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#2 |
Roll Tide!!!
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Tuscaloosa, AL
Posts: 341
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Looks like some kind of limpet or snail......I can't be sure.
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~Chris~ Current Tank Info: 40 breeder mixed reef |
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#3 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Abbotsford, B.C.
Posts: 578
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Flatworms.
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#4 |
Moved On
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Clearwater,Fl
Posts: 2,915
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Flatworms
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#6 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: Abbotsford, B.C.
Posts: 578
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No, you don't have to worry about your acros. They can get unsightly though.... sorry, must go to sleep now.....zzzzzzz.
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#7 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Uranus
Posts: 3,094
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yep flatworms
sana
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Senior Member of the "Hardly any Water Changes, Temp Swinging, T5ing, No Qtining, Frag Exchanging for Fish Food Current Tank Info: 90RR inwall, Octopuss Skimmer, 2 MP40 wQD, 1 MP10 WQD, 2 Radions G4 Pro, Apex Doser, Apex Controller, 400w heater, 30 Gal Sump, Biopellets, Carbon, Gfo, Macroalgae |
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#8 |
Moved On
Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Clearwater,Fl
Posts: 2,915
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#9 |
Premium Member
![]() Join Date: Jun 2003
Location: Ft. Lauderdale
Posts: 10,598
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No, there is no reason to be concerned about this flatworm. It is NOT the infamous red flatworm (Convolutriloba). It's just one of the many harmless acoel flatworms that occur on reefs.
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Some say the sun rises in the East. Some say it rises in the West. The truth must be somewhere in the middle. Current Tank Info: tore them down to move and haven't had the time or money to set them back up |
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#10 |
Team RC Member
![]() Join Date: Jul 2005
Location: houstonia
Posts: 7,989
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Agreed with greenbean, that's a relatively harmless flatworm. You may want to pursue something to control their population (such as a Halicheores species wrasse, or even test run some Flatworm Exit in a small dish to see how effective it is with the pests), but your corals should be alright.
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-Chris- You don't win friends with salad. "Look! They're trying to learn for free!" ... "Use your phony guns as clubs!" Current Tank Info: rectangluar? wet? |
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#11 |
R.C. Fraternity President
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Thanks fro the responses, I am going to want to control the population somehow, as I understand that they can get out of hand pretty quickly.
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Jimmy MASVC President Dishes are done man! Current Tank Info: 300 in progress |
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#12 |
Cyprinius carpio
![]() Join Date: Mar 2004
Posts: 4,496
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Or you could just leave well enough alone. They like many others come and go. I have had them in my tank before like you are showing and then they slowly died out.
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#13 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Greensboro, NC
Posts: 425
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I had the same ones in my 100g reef...I left them alone and the population never went anywhere.
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100G AllGlass reef/Lifereef Filter Systems custom sump/skimmer/filter cylinders. 1/5 HP Aqualogic chiller, ACIII controller, Lifereef LCR1 Calcium Reactor. Current Tank Info: 100g reef/Berlin method |
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#14 | |
Registered Member
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: Milwaukee
Posts: 6,081
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Quote:
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#15 |
Registered Member
Join Date: Jan 2005
Location: Southern Illinois
Posts: 2,913
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Agreed. Just leave them be. If the population does boom, they will eventually snuff themselves out.
I had the same issue, except with red planaria. Population boomed, but they slowly died off, and now I have none.
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Current Setup: 10 Gallon Skimmerless Zoanthid Tank Lighting: Single 175 Watt Metal Halide (14,000 K Hamilton Lamp) Filtration: 10 gallon sump/refugium and Phosban Reactor Return: Mag Drive 700 Controller: ReefKeeper Lite (Basic Version) Circulation: TBD Age of System: Build is in Progress |
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