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![]() Oooops, sorry Beta Guy.... and thanks Myka... my bad... yes they are hydroids... of which there are copious types....
Here's some good reading for Beta guy >:-) or anyone else who may be interested: http://www.wetwebmedia.com/hyzoanidfaq.htm The site's search engine allows for confining the search to the site. I find it best that way... there is soh much to learn; one can spend weeks reading >:-) This site is written/hosted/monitored by the likes of Bob Fenner and Anthony Calfo... there's plenty of info regarding water preparation and tank cycling as well anything SW one can imagine. Personally, I'd wait until after the cycle to see the whole playing ground rather than treating anything at this time. I have a little cluster of hydroids that have remained the same size for over a year, and localized in an unobtrusive manner; so there was no need to do anything. If they really bother you, I suppose you could lop off the piece of rock they are on (outside the tank), and hope they don't have siblings elsewhere.... Some of these guys sting so don't do the bare finger pokey thing.... Most algae are controlled by levels of nutrients in water... or Turbo snails... read the site... info is power >:-) That being said, aiptasia are another matter. I had a peppermint shrimp who was a proven aiptasia killer. He could handle them as long as they were juveniles. Once he cleaned that particular tank, I moved him on to a larger tank because they don't do well with water parameters that change too much. I got mine from a LFS that actually demo'd my guy before selling him to me LOL! Gotta run and get to work.... Love your tank build and the mature rock is wonderful and giving you lots of goodies to enjoy! Have fun! Bunny >:-) Quote:
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