ajnweb
Well-known member
So, here is a little background on the problem.....(sorry, some of the picture are kinda large)
I have a 34 gallon Solana packed with zoas (about 25 colonies), and a 20 gallon frag tank also packed with zoas, completely independent of one another. I added a HOB refugium to the Solana about 2 weeks ago that I painted with plastic paint, and did some piping modifications to the output of the fuge. Sometime around the time I added the fuge, of course I can't exactly remember before or after, the zoas started to look bad, and close up. One colony was closed with only the skirts showing, very unusual, and shortly thereafter the skirts melted/decomposed away, since then the colony is completely gone. The "infection" has seem to targeted about 1/3 to 1/2 of the colonies, with some colonies being completely unaffected. At first I attributed it to the addition of the fuge, thinking that I contaminated the tanks with either the paint or the piping(although the other tank inhabitants including shrimp were fine), then I thought that the trash barrel I was using for RODI water was leaching contaminants, althought the frag tank was fine. Then I thought (and it is still a possibility) that it was a fungal/bacterial infection, since some of the closed zoas have a brown coating on them. PREDATORS were brought up again and again, but I thought the infected zoas were too random for a predator. AND I dipped all of the infected corals in 4 different dips, Furan, Lugols, Melafix (each 3 for 10-15 minutes one after the other), then a freshwater dip for 1-2 minutes. I thought that this would either kill the infection/pest or kill the coral. I though either just watch them die, or possibly kill them trying to treat them, or maybe they would fight off whatever it was that was killing them. But tonight I found a NUDIBRANCH that matched the skirts of my green zoas exactly. However, when I dipped and brushed the zoas nothing came off of them, nothing. So, can a nudibranch that is eating zoas cause them to close up and die, with a brown covering, and maybe even cause a secondary infection. If it is the Nudi, he is busy, or yikes, there is more than one. So here are the pics of the unhappy zoas, and the nudi. Anyone have any thoughts/experiences with Nudis's wiping out there zoas?
Pictures in the next post.................
I have a 34 gallon Solana packed with zoas (about 25 colonies), and a 20 gallon frag tank also packed with zoas, completely independent of one another. I added a HOB refugium to the Solana about 2 weeks ago that I painted with plastic paint, and did some piping modifications to the output of the fuge. Sometime around the time I added the fuge, of course I can't exactly remember before or after, the zoas started to look bad, and close up. One colony was closed with only the skirts showing, very unusual, and shortly thereafter the skirts melted/decomposed away, since then the colony is completely gone. The "infection" has seem to targeted about 1/3 to 1/2 of the colonies, with some colonies being completely unaffected. At first I attributed it to the addition of the fuge, thinking that I contaminated the tanks with either the paint or the piping(although the other tank inhabitants including shrimp were fine), then I thought that the trash barrel I was using for RODI water was leaching contaminants, althought the frag tank was fine. Then I thought (and it is still a possibility) that it was a fungal/bacterial infection, since some of the closed zoas have a brown coating on them. PREDATORS were brought up again and again, but I thought the infected zoas were too random for a predator. AND I dipped all of the infected corals in 4 different dips, Furan, Lugols, Melafix (each 3 for 10-15 minutes one after the other), then a freshwater dip for 1-2 minutes. I thought that this would either kill the infection/pest or kill the coral. I though either just watch them die, or possibly kill them trying to treat them, or maybe they would fight off whatever it was that was killing them. But tonight I found a NUDIBRANCH that matched the skirts of my green zoas exactly. However, when I dipped and brushed the zoas nothing came off of them, nothing. So, can a nudibranch that is eating zoas cause them to close up and die, with a brown covering, and maybe even cause a secondary infection. If it is the Nudi, he is busy, or yikes, there is more than one. So here are the pics of the unhappy zoas, and the nudi. Anyone have any thoughts/experiences with Nudis's wiping out there zoas?
Pictures in the next post.................