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#1
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![]() I have soooo many (bought live rock for a good price) that a peppermint shrimp could not keep up. I planned on getting rid of most of them and then buying a shrimp to maintain.
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#2
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![]() Quote:
The problem with the torch is you will also kill the good stuff near the aptasia and the good stuff inside the rock itself. You will also leave a residue from the blowtorch gases on the rock. |
#3
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![]() I also had aptasia and tried 2 peppermint shrimp, ate all my pods and stomatella and left the nems untouched, I tried torching a few but didn't like the residue, but being cheap and not wanting to pay for joes juice I tried boiling water applied with a turkey baster although a needle might work better, a couple took more than one application but as long as they aren't close to anything else you might harm it could work, at least it did for me
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#4
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![]() I had a few that my peppermint shrimp didn't eat, so I took a lighter to them until they were good and melted, then rinsed and brushed away the remnants with a toothbrush. When I put the rocks back in the tank, my peppermint shrimp went right to where I had burned the aiptasia and picked out whatever was left in the hole. It was very cool and worked like a charm. Never saw another sign of them...
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~ Claire ~ 46 gallon bowfront - Seahorse Species Tank |
#5
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![]() I'm a huge fan of blow torches. Good for all sorts of pest killing! Including algae, majanos, aiptasia! If a blow torch doesn't work, then you didn't do a good job of it. You gotta roast them little buggers. You will cause a certain amount of ammonia spike, but if you only do one rock at a time in a decent sized tank it should be able to handle it. Personally though, I usually just setup a little Rubbermaid with powerhead and heater and "cook" the blow torched rocks for a few weeks afterward.
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#6
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![]() I'm a big advocate of using fire to solve many problems. Too bad everything reeks after the torching of the rock.
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