Katchupoy
Well-known member
Cool thanks... I remember when I visited Point Defiance Zoo, they also have thousands of these little creatures on their display (softy) tank.
Crows Ridge said:Okay Curt, where can I get one?
maxx said:Idgy,
If your going to be starting a fowlr, you wont really need to worry about flatworms in the tank. Flatworms are problematic because they can smother corals, and prevent them from getting light.
In a Fish Only With Live Rock, you're not really gonna have corals in the tank anyway....
I hadnt previously been aware that flatworms are photosynthetic, (thanks for the info Nikki!), so another way you will be keeping their numbers in check is the lighting you will be using over your tank. For a FOWLR, intense lighting isnt necessary, so most people just use the strip NO lighting that comes w/ most tanks. I dont think that would be suffient to sustain large populations of flatworms in the tank.
HTH,
Nick
Good point Dr B.Dr B said:If you are planning to kill them off by starving them in light, or letting them be, you better be CAREFUL! If you get a mass die-off for some reason(wether you try to starve them on purpose with light, or if you just let them be and they die on their own) you will be in trouble! Get as many of those guys out of there before you do anything, and get them out as they are dying. Those toxins will be harmful to any livestock in the tank.
maxx said:Good point Dr B.
However Idgy is going to be starting up a FOWLR and was concerned about having flatworms develop in the tank. Not a real problem as far as I can see because of what I mentioned earlier.
Nick
The camouflaged predators do make it through on occasion. Most pest nudibranchs observed by aquarists are tasseled with cerata to hold the ingested, stinging cells of their prey. They are subtly colored and formed to resemble the "food" that they eat.
Most nudibranchs only feed in the dark of night and visual inspections must be conducted on quarantined animals or suspected victims in display. Manual extraction with tweezers is usually sufficient, but siphoning may be easier (please don't ever start a siphon by mouth, especially when trying to slurp a toxic nudibranch).
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