Ammonia, very slight trace, less than .25 on the chart, but some slight
color over the 0 indication
Nitrate, again, very slight. not 0 but not quite up to 2.5 on the chart
Nitrite, 0
Alk, normal (color lines up with the *normal* reading on the color chart
anyway)
Ph, 8.2 to 8.4 difficult to tell between the two
SG 1.022
The Ph seems high to me but I am used to freshwater tanks, and I see normal
Ph ranges for marine critters as 7.5 to 8.5, so I am assuming this is normal
also. Another water change will take care of the traces of ammonia and
nitrate, but is there something other than osmotic shock that could have
caused the problem with the star and with the snail deaths? I do not have a
protien skimmer in the 10 gallon tank. I just had the critters and some live
rock. Currently there is nothing but the crushed coral with tons of odd
looking bristle worms, I say odd because in the large tank I have the
typical pink and black looking ones.. the rock came out of that tank to the
small tank, and so did a bunch of the crushed coral.. the only bristle worms
around were the pink and black skinny ones, yet now in the small tank they
have turned into fat bloated looking pink ones.. not dead.. and some have
gotten more than an inch or two in length. I need to get the star back
into the other tank but am a bit afraid to just yet.. any ideas?
teeb
-Todd
"Teeb" <n...@way.com> wrote in message
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