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02/27/2013, 09:44 PM | #1 |
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Join Date: May 2012
Location: Southern California
Posts: 40
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Zoa vs Acan?
Hi all,
I picked up two polyps of pink zoas 2 months ago. Didn't take me long to notice there was another coral on the frag. Think the hitchhiker is an acan. The zoa grew, to 7 polyps, and the acan grew/recover as well. The acan is now out-competing the zoa. Already loss one polyp. Is there anything I can do to save the zoa? I'm new, never fragged anything before. Here are some pics. Many thanks in advance. |
02/27/2013, 10:29 PM | #2 |
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Location: Orlando, FL (OIA)
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If your not down for fragging, you could maybe ask a local reef store to do you favor, maybe throw in like $5-$10 bucks, just a thought. or look up zoa and arcan fragging on YouTube and get a razor blade, gloves, some gel super glue and follow along.
Good luck |
02/27/2013, 11:21 PM | #3 |
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Join Date: Dec 2012
Posts: 103
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Get some bone cutters or wire cutters and cut the frag plug in half. Don't be scared.
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02/27/2013, 11:55 PM | #4 |
Freedom costs a buckofive
Join Date: May 2012
Location: Michigan
Posts: 3,002
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Zoas are tough and can usually take a knife easy enough. Chisel the rock between them, whatever.
The acans would eat small children if they could, they are always hungry, watch out & keep other corals away from them. |
02/28/2013, 01:27 AM | #5 | |
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Join Date: Mar 2012
Posts: 324
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Quote:
Those zoas are a snack unless you separate them |
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02/28/2013, 10:16 AM | #6 |
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Join Date: Jun 2012
Location: Austin / Port Aransas, TX
Posts: 1,479
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Acans don't really sting alot as other LPS corals but they will litterly consume the pink zoa polyps as food. I would frag them my self utilizing a zip rotory (Dremel) tool.
1. Remove frag from water and set on paper towl and cover will a non clear plastic bowl to subject it to total darkness for about 10 - 15 minutes. The polyps and acans will recede. 2. Using the riotory tool, score a line between the two about a 1/4 inch deep. 3. Place the sharp edge of chef's knife in the scored line and gently tap w/ a hammer until it fractures. 4. Whola two frags I usually use a pair of channel locks to hold the coral while zip cutting as one little slip will cut the heck out of a finger. And be sure to hold w/ channel lock pliers on a hard surface when fracturing. Or as mentioned before I would let a local LFS do the cut. Personally I'd offer them a couple of bucks for the cut or the Acan and save those pink Zoas. Pink Zoas are a pretty hot color right now. Merry Skerry |
02/28/2013, 10:32 AM | #7 |
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Join Date: May 2012
Location: Southern California
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Yall r awesome! Thanks for all the responses. Will be separating the two. Fingers crossed!
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03/18/2013, 02:12 PM | #8 |
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Join Date: May 2012
Location: Southern California
Posts: 40
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Hey guys, just wanted to do an update to this thread. So I went ahead and fragged the pink zoa off of the rock. Didn't do anything fancy. Just a razor blade, gloves, and goggles. Didn't have any iodine to dip em with either. And the result.... "drum rolls".... Both corals survived! Thanks again for all the help! Hope this will help others one day.
Scraped off with a thin layer of rock, glued it to a rubble. Lost 2 heads, but 4 survived. I missed a piece of the acan, it broke in half when I took the frag off of the main rock. Its coming back. Not next to any zoa this time though. Will decide what to do with it at a later time. The acans. |
03/18/2013, 02:38 PM | #9 |
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Location: New Jersey
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nice job. . . and kudos for using the proper safety gear.
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10/28/2015, 01:00 PM | #10 |
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Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: Wilmington, DE
Posts: 124
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And definitely got a good deal..two coral for the price of one. Got a rock of eagle eye zoas once..within a month noticed something growing. Posted pictures. Everyone said it's aiptasia or majano. It didn't look like it or anything else I found online. So I waited and was patient. Low and behold...almost a year later it's grown into an awesome plate coral.
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10/28/2015, 01:00 PM | #11 |
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Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: Wilmington, DE
Posts: 124
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And yes I know..this thread is old.
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