Re: Coral Dieing Off Laura,
I wonder if your frogspawn is still alive? What is your lighting as your frogspawn will need lots of intensity. Keep it away from all other corals so there is no competition. Since it has sweeper tentacles, it may attack and harm other corals within its reach, which may in turn cause them to release toxins. Requires moderate water movement over it, this will help wah away dead material. And some carbon filtration to clean the water as it demands excellent water quality... and calcium supp. of course to help its skeletal growth.
Maybe an energy boost? Please let us know how you make out with your frogspawn.
Maybe this article will help: Feeding Saltwater Aquarium Corals - Part 1 - Corals Need More Than a Lot of Light
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Be very careful, then, how you live-- not as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity. (Eph.5:15)
Tank Profile: 65 gal.(24" deep)75 lbs. live rock,(tonga and fiji) 2 " sand bed, Fluval303 canister filter, Prism protein skimmer, 3 power heads, thermometers, 30" 2-lamp PC by Sunpaq, w/65WDualActinic (420NM&460NM) & 65W Dual Daylight (6700K & 10,000K), moon lights.
Fish, Invert Stock:Scopus tang, 2 clarki, flame dart, 3 PJ cardinals, mandarin, hermits, 2 serpent stars, 3 cleaner shrimp,4 feather dusters, snails.
Soft Corals: xenia, colt, Kenya tree, 3 mushroom leathers, chili cactus, Christmas tree, various Corallimorphs, gorgonions, zooanthids. LPS: yellow sun (tube coral), tongue, (plate coral)
Another 55 gal FOWLR has Spotted grouper, fuzzy dwarf lion, pencil urchin, choc. ship star.
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