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#1
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![]() I had it happen to me long time back with bristle worm attacks. I had a lot in my tank at the time and one large bristle worm that would come out, would slide by fish when they were sleeping OR would come out when there was food in the tank and the bristle worm was reaching for the food at that exact time as the fish. I even had a bristle worm wrap around one of my blennies. I removed the rock, later removing him.
My regal tang had the white fiber glass shards (thats what it feels like) sticking in his side. At first I tried to remove them with tweezers but they break off without all coming out and the stress to the fish to you & the fish is HUGE! If you have ever got them in your hand, they dont come out either, you just scrub hard with a brush on your hand. Evenually the fish rubbed and it went away. The next time I seen on my Yellow tang with the the same thing happen, I left it and evenually it disappeared. I would leave it, however, remove the bristle worm. Hope that helps.
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~ LeeWorld ~ "Not using a quarantine tank is like playing Russian roulette. Nobody wins the game, some people just get to play longer than others." - Anthony Calfo Last edited by bulletsworld; 10-19-2009 at 10:11 PM. |
#2
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![]() I support that this happens and it has happened to me. I don't think that the bristleworm makes deliberate contact with the fish...just that certain fish have habits that put them in the same place at the same time.
In my case, I had a red-head blenny that spent much of it's time inside holes in my LR. Over the many years I had him, he would frequently have bristle worm spines sticking out of his head and sometimes out of his eyes. I never attempted to remove them and they didn't seem to cause any long term damage.
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400 gal reef. Established April, 2007. 3 Sequence Dart, RM12-4 skimmer, 2 x OM4Ways, Yellow Tang, Maroon Clown (pair), Blonde Naso Tang, Vlamingi Tang, Foxface Rabbit, Unicorn Tang, 2 Pakistani Butterflies and a few coral gobies My Tank: http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=28436 |
#3
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![]() Happened to me as well, my Regal tang in my old tank use to get them all the time because it would always sleep in the tightest cave it could find. I don't think the fish liked it but the spikes would eventually fall out and things would be back to normal until it happened again.
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#4
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![]() Lately my Bi-color blenny has a habit of slapping himself against the sand. I could see how he might pick up some bristles if a worm was buried just beneath the surface. Does anybody know what this slapping behaviour is about?
Last edited by soapy; 10-20-2009 at 02:18 AM. |
#5
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![]() Maybe it is trying to stir up some food in the sand
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