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#1
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![]() I joined recently and have been learning lots from what I've read, so thank you everyone for sharing..........it will show to be a great benefit to me.
I've had an incident a month ago where my stepson's friend was sleep walking and accidentily fed my tank a whole container of fish food..............not good, lots of death- total mayhem. My clown fish, hermits and snails and corals survived ![]() ![]() Thanks for your imput in advance, I look forward to getting these &%$^#%^*s under control !
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#2
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![]() The environment will keep them under control. In other words, they are thriving now because there is a lot of available food floating about the tank. Once that food is exhausted or taken away via water changes, their numbers will die back.
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#3
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![]() Maybe not billions but I got lots as well, but they're harmless.
It's going to similar to algae blooms, keep the nutrients low to keep under control. |
#4
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![]() I at one time in the years had a bunch of rock was infested with them. They were in every rock. So I dipped each rock in cold freshwater and shook them out. I didn't realize how clean they really did keep my tanks over the years. Now I NEED some in my tanks. Wished I didn't do that to my live rock years back. They may not look good. But they do serve a really good purpose, especially when your tank had a food overload.
Hope thats helps.
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#5
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![]() Keep in mind, Once all the food is removed you will have a bunch of death bristle Stars... Make sure you remove ASAP unless you like NH3 Spikes
![]() Last edited by Zoaelite; 07-09-2007 at 11:40 PM. |
#6
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![]() you could add a harlequin shrimp. They eat sea stars.
http://saltaquarium.about.com/cs/inv...hautharshr.htm
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Manuel it's not the size of the fish, it's the motion in the ocean! |
#7
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![]() Quote:
Harlequin shrimp only eat the tube feet of sea stars and those mini-brittles are too small for the pincers of harlequins. They're still cool to have though, but you'd have to feed them a much larger sea star (like a sand sifter or linkia or something).
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