DOH! Disturbin the peace! Zoa eating nudibranches
So this past week I've noticed a few of my zoas were not opening like before... by before, I mean last week when they were open pretty much 18 hours a day. At first I thought maybe some of my levels were off and that the weekend water change would fix it, however, it seems like the issue is actually a lot worse.
I'm not sure if you can see it in this picture... but there is a nudi crawling over the closed zoas that it's disturbing. Not only has these nudi's mysteriously appeared, their ruffles or feathers have started to take on the metallic florescent colors of the zoas they've been eating! It's kind of weird but I guess it makes sense. The nudi's on my dragon eyes have a yellow glow to it while the ones on my orange zoas shine orange. If you click on the picture to get the bigger version, you can actually see a yellow nudi on the red zoas. Stupid nudi who thinks he can grab and collect all the colors of my collection...
Reading online, it seems that people have been successful getting the population under control via fresh water dips but I don't think I want to go this route. First of all, it's a lot of work and I'm personally just not a fan of taking something out of its element for dips. Can you imagine a higher being saying... hey, that girl over there has pimples, I'm pretty sure we have to pick her up and put her in space so the pimples will pop. Yeah... I guess that's a viable solution... but the zoas have already been stressed, there has to be a less stressful way. However, this is my personal preference and I'm sure most if not all of you will prefer the dip over doing nothing at all. Secondly, many of my zoas are on large pieces of rocks that make up the foundation of my rock work, I'm not rearranging the house to get a couple of pests out...
Other solutions I've read online included getting a certain types of wrasse that may hunt the nudi's and possibly using flatworm exit to poison it. I searched online for a bit for more information on the Sea Grass Wrasse and that seemed to have worked for a few people... (Blue Zoo Aquatics was the only online store I found that sold it) but I haven't found any locally, so I guess that will be my plan B.
So today I'm testing out plan A: Flatworm eXit by Salifert. (By the way, why is it cool to type it eXit instead of Exit? SAiLfERT, YOU gOT iSSuES.) Anyway, I took the carbon out of the system and poured some of this stuff into the system. Surprisingly, I saw some flatworms floating in the water columns now... very interesting... I did not know I had a flatworm problem... but can't worry about that for now. I'm still monitoring the nudi's that are crawling around and unfortunately they still seemed fine; hopefully things will change in a few hours.
On an unrelated side note, if you try to pick up a nudi with your bare hands, you could rub some of this glowing stuff on your hands. It's kind of cool, assuming I don't have to go to the ER in a few minutes. =P
Labels: zoa eating nudibranches
3 Comments:
Nice site! On your Nano Streams have you managed to break the little tabs the connect the power head to the magnet?
I did on both of my nano's. I heard they are redesigning them.
Awesome looking Tank. I linked your blog to mine. Keep up the good work!
I also had the same problem and fortunately i have small frags of zoos so i FW dipped them and did the flatworm exit by salifert. But no no avail i have them again and i was wonderin if the flatworm exit worked for you i might do another dosage if it did.
Thanks, Steve
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