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View Poll Results: Best method to control bristle worm population | |||
Copper Band Butterfly |
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6 | 8.00% |
Six Line Wrasse |
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19 | 25.33% |
Bristle worm trap |
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3 | 4.00% |
Reduce feeding |
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10 | 13.33% |
Emerald Crab |
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2 | 2.67% |
Arrow Crab |
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12 | 16.00% |
Coral Banded Shrimp |
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14 | 18.67% |
Other fish (please post type after voting) |
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3 | 4.00% |
Other crab (please post type after voting) |
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2 | 2.67% |
Other shrimp (please post type after voting) |
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4 | 5.33% |
Voters: 75. You may not vote on this poll |
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#1
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![]() Someone posted "other fish"....can you post what type of fish you are referring to? Thanks!
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#2
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![]() The population is only as big as it's food supply. Clean the tank of detritus and food bits, they'll decrease on their own.
And bristleworms don't eat polyps.
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Brad |
#3
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I am weary on due to the different experiences of others. See the post directly after yours ![]() ![]() ![]() |
#4
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![]() Quote:
Now, I've added a strawberry dottyback in my main tank to take out the bristleworms in there. My orange ricordia and my zoos last year were dissappearing each night. At night, I'd see why the polyps were disappearing. The bristleworms were eating them because I had cut back on feeding food to the tank and they were hungry. Cutting back on food did not make a dent in the populatation at all after a year. So now, I've resorted to using the fish. However note that the dottyback may eat all of the pods as well so if you want pods in your main tank, then don't use this method. Last edited by Samw; 10-07-2008 at 02:33 AM. |
#5
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![]() I had a coral banded shrimp in my red sea max, and I would check out the tank in the morning and my CB would have a bristle worm behind the rockwork all wrapped up and twisted in his big claws and he would be having a big old bristle worm breakfast. Kinda gross to see, but kinda cool too. He definitely kept them under control.
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65 gallon mixed reef and 34 gallon mixed reef |
#6
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Yeah, I've heard they are really good, but I am concerned it would eat my peppermint shrimp ![]() |
#7
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![]() My corals were pretty healthy when they were being devoured. The orange Ricordia (in the center bottom) had been splitting for a year and were always expanded during the day. Then they just started disappearing and it was clear that the mushrooms were being eaten. Even with pieces of the polyp missing, they would expand during the day. It was clear that the corals were healthy but just eaten. After the orange Ricordia were gone, the zoas in the area started to disappear as well. When I look in the tank at night, I can see bristleworms eating them. One minute, the polyp is there, the next, it is gone. To me, it is clear that they are eating healthy corals.
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#8
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![]() This is a pretty good example of why there is so much confusion on this subject. Unfortunately we use the name bristleworm on HUNDREDS of species, most of which are harmless. The picture Samw posted is a coral eater, I think maybe it's a Phyllodocid of some sort, nasty little buggers and not something you want to leave in there.
Unless you know you have something that is eating coral polyps or going after your snail population I wouldn't get too excited about it. |
#9
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![]() I think they look like fire worms.
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Sebae |
#10
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![]() Quote:
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One more fish should be ok?, right!!! ![]() |
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