Canreef Aquatics Bulletin Board

Canreef Aquatics Bulletin Board (http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/index.php)
-   Reef (http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/forumdisplay.php?f=8)
-   -   Montipora Nudibranches (http://www.canreef.com/vbulletin/showthread.php?t=44576)

marie 08-29-2008 03:18 PM

Montipora Nudibranches
 
I don't have them thank god but I was reading Eric Borneman's forum and came across a test he did by puting nudibranches in a sealed jar filled with tank water. The nudibranches lived for 7 weeks with no host and with less than optimal conditions :surprise:. If that isn't a good arguement for quarantining corals I don't know what is

http://forum.marinedepot.com/Topic90143-9-1.aspx

christyf5 08-29-2008 04:42 PM

Oh wow! They're hardy little buggers. They're no match for the power of potassium permanganate though :wink:

Oceanic 08-29-2008 05:26 PM

I had experience with these little bastards a couple of years ago :bad-word:. My in tank fix was blasting the montis regularily with a powerhead, a yellow Coriss Wrasse, Green Wrasse, and a six line Wrasse.

These Wrasses eliminated all traces of the nudis within about 3 weeks. Anyone having issues with these should look for any wrasses in the Halichoeres species.

:biggrin:

justinl 08-30-2008 06:54 AM

oceanic, are you sure you weren't treating for flatworms rather than nudibranchs?

deep6er 08-30-2008 01:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by christyf5 (Post 342586)
Oh wow! They're hardy little buggers. They're no match for the power of potassium permanganate though :wink:

im with you on that, christy

Oceanic 08-30-2008 04:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by justinl (Post 342692)
oceanic, are you sure you weren't treating for flatworms rather than nudibranchs?

Yeah I am sure, they certainly were not the red planaria type flat worms. I looked at them very closely and they were white greyish nudibranchs, I only had them on one Monti (montipora confusa) They were killing it from the bottomside up.

The Wrasses did the trick, this was a couple years ago and no sign of them for at least that long ago.

christyf5 08-30-2008 04:15 PM

My tailspot wrasse ate them too, however it wasn't until I exposed them that he decided they were tasty. I think the scrolling of the M. cap didn't allow him to get his fat head in there. Once I discovered that I indeed had them I wanted to take some photos so I broke a few pieces of cap off and flipped them over (nudis were on the underside) to get a shot of them. As I was focusing the camera the wrasse zoomed over and nipped them off the coral.

the moral of the story: if you're gonna try to get a wrasse to eat them, make sure its a small wrasse :wink:

chevyjaxon 08-30-2008 11:25 PM

will a large neon wrasse eat these things? i dont have a quarantine tank that i keep things in, besides i have no idea what a nudi even looks like:redface:

rocketlily 08-31-2008 04:31 AM

Here's 2 very interesting articles on these little beggars. I lost a Montipora a few months ago to them and still haven't put another in my tank yet. Nasty little bugs.

http://www.qualitymarineusa.com/arti...5-0913F83DCB60

http://www.3reef.com/forums/diseases...chs-46433.html

Fauna Marin 08-31-2008 06:06 AM

Hi

We use for such snails following predators with great success
Halichores cosmetes , i think they are more effective then thesixline wrasse.

We have another tipp against flatworms and monti nudibranches.

We have a small tank with Rhynchocinetes durbanensis
Then we add the coral for 30 min in this tank, after a few seconds the shrimps will eat all nudibranches , eggs and flatworms in a few minutes.
After that you can remove the corals back to the tank

Greets claude


All times are GMT. The time now is 08:17 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.