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| | #11 |
| Big Nosed Lazy Reef Dummy Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: Westchester, NY
Posts: 11,980
Reefer Ratings: (21) Friends: (31) |
__________________ Brendan "So this is how liberty dies, With thunderous applause" Padme Amidala in "Revenge of the Sith" My reef tank 24 gallon Aquapod |
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| Nooblet Reefer Join Date: Jun 2006 Location: Astoria
Posts: 102
Reefer Ratings: (1) Friends: (0) |
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| | #15 |
| Line Skipper Join Date: Nov 2005 Location: Marine Park
Posts: 3,278
Reefer Ratings: (35) Friends: (0) |
Smart money says it's either one or the other on those links. The zoa eating nudis that I had were plain brown in color, no fancy orange pollen on them. Pods do go to town on anything they can but like termites not on living stuff. If your zoas are dead or dying then your pods will be all over them but not the culprits of their demise. You can always try FW dipping your zoanthids. That has saved many of my ailing colonies. OH! Another worthwhile mention: Are ALL of your zoas affected or just some? I've found some colonies die off for no apparent reason while neighboring colonies were thriving. If you are experiencing something like that it most likely isn't a predator or parasite. They tend not to discriminate. Other more mysterious zoanthid killers such as "mold" or "bacteria" (I've heard them called but doubt that they are actually either) seem to decimate zoanthid colonies. I've found the purple rim with green center zoanthids were like my canary in a cave mine. They were always affected first by any zoanthid flu going around. The rest of my zoanthids were pretty resilient. If all of your zoanthids are affected, FW dip one colony and blast it with a aspirator, turkey baster, what have you. See what comes off. You should be able to get a good look at everything and you'll be able to figure out who's giving you trouble. Last edited by fritz; 01-11-2007 at 01:22 PM. |
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