I wish I didn't have to write what I have to write now. I've had a rough day with this tank, but rather than hide and pretend it didn't happen, I'll come out and be straight about it and use this as a teaching moment.
Just remember that when dealing with a reef or a nano, or both, anything can happen. No matter how cautious you are, or how careful.
I've been very careful with this biotope. I've thought long and hard about what went into the tank and what didn't. I rejected many Caribbean species because I couldn't care for them or they wouldn't be suitable because of size or habits. I was extremely happy with this tank and was looking forward to celebrating its year birthday in August...
But...
I write this and I am very sad. Friday, when I last saw the tank, it was fine. Had a scheduled water change and prune for today, but it looked great that day and I almost took pictures. Yesterday my tank was fine, my mom and sister had been feeding the fish and taking care of it while I had my performances for Madama Butterfly. I'd come by once a week, do the water changes, test the water, prepare the RO/DI and the SW for the following week, check filters, prune macros. Since I started seeing my boyfriend, this has become a nice routine and the tanks have been doing very well. This morning, they said the tank looked fine and the fish were out.
I come home today after work late in the afternoon. Tank was cloudy and everything was dead. The Caulerpa prolifera, the Caulerpa prolifera that I was so careful to prune and keep trimmed because I knew that that prevented it from going sexual, went sexual despite my pruning. The tank was a cloudy, milky mess and the ammonia smell was horrid. I did what I could with the SW I had. I prepared more RO/DI and more Saltwater to do another water change. I suspect that most, if not all of the fish and inverts were already dead. I did find a lone survivor. A colony of palythoas that were near the top of the tank. Closed but not withered. I put them in the quarantine with the ocellaris that is recovering very well from ich, by the way. Did a large water change in the quarantine tank, and it's starting to open.
Sorry, I didn't think to take pictures of the tank as I had found it. Was scrambling to do a water change. Here it is after the water change, I think. Still really cloudy, but doesn't smell so bad.
Dead emerald crab. I removed it. It was the only thing I could find so far. I just couldn't seen into the tank very well.
The palythoa, already in the quarantine tank. Sorry, not putting a stressed palythoa colony into any my picos. Yes, it's a small risk to the clown, but honestly, I had to make a decision to risk the clown or a whole pico tank. So I chose the clown.
Yeah, I cried. But, I'm over it now and have a game plan. I'll do another water change tomorrow, make more water and go from there. There is macro algae still alive in that tank as are the sea grasses. Let the macros do their work to some extent. I will assess the damage when I can get clear water. Right now, it's just a mess and I can't even see if anything is alive. I just got home from this mess and did the best I could.
No, not giving up, but I may have to tear down this tank if nothing is viable. If the LR survives, then I start again. We'll see.
I write, though, because it's a teaching moment. That even when well-prepared, something can still go terribly wrong. Even with back up plans and a steady supply of SW, RO, and a good family who takes care of things well, things can still go wrong. I don't want to be negative about it. So far, keeping reefs has been an awesome experience, and despite this setback, I'd still totally do it. I just wanted to say that things like this can happen and not be discouraged. Also, always think before you put things into your tank. I never impulsed with this tank and something still went very wrong.
This is the risk you take when you do a planted marine. I'm gutted, but I've learned from this too. As lovely as Caulerpa is, and even if you take precautions, it can still do this damage. The irony is that I had even asked around about Caulerpa prolifera and saw multiple systems with it, so long as you prune it, I was assured that I'd be fine. But things don't always go as planned.
I'm rambling. I'll keep this thread open and keep everybody posted on the progress of the palythoa and of anything else that makes it. Who knows? It's not the first time that corner bow has revealed survivor surprises. Once as a planted tank, it was without light for over a month while I was about to dismantle the tank. I still found crytocorynes surviving and growing new leaves. You never know...
Thanks for looking at this thread and supporting me on what was my first SW journal. I really learned a lot and if I even venture into planted marine tanks again, I'll definitely draw on the knowledge in this journal.
Lissette