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			#1  
			
			
			
			
			
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|  What does AEFW damage look like? I've got one acro that's never done well, but I'm pretty sure it's an oregon tort, and they're known to grow really slowly, but I started noticing what looks like a mottling to the colour of it's tissue a few weeks ago, and I just noticed what looks like a patch of the encrusted base of a nearby coral that's missing polyps. I'm not sure if it was always like that and I just noticed, but I'm paranoid. What does the damage from AEFW look like? If I break off the tort, should I be able to see them with my naked eye if I look at it close up? | 
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			#2  
			
			
			
			
			
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|   I'm not sure exactly what the look like but on a few frags I dipped there was brownish flat worms that were about 1/2 mm. Hard to see but I did manage to see | 
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			#5  
			
			
			
			
			
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|   Thanks for that link. And it's confirmed. I have AEFW   I broke the coral that wasn't doing well off the rock and put it in a small dish with about 35X the recommended dose of flatworm exit. 6 of them immediately curled up and fell off. Looking closely, there's hundreds of eggs along where the coral met the rock. *sigh*. Expletive expletive expletive. OK, so now it's time for a treatment plan. Do these guys eat all kinds of SPS, or are they specific to Acropora? I think I can get all my acroporids out for treatment pretty easily, but getting the encrusted montiporas will involve a lot more effort. | 
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			#6  
			
			
			
			
			
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|   Just acropora, so if you can remove them, you should be ok. Talk to Wayne (Rice Reef) about the process, he's just gone through it. 
				__________________ Brad | 
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			#7  
			
			
			
			
			
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|   Ok, I'll pm him. I've now dipped the 4 closest Acro colonies to the one that was infested and nothing happened, no flatworms came off anything except the first piece that made me thing I might have it. Is there a possibility that it was just this one coral? | 
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			#8  
			
			
			
			
			
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|   no... there are 2 options for you : - live with them - eradicate them (ie removing all acros and dipping for 6-8 weeks) | 
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			#9  
			
			
			
			
			
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|   I've sucessfully treated FW tanks with Fenbendazole to kill flatworms.  I'd be curious if It's used for SW tanks as well. | 
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			#10  
			
			
			
			
			
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|   Quote: 
 AEFW is serious and can cost dearly... I have just recently threw out 10 plus pounds of corals and will have to start from scratch again. Good luck and hope you will not get discouraged. | 
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