How long for corals to die/show distress?

Cwalster

New Member
View Badges
Joined
Nov 22, 2023
Messages
1
Reaction score
0
Location
Detroit
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
I started my 70g tank a few months ago, and everything has been going well for the most part. My tank has had stable numbers within good ranges for a while.
As of two weeks ago, I started adding cheap beginner-level corals to the tank - a couple of mushrooms, a zoa, a trumpet, some form of euphyllia, and a birdsnest. All small frags. Everything has been opening regularly, hasn't changed color, or shown any form of distress that my newbie eyes can see. I'm not seeing any growth, but I wouldn't expect to see that in this time frame either. Everything has been dipped prior to tank, all the fish have gone through quarantine.
My question is when do the more experienced keepers consider a tank fully "safe" to add more corals? How fast should I see a problem that would cause people to stop and fix it before continuing?
I'm looking at a pretty bare tank and the black Friday deals are getting tempting. I realize there really is no substitute for just going for it, but don't want to throw money or lives down the drain.
 

TX_REEF

Kessil Fanboy
View Badges
Joined
Mar 12, 2023
Messages
2,149
Reaction score
2,594
Location
Texas
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
In my experience 2 weeks after any changes is long enough to see anything malicious show itself. Others may have differing opinions, but this has generally worked for me
 

Making themselves at home: Have you intentionally done anything in your aquarium to enhance the natural behavior of your fish?

  • I planned my tank to encourage natural fish behavior.

    Votes: 12 27.3%
  • I did some things to encourage natural fish behavior.

    Votes: 18 40.9%
  • Anything that encourages natural fish behavior was a byproduct of the aquascaping.

    Votes: 9 20.5%
  • I did not do anything to encourage natural fish behavior.

    Votes: 4 9.1%
  • Other.

    Votes: 1 2.3%
Back
Top