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04/30/2008, 09:03 AM | #26 | |
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Quote:
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The reefer formally known as Lefty Ink is the way; the way is ink. Current Tank Info: 150 mixed reef with a 180 remote sump • 250 gallon fish breeding system • 200 gallon cephalopod breeding system • 212,000 gallon reef tank at work |
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12/19/2008, 12:21 PM | #27 |
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Cephalo - Head
Pod - Foot Thus, the Headfeet!
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Later, KarlBob Current Tank Info: No tanks for now. Starting over in Austin sometime next year. |
11/24/2009, 01:05 AM | #28 |
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This is a very useful post for the newbies... very descriptive.. thanks mate.
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10/15/2010, 04:57 PM | #29 |
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don't snails count as cephalopods or is that what cephalopods evolved from
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10/15/2010, 06:59 PM | #30 |
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Snails and slugs are in a different class of Mollusca, Gastropoda. No one really knows how the 8 major lineages (classes) of molluscs are related to each other but figuring it out using DNA sequence data is my Ph.D. dissertation research project.
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11/01/2012, 08:23 PM | #31 |
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10/15/2013, 05:36 AM | #32 |
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Might the pics on the first post be fixed?
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Inventor of the easy-to-DIY upflow scrubber, and also the waterfall scrubber that everyone loves to build: http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?t=1424843 |
03/24/2014, 08:31 AM | #33 |
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Very informative. I thought everything with the word Pod at the end was the same
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05/04/2014, 03:11 PM | #34 |
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Hello I recently saw cuttlefish eggs for sale at my lfs and there scientific name was sepia officinalis and I was wondering what the min tank size for one would be
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05/05/2014, 02:27 AM | #35 |
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Very doubtful there were actually S. officinalis, and most likely they are S. bandensis. S. officinalis get very large 30 cm + and require 70 degree water. However, they are prolly S. bandensis which are tropical and get max 4 inches please do some serious research before purchasing because they are not simple to raise from eggs.
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The reefer formally known as Lefty Ink is the way; the way is ink. Current Tank Info: 150 mixed reef with a 180 remote sump • 250 gallon fish breeding system • 200 gallon cephalopod breeding system • 212,000 gallon reef tank at work |
06/23/2014, 05:53 PM | #36 |
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