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#1
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springeri damsel sometime eat it
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#2
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I think there is a wrasse that will eat them. Name escapes me right now.
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#3
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Melanurus
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#4
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#5
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siphon them out with water changes, reduce your photo period, less food if you are feeding, and increase your flow... that is assuming these are the photosynthetic flatworms and not the coral eating sort. basically make your water as pristine as you can and increase your flow so its hard for them to settle. that combined with siphoning them out and they will disappear. at least it worked for me!
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#6
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.........
Last edited by jorjef; 04-22-2014 at 05:40 AM. |
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#7
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6line wrasse or yellow coris wrasse. The 6lines can be huge wrasse holes though. And skabooya is a she fishingoalie
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#8
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Oops My apologies to skabooya
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#9
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The coris wrasse is a great suggestion. I would just add the recommendation to stick to the Yellow Coris Wrasse rather than the Red Coris Wrasse. The Red one gets very very big and as a result has a much higher likelihood of going after your inverts. The Yellow Coris ten to remain much smaller and and less destructive :-) Another suggestion along the same lines is a Green Wrasse. They look just like Yellow Coris wrasse, except green :-) A small Melanarus wrasse might be okay but unfortunately I think they are one of those 50/50 chance fish. They may go after your inverts, they may not. I've heard plenty of reports from both. The other thing about the Melanarus is that they do tend to grow pretty big also. I got mine at about 3 inches and now he's 5 almost 6 inches! |