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07/29/2019, 11:48 AM | #1 |
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Location: Philadelphia
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Aiptasia in refugium -- Please Help!!
Hi! I have a 90 gal DT with 30gal sump with fuge, skimmer, and return section.
About 3 weeks ago, I got a 1000 pods from live aquaria and put them directly in my fuge with the sponges they came with. I just looked yesterday in my fuge and see Aiptasa are all over the place! Is there any chance they came with the pods from live aquaria? Regardless, I'm hoping someone can help me with the best way to proceed from here? Im about to just take everything out and restart my fuge from scratch, but would love to prevent killing the pods. Anyone have any suggestions on how to be sure I kill all the Aiptasa without disrubting the pod colonyies to much? RIght now I have about 2 inches of live sand, a bunch of rubble, 5-10lbs of live rock, and cheato in the fuge. Have light running 12hrs a day at night 9pm-9am. Any help would sure be appreciated!!! |
07/29/2019, 01:47 PM | #2 |
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Location: North Carolina
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It would be quite uncommon to all of a sudden have Aiptasia "all over the place"..
Are you sure its not something else like hydroids,etc..? Got a picture to get a positive ID? If it is aiptasia you could use any of the commonly recommended methods of attack.. All of those methods are fairly "pod safe" for the most part..
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07/29/2019, 02:01 PM | #3 |
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Location: Bay Area, CA
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What kinds of fish do you have in your DT? If compatible, just get an aiptasia eating filefish or copperband butterfly. If any aips make it into the DT, the fish will take care of them. That way you can just leave them in the fuge. I have tons in my sump and fuge but none in the DT due to my filefish.
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Tank info: 120 gallon 48x30x20 high DT. Clownfish breeding rack in full swing: C-Quest Onyx, Bali Aquarich P1 Picasso + Rod's Onyx, wild percula + Rod's Onyx. |
07/29/2019, 02:08 PM | #4 |
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Location: FL
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I’d throw a couple peppermint shrimp in the sump. They do a good job at eliminating them.
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07/30/2019, 02:31 AM | #5 |
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Pictures would definitely be helpful to determine if it are indeed Aptasia, hydroid polyps, or something else.
In case it are Aptasia, since it is a fuge I would rather empty it and sterilize it than take the risks of having Aptasia spread to the display tank. This doesn't mean that you have to kill off the pods as well. They are mobile and therefore it should not be too hard to separate them from the substrate. In the end only a few need to make it into the display to later repopulate the refugium. Sent from my XT1254 using Tapatalk
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Pairs: 4 percula, 3 P. kauderni, 3 D. excisus, 1 ea of P. diacanthus, S. splendidus, C. altivelis O. rosenblatti, D. janssi, S. yasha & a Gramma loreto trio 3 P. diacanthus. 2 C. starcki Current Tank Info: 200 gal 4 tank system (40x28x24 + 40B + 40B sump tank + 20g refugium) + 30x18x18 mixed reef + 20g East Pacific biotop + 20g FW +... |
08/01/2019, 10:40 AM | #6 |
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What pfan said
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08/02/2019, 07:11 AM | #7 | |
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Quote:
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“In wine there is wisdom; in beer there is freedom, in water there is bacteria.” - Benjamin Franklin Current Tank Info: 90 gallon reef. Biocube 29 lionfish tank. Mantis tank. |
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08/03/2019, 04:28 PM | #8 |
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Why worry about them being in the refugium? They are filter feeders, so they are helping out.
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Beware of recommendations by those who don't actually use their recommendation!! The search function actually works quite well!! Tanks:Planet Aquarium 150g LPS, Planet Aquarium 90g Softie |
Tags |
aiptasia, fuge, pest anemone, pests |
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