects of LEDs on coral, especially SPS. While many do just fine there are many of us that bleach and loose corals from LED transition and it simply can't just be intensity or spectrum as switching halides and T5s is common practice, often going to a completely different spectrum and doubling par without ill effect.
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Old 01-16-2012, 11:59 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by doch View Post
Something else that I should mention... many of the corals that I'm having problems with are towards the bottom of the tank... still lean towards the lights as the issue?
Quote:
Originally Posted by doch View Post
ScubaSteve:

You think that this would happen almost immediately after changing the lights though? (I started them out at 30%) I have been using KZ Amino Acids... but not religiously. I will try to use it daily instead of a couple of times a week. What would you suggest for 'food' for them? I dose much of the KZ line, but no phyto, or food per se. There should be some mulm coming off of the Zeo rocks though. I do have a couple of types of coral food... NLS powder and Acan plus... Acan plus is likely too big..? Maybe the NLS stuff would help?

I appreciate the write up... any opinions are gatefully accepted... I'll try anything.
Colour me confused then. It's strange that the corals lower down are struggling. If all else was equal, it's either the lights or neighboring corals wreaking havoc. I'm leaning toward the lights. Has your flow changed so that the SPS down low aren't getting as much flow?

Lighting effects don't always change things immediately. I had an SPS frag only recently begin to show light related stress after being in high light for over a month (everything else was stable and constant). I moved it just a little bit over out of the intense light and it's starting to come back to normal.

Just to rattle off some ideas of what might be different to try and spark a discussion:

-The spread of the LEDs may be different the T5, so light distribution might be different
-Different spectrum from the LEDs
-Intensity (not likely the issue)

The best SPS food is fish poop IMO. I have very few fish, so I feed Acan+ (to the LPS, but it floats around the tank), ReefRoids, Powdered Euphasia and CoralAmino. I know people say you get the bacterial mulm off the zeo but really, I make a ton of bacteria with VSV and I've never seen my SPS behave any different when I blow the mulm into the tank (no obvious feeding response... and this is after staring at single sections of branches for LONG periods of time).

Quote:
Originally Posted by sphelps View Post
I would say it's light related although not intensity and like I said before something else must be at play as well. Many of the SPS I lost were next to LPS corals which seemed unaffected.

As for zeovit IME it doesn't push coral health to edge, when I used it my SPS corals were much healthy and resilient than before. While some products can cause brief coral stress for long term benefit for the most part vitality was increased. I use to change halide bulbs all the time without any adverse effects on the SPS and no acclimatization was required. I even use to be able to kill off algae with controlled kalk overdoses so the corals were the furthest thing from the edge.

I think we have much to learn about the true effects of LEDs on coral, especially SPS. While many do just fine there are many of us that bleach and loose corals from LED transition and it simply can't just be intensity or spectrum as switching halides and T5s is common practice, often going to a completely different spectrum and doubling par without ill effect.
I'm not a ZeoVit guy, so I don't know the whole range of products (I'm a VSV guy). My observation of ULNS as a whole is that if the system is well fed, ULNS makes things strong. If it's underfed, they can crash quite quickly from disturbances. Biopellets really prove this point in tanks with low fish population or low feeding. I stayed away from ULNS for so long because of all the horror stories until I started understanding why they had issues. Again, this is just observation, not hard science.

I agree with you though. Once I went to ULNS, everything became much healthier and damaged areas began to heal. However, because I have a small fish population and was underfeeding, once I hit low, low nutrients I started to get STN. Up'd the feeding a bit and all was right in the world. I think Zeovit may have its merits now that I'm thinking about it because, if you use the full suit of product, you are introducing all the nutrients and minerals the corals need (aminos, etc). In other words, Zeovit keeps things further from the edge.
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  #27  
Old 01-17-2012, 12:13 AM
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or his flagfin angel has the best access to the sps farther down in the tank???
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  #28  
Old 01-17-2012, 12:30 AM
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Originally Posted by fishytime View Post
or his flagfin angel has the best access to the sps farther down in the tank???
My angels have never caused stn in my sps, unless the stn has distinct bite mark edges. The polyps quite extending and the tips are bitten off if the angel is to blame
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  #29  
Old 01-17-2012, 01:13 AM
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The more of all of your excellent input that I read, the more that I starting to think that it is in fact a few things at play. There are some corals that have tips that are bare, and the polyp extension tank wide is CRAP. Then there are some other corals that are STN from the base/inside. I have seen the angel nipping a little, so I'm' sure that he's not helping the situation. Now, come to think of it, the first few corals were all in the same area... directly under lights. In retrospect, I guess I should have ramped slower to be safe... I thought the ramp of 5%/3days would be ok.

Anyways, I havedropped the LED output to 70% for the whites, and 65% for the blues... I'll start with more religious coral feedings, and dosing. Also, I have about 20 fish in the 250gallons of water, and they are well fed to keep the angels happy and not nippy... I'd say that there is lots of fish poop.

Thanks for the inputs everyone!
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My tank Journal: http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=75924
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