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#1
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![]() I have had good success using the nylon sock with fresh seafood(oysters, clam meat and uncooked shrimp)placed inside the sock. However with that being said I use fine mesh nylons as I found nylons with thick mesh the worms cereal all over and don't stick that good with the fine mesh their bristles stick quite well
I have tried traps but get varying degrees of success for me fine mesh nylons worked the best
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#2
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![]() Quote:
I've always wanted one of those... I wonder if it would get along with my richmond's wrasse? I need to reduce the population a bit before I add to it though |
#3
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![]() My Melanarus is super friendly. My only other wrasse is a corris, but he doesn't bug any of my fish, not even my borb. Even my corris chases my borb once n awhile. And my Melanarus is double the size. When I put my hand in the tank he is always right there looking for food I might happen to stir up. He even lets me pet him. An awesome fish for sure.
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#4
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![]() 6 line eats them like crazy but will be a nightmare if you ever wanna add a wrasse again after. I also found that whenever i do a flatworm exit treatment i am sucking up 40-50 bristle worms as they seem to die too. But with a population that big you might wanna catch some first in case they die inside the rockwork and cause a big nutrient spike.
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Nick |
#5
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![]() Interceptor also kills them along with flat worms and acro eating flat worms. Just dosed my tank with it, and it has never looked better.
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#6
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![]() Quote:
![]() If I do that every night for a couple of weeks I *should* make a dent in their population |
#7
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![]() Yup definitely the stuff nightmares are made of.....
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#8
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![]() I think you found why your corals are dying!!!!
That many worms need to eat!!!! Including coral.... |
#9
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![]() I really don't think so. At least not from predation. I watch my tank at night a lot, those worms never go near corals. They don't so much as crawl on their bases, let alone crawl all the way to their tips and start eating them. I've never seen a single worm on a single coral, and I'm often working next to the tank until 3 in the morning. You barely even see them at night unless there's a piece of uneaten leftover food on the sand to draw them out.
It's entirely possible that something killed a bunch of them, and that's where the ammonia spike came from though. I think I have a good trap idea. I'm going to bury the lid of a red sea nitrate test kit in the sand, and build up the sand around it so that worms can crawl. I'll drop a couple of cubes of food in after lights out, and once a large enough writhing mass of worms has crawled in to it, I'll put the bottom half of the kit on and lift it out. |