mojoreef said:James I only had 2 frags put in my tank in the last 2 years so I thought I was safe. Also I cant see the damm things, even with the magnifing glass I bought, lol. And to be honest I want to see some evidence of them causing actual harm.
Mike
mojoreef said:Yea Nikki that was the evidence I wanted to see, thus????? lol
Mike
EricHugo said:They are direct developers, so no larval stage to worry about (females have a brood pouch, I got nearly 20 from 5 adults after two weeks).
Nikki The tank I found out did have red bugs, I was as surprised as you that I got them, that is the only thing I have added to my tank in about 1 1/2 yrs. and it never crossed my mine that I would get the bugs back.
I am with you Reed but in all honesty arthropods are not really high on the priority list to have a scientific study done on them, no grant money thier. So I wouldnt hold your breathe to much on that. What we must go by is peoples experences, mixed with visual signs and habits of the bug.I really wish there was a firm scientific foundation on the broad brush stroke statement that the "red bugs" are as detrimental as people are saying they are.
It means the bugs are tearing through the tissue (2 cell layers deep) to either eat it or extract something. Personally I would guess they are going after protiens (since that is a major form of thier matrix) and that would explain the loss of coloration. The video was the last peice I needed in order to make the jump.I know there is the infamous video of a red bug drilling into a coral, but really, what exactly does that mean?
If it is the type of crab that eats the corals flesh then I would say thier bad and should be removed. Normal acro crabs will not do this.There are commenseral crabs that pick at corals. Are they bad???
Good point, but sucking off or picking a parasite of the tissue is still not the same as drilling and tearing through the corals tissue.There are fish that appear to be biting other fish when they are actually picking parisites off of them.
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