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#1
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![]() My CopperBand Butterfly ate mine. Had a couple rocks with quite a few patches and are now all gone. I saw him picking at them a number of times so I assume he is the reason for them disappearing.
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Red Coral Online Store ![]() www.redcoralaquarium.net 45 Gallon Cube with 10 Gallon Sump, Lighting 8 bulb T5, Vertex IN 80 Skimmer -2 Occelaris Clowns, Engineer Goby, RBTA, Peppermint Shrimp |
#2
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![]() I had a serious growth of hydroids and had tried everything to kill them with no success. One day last summer, my chiller broke and my tank went up to around 92 degrees. It killed all my sps and fish, but also killed my hydroids and they have never been back. I suggest you remove a piece of rock with hydroids from your tank and place it in a container and run the temp up to 92 degrees. It worked for me and it is worth testing on a small piece of rock.
Jim |
#3
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![]() similar to my running hot water over the affected area...
definitely effective. |
#4
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![]() Hammer & chisel, I did it. There are still some in my tank hidden away and at the bottom of 130lbs of rock so I don't try to get those but what I can get at relatively easy I hack away at.
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96" x 16" x 16"//106g Skimmerless Reef, Established Jan. 13, 2012 |
#5
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![]() Leave them alone, they will go away... or not. Hydroids are like algae, if you put something into the system that occupies their 'niche' or outcompetes them, they will recede and maybe even disappear. And as was said above, as reef tanks mature they seem to go through a bunch of stages where you are guaranteed to deal with algae, cyano, and a host of other nasty stuff... maybe this is something to be expected in our little tanks filled with incomplete ecosystems?
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Calvin --- Planning a 29 gallon mixed reef... |
#6
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![]() Quote:
I can't agree that hydroids are like algae...they are a pest like algae, more like Aiptasia in that hydroids give a nasty sting to anything they touch (like your finger) and I have seen them kill a 5 inch sps overnight. You should see how my red and gold zoas compete with my hydroids, it is incredible how much something can accelerate their reproduction in order to get the last word in their "niche". I would deal with hydroids immediately if at all possible, wished I had when I had the chance. Last edited by Whatigot; 01-27-2009 at 08:12 PM. |
#7
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![]() Can you starve them?? IE stop feeding the tank or remove the rock and just let it be for a couple weeks?? I'm of the mind set you get them from over feeding but I may be wrong (again).
Douglas |
#8
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![]() Quote:
And that's exactly what I meant, is that hydroids are like algae in the manner that they are pests and can easily get out of control... but I doubt hydroids occupy the same ecological niche as zoas. Are they mainly photosynthetic? I doubt it if they have stinging nematocysts, they probably feed on zooplankton or tiny 'pods.
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Calvin --- Planning a 29 gallon mixed reef... |