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This is what I have growing in my zoanthids and pretty much everywhere on my liverock ramdomly. Does not seem to affect any coral nor my zoanthids. Is that the same thing that you have?
I strated a month ago with 3 king midas polyps and now I have about 12 and new babies growing, so they are not affected like yours, in fact the zoanthids seem to be taking over. http://i786.photobucket.com/albums/y.../103_1052s.jpg |
I do have Blue Cloves as well, much more manageable compared to the anthelia/waving hand stuff. I guess if I do go ahead with the fluke tab treatment I will lose the cloves
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Yes I think it's a good guess. I just hope you will not lose anything else.
I do have a few of the same polyps you have and now that I know it's so bad I will kill it while it is not yet spread. I thought it was some xenia polyps but looking at it now it's not that. Quote:
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Seriously? You'd rather treat your tank with chemicals and risk a complete system crash than take out one rock at a time and sit it in the dark for a few weeks? Did you not look at my picture? I know full well what anthelia is and my method worked extremely well to eradicate it from my system. Here are some more pictures to show how infested my tank was. Anthelia is photosynthetic so leaving it in the dark slowly kills it. After a few weeks it won't be dead yet but it will have shrunk and its hold on your rocks will have weakened. At that point you'll be able to easily peel it off without leaving any pieces behind. If you have a dark unlit sump you could rotate rocks through there or you could do what I did and set up a plastic bin full of aquarium water with a heater and powerhead. Its simple, safe and inexpensive.
Have you thought about what is going to happen if you kill it all off at the same time while its still in your tank? A large amount of organic life suddenly dying will pollute your closed system very quickly. You'll need to do some massive water changes, skim and run carbon if you don't want it to crash the entire tank. http://i254.photobucket.com/albums/h...aneyedo/29.jpg http://i254.photobucket.com/albums/h...Picture046.jpg http://i254.photobucket.com/albums/h...Picture020.jpg http://i254.photobucket.com/albums/h...Picture027.jpg http://i254.photobucket.com/albums/h...cture026-1.jpg |
Ok but what about the corals on the rocks? They will also die for sure without light for 3 weeks or more no?
Did you not lose any coral that was on those rocks? Quote:
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coralls can be removed from rocks easily enough, our systems arent as fragile as everyone thinks. clove polyps and anthelia arent the same thing...like russell said anthelia is actuall easy to get rid of if you take away its food:) |
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Thanks Colin |
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The only coral that I lost was anthelia because the rest did not leave my tank. |
yes but some are really fragile and break easily. I know my orange digitata is well incrusted on the liverock and it is very fragile and break easily. Yes it can be glued back but it will not look the same for sure.
Plus I don't know about you guys but my liverock is glued with epoxy so removing it would mean to thear everything out of there...yike! Quote:
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Been there myself, I sympathize. You can get through this without a chemical based treatement. In my case, whatever I could I peel off glass and rock I would flush, and in the end I was able to sell the worst infested rock to FOWLR tanks where the angels and butterflies made quick work of them.
I remember someone on here a few years ago using an electric toothbrush to clean them off rocks and it working out well for them. Obviously use a cheap toothbrush and throw it out afterwards. Good luck. Quote:
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