Krish
RF STAFF
Great info and amazing videos Curt!!! Keep up the good work
What you did not see was that the stomatopod continued to pound the octopus for about 25 minutes, long after it was initially disabled, and then killed. Several times during this period, the stomatopod appeared to sample the octopus, jumped back and extensively cleaned its mouth parts. Finally, it ate the entire corpse. We watched the stomatopod for several days and it seemed no worse for the meal. When offered another blue-ring, it also attacked and ate it suggesting that it had not learned to avoid them. In fact, there seemed to be no reason to.
I'll be very interested in the follow up research he does, especially how the mantis is processing the toxin.
There is no known antivenom for TTX poisoning from blue-rings. O.s. can do something that no other marine animal or humans can do. This research will hopefully prove more useful than planned.
My...what big eyes you Mantis shrimp...have....
Wpecoul said:OK, I have what I hope isn't too dumb of a question - where can I get a nano-suitable mantis online? I haven't searched everywhere, but I haven't yet found a vendor.
NaH2O) said:Curt, what do you feed something this small and still keep its smashers healthy? That cerith snail looks like it could take the mantis out.
Curt,
Dr Caldwell suspected it was a G.affinis...
http://reefcentral.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&postid=8195912#post8195912
But I'd definately prefer a species that gets larger, just so you can see the damn thing more often. I fed it yesterday, squirted some mysis in the hole its hanging out in. Pretty sure it grabbed up some.
I have it in a 10 gallon tank with a couple of small pieces of rock, some smaller snails, a micro blue leg hermit, and a tiny chalk bass. The chalk bass isnt big enough to eat the mantis, but its too big to be a meal for the shrimp...
Nick
MYTH #2: My hitchhiking mantis is going to break my tank or break my hand
Fact #2: Highly unlikely. While there are a few species that are capable of this, to my knowledge, they are rarely hitchhikers. If you have a very inexpensive tank with thin glass, it helps to put down a piece of plexiglass under the sandbed. (These issues will be described in section 4). The reality is that mantis have one of the fastest movements in nature so they have the acceleration thing down pat. Simple Newtonian physics explains why they aren't going to break your tank. Force = Mass x Acceleration. While they have the acceleration thing down pat, most hitchhikers don't have the mass to damage you very much nor your tank. Don't get me wrong....a strike definitely hurts. However, most hitchhikers are not going to cause long term damage provided you are being wise and wearing gloves.
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