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WaitForIt...
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Topic: frogspawn losing color Posted: March 03 2016 at 8:30am |
I have a branching frogspawn that has five heads on it. The tips are purple and green and the tentacles are dark purple. Over the last couple of days, the tentacles on one of the heads has become almost translucent and it doesn't seem to be as healthy as the other heads. Is it normal to have different colors throughout the same colony? The colony is placed in the open with moderate flow and full lighting, out of reach of other coral.
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Krazie4Acans
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Posted: March 03 2016 at 9:24am |
Move it to the sand bed and see if it colors back up . It may be too much light for it or it may be from not having enough time to acclimate to your lighting after being moved from another type or intensity of lighting.
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WaitForIt...
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Posted: March 03 2016 at 10:00am |
i'll try that tonite. Right now, I've turned off the daylight bulb and I'm only running one purple and one actininc T5. Should I also try to minimize the flow across it?
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Krazie4Acans
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Posted: March 03 2016 at 10:19am |
Flow is not an issue as long as it's not so much that it's causing the tissues to be cut on the skeleton. So if it's just a moderate flow then leave it. This sounds light related to me.
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WaitForIt...
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Posted: March 03 2016 at 10:33am |
great, thanks!
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Mark Peterson
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Posted: March 03 2016 at 5:28pm |
Assuming of course that Alkalinity, Calcium and Nitrate levels are within range, right? Other coral stress will indicate if Nitrate is too high, but testing Alk and Ca is essential, but you knew that, right?
Aloha, Mark 
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WaitForIt...
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Posted: March 04 2016 at 9:54am |
yes, everything is within spec. Alk is 8.9, calcium is 425ish and nitrates are near 0.
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jbuck13
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Posted: March 04 2016 at 10:43am |
I would take a turkey baster and squirt that head and see if any flatworms blow off of it, or take the coral out and dip it
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Mark Peterson
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Posted: March 04 2016 at 5:31pm |
Flatworms will not cause frogspawn color to fade.
Flatworms can be seen. To see examples, do a Google search "flatworms on frogspawn" Don't dip the coral unless flatworms are actually seen. Dipping is stressful.
Also, removing large polyp stony coral from the water can cause polyp damage. There is a procedure for preventing damage. Are you aware of the procedure?
Aloha, Mark 
Edited by Mark Peterson - March 04 2016 at 5:50pm
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jbuck13
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Posted: March 04 2016 at 5:47pm |
Mark, I've seen these flatworms the split tail brown ones do this to torches, hammers, and frogspawn. The Bayer dip is fairly safe I have performed this very procedure on several different colonies with great success. If he squirts the coral and nothing blows off, (because they will blow off if they are there) then he doesn't have to worry about dipping the coral. Simple procedure ðŸ‘
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Mark Peterson
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Posted: March 04 2016 at 5:58pm |
Wow. Was the coral totally covered with those flatworms? That means they were a huge infestation all over the tank, right? T his flatworm?
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jbuck13
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Posted: March 04 2016 at 6:04pm |
No, they were only on the euphyllia which I found interesting this was in a friend's aquarium, heads on all of his euphyllia had lost color as well as receded. The flatworms were quite camouflage on the tips of the coral. The Bayer took care of them. The coral have made a great recovery.😊
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Mark Peterson
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Posted: March 05 2016 at 8:58am |
Interesting. Thanks for sharing. I had never heard or seen of that, and I've seen plenty of flatworms. Just when I was beginning to think I knew it all.  Aloha, Mark 
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jbuck13
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Posted: March 05 2016 at 9:58am |
Haha I know right, it was bizarre to me that I found them only on the euphyllia.
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jbuck13
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Posted: March 08 2016 at 3:11pm |
Curious, did you hit the head with a good jet of water? Did anything come off? Or did you just need to move it in your tank? Thanks for sharing
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Posted: March 11 2016 at 8:02am |
Update: color has returned and the heads look amazing! thanks everyone for your advice!
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Mark Peterson
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Posted: March 11 2016 at 8:16am |
What was it you did that brought back the color?
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Posted: March 11 2016 at 10:44am |
lowered it to the bottom of the tank in an area that has a little less flow than other spots. the one head that looked the worst has completely returned to color.
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jbuck13
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Posted: March 11 2016 at 10:46am |
Good deal!
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Mark Peterson
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Posted: March 11 2016 at 11:40am |
 "Acclimation" means moving it up gradually to where you want it to be over the course of 2-4 weeks.
Aloha, Mark 
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