Angelscrx
Import Fish
Lunchie Welcome to Reef Frontiers.
charlie said:They do a good job of cleaning up, and unfortunately, munching on snails. Oh well, I'm sure it happens in nature, so I'm not real worried about it.
NaH2O said:Has anyone kept an Arrow Crab? They kind-of give me the creeps. The Arrow Crab seems to be a popular specimen. What I've read is they are good for killing bristleworms, but will also kill small fish and other crustaceans. I wonder if you keep them well fed, how much damage they will do in a tank. Or, are they one of those critters, where you sit back and say, "What was I thinking??".
The masses of hermits that folks seem to be having in their tanks create a decidedly abnormal situation, as such herds are simply not found on most reefs. Their crawling over animals such as corals and sponges is abrasive and destructive. They also remove food from sessile animals such as corals. Additionally, hermit crabs are at least partially predatory and the bigger ones are particularly a problem in this regard. Some of them are significant predators on small snails, other small crustaceans, and each other. When folks see hermits gleaning materials from the rock surfaces, they are seeing the hermits pick off small animals as well as small plants. This results in an abnormal surface that has only the animals and plants that are hermit crab resistant living on it. Additionally, at least some of them appear to be predatory on some of the worms living in the sand, and I think this is decidedly a problem.
Upon the removal of hermits from my reef (and their replacement on the sand by Nassarius snails as scavengers) I have noticed a significant new growth of smaller polyped animals, as well as small feather duster and other tube worms. I have not noticed an increase in algae. Basically, I feel like the hermits are an unnecessary complication in high numbers. Some species I think don't belong in an aquarium under any circumstances, but others like the small blue legs are probably benign if there are only one or two in a system.
maxx said:Nikki,
I need to find out where he story came from...(Mike Palletta maybe??) but I read where someone had an Arrow crab that harpooned a Royal Gramma with its long rostratum, (nose), killing the fish and eating it. I've never seen that behavior before, but its quite a mental picture.
I know they will also eat feather dusters.
Nick
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