FoxFire110;4642484; said:went to Jay's Aquatics, had water tested for everything incase it was something we were missing. A little nitritie but nothing that could be the reason.
Replacing the heavy sand substrate with a corser type sand to prevent packing and dead pockets, refilling up with RO and previous tank water.
purchased and added a protien skimmer, thinking about waiting a week and if all parameters have held steady they want to try again.
Any better ideas or does this seem like the way to go?
They still have in their tank an engineer goby, hermit crab, horse shoe crab, clown fish a couple snails and a couple ghost shrimp.
So you replaced your fine sand with coarse sand? If so, coarse sand is not a good substrate for sharks. It will irritate and potentially damage their stomachs, especially with babies. With that large of a water change/disturbance, I would wait longer than a week for things to settle down. More like a few months. Were you not running a skimmer on the tank before? How about live rock and a sump? I would consider these all basic requirements for any saltwater tank, especially a shark tank. Getting a newborn to start eating is challenging enough, so anything you can do to improve the environment is a major plus. Also, any measureable nitrite should be a concern (assuming the tests were accurate) in an established tank.