rumpypumpy Posted June 3, 2016 Share Posted June 3, 2016 I was randomly fixing my coral placement so I decided to lift my GSP and looked at the base and saw this... A worm of some type... can anyone help ID? Quote Link to comment
jamescstein Posted June 3, 2016 Share Posted June 3, 2016 I was randomly fixing my coral placement so I decided to lift my GSP and looked at the base and saw this... A worm of some type... can anyone help ID? Sort of looks like Hesionidae http://tolweb.org/Hesionidae/22789 http://chucksaddiction.thefishestate.net/hitchworms.html Quote Link to comment
roobot5000 Posted June 17, 2016 Share Posted June 17, 2016 Hi all: First time post, long time reader. I looked through all 17 pages of this thread and couldn't find anything that was similar to what I am trying to identify. Here it is (sorry for the dirty glass): The red arrow shows the exact spot of the location of the before mentioned growth. Also, is the red plant on the right just a type of seaweed? Any ideas? Thanks for looking! Quote Link to comment
lakshwadeep Posted July 15, 2016 Share Posted July 15, 2016 The red arrow shows the exact spot of the location of the before mentioned growth. Also, is the red plant on the right just a type of seaweed? Any ideas? Thanks for looking! It looks like possibly some coral (retracted or maybe decaying - time will tell). Is it hard or soft? The red thing is a type of red macroalgae, which include many seaweeds. Where did the rock come from? Quote Link to comment
pmemmer Posted July 18, 2016 Share Posted July 18, 2016 This came in as a hitchhiker on my live rock about eight months ago... any ideas? Bright green, and glows nicely under the actinics. Started as a single polyp and has grown slowly but nicely. Sorry for the junky pic. hitchhiker by Phil Memmer, on Flickr Quote Link to comment
lakshwadeep Posted July 20, 2016 Share Posted July 20, 2016 This came in as a hitchhiker on my live rock about eight months ago... any ideas? Bright green, and glows nicely under the actinics. Started as a single polyp and has grown slowly but nicely. Sorry for the junky pic. Are the polyps soft or hard (i.e. having some type of skeleton)? Quote Link to comment
pmemmer Posted July 20, 2016 Share Posted July 20, 2016 Are the polyps soft or hard (i.e. having some type of skeleton)? Soft, as far as I can tell without reaching in and molesting them. If there is any firm skeleton, it is at the very base. For the longest time, there were just 1-2 polyps, and they did not extend like this... they were very tight to the rock, and almost looked like some type of zoa. But in the past couple of weeks they have really come out of their shell. Quote Link to comment
RayWhisperer Posted July 20, 2016 Share Posted July 20, 2016 The polyp structure and feeders are very reminiscent of a tube coral. However, I would expect a visible skeleton at this far along in growth. Quote Link to comment
pmemmer Posted July 24, 2016 Share Posted July 24, 2016 The base on these is stony, as it turns out. Quote Link to comment
RayWhisperer Posted July 24, 2016 Share Posted July 24, 2016 Then it's likely to be Cadocora arbuscla, tube coral. That's gulf live rock you have, right? 1 Quote Link to comment
pmemmer Posted July 30, 2016 Share Posted July 30, 2016 Yes, Gulf live rock... a couple other folks have also told me they thought it could be tube coral. Probably that's it. Thanks! Quote Link to comment
Ebn Posted August 5, 2016 Share Posted August 5, 2016 Didn't see this posted while perusing through the thread. Acro eating spiders. Sorry crappy looking pic from my cellphone. Those came in on some SPS from AquaSD during one of their live sale. One of them survived a Bayer dip for 15+ minutes. Originally had a video of them, but my phone crapped out on me and I've lost the video. Read more about them here: http://www.3reef.com/threads/sps-nightmare-pycnogonids.155311/ Quote Link to comment
RayWhisperer Posted August 5, 2016 Share Posted August 5, 2016 Interesting. Never seen acro eating spiders. Sorry, Ebn. They sound like a rough pest to deal with. I have only 2 ideas, and don't know if either would be an option for you. First, would obviously be interceptor. However, without quarantine, I don't know if I'd be willing to go that route. The other idea I have is only my idea. Nothing proven, or documented, and obviously (since I've never dealt with these spiders) I have no idea if it would even work. Perhaps pipefish may eat them. Since they are nocturnal, and many species of pipes are primarily nocturnal. Just an idea. Another idea, maybe acro crabs???? I know they'll defend their host from larger predators, like stars. I don't know if they would do the same with these little guys. I don't know if they are nocturnal, either. 1 Quote Link to comment
Ebn Posted August 6, 2016 Share Posted August 6, 2016 Interesting. Never seen acro eating spiders. Sorry, Ebn. They sound like a rough pest to deal with. I have only 2 ideas, and don't know if either would be an option for you. First, would obviously be interceptor. However, without quarantine, I don't know if I'd be willing to go that route. The other idea I have is only my idea. Nothing proven, or documented, and obviously (since I've never dealt with these spiders) I have no idea if it would even work. Perhaps pipefish may eat them. Since they are nocturnal, and many species of pipes are primarily nocturnal. Just an idea. Another idea, maybe acro crabs???? I know they'll defend their host from larger predators, like stars. I don't know if they would do the same with these little guys. I don't know if they are nocturnal, either. Didn't bother with keeping the sps. They were still being dipped and were being examined under 2.5x magnification when I saw these guys and how they can survive the dip. I ended up chucking all the sps ($200+ worth) that came in from the live sale. Also sent the pic to ASD and got a brush off from them. I've since sent my money elsewhere. Quote Link to comment
RayWhisperer Posted August 6, 2016 Share Posted August 6, 2016 Ouch! $200 is a tough one to throw out. Good thing you caught it. I'm gonna have to start qting with a microscope, or something. You makin me nervous, son. Quote Link to comment
SE-Tank Posted August 14, 2016 Share Posted August 14, 2016 What is this? I do not see anything simlier on this thread, including last 17 pages. One side looks like grass and the other looks flat. The current can push it around and I have not notice any movement. Thanks!! Quote Link to comment
TheStar Posted September 29, 2016 Share Posted September 29, 2016 Looked through 17 pages and could not find anything that looked like this. Can anyone help? Here it even looks like its forming a Mouth. Quote Link to comment
RayWhisperer Posted September 30, 2016 Share Posted September 30, 2016 What are you wondering about in those pics? The snot looking thing, or is it something on the hermits I'm not seeing? If it's the snot looking stuff, it's a sponge of some sort. Quote Link to comment
TheStar Posted September 30, 2016 Share Posted September 30, 2016 What are you wondering about in those pics? The snot looking thing, or is it something on the hermits I'm not seeing? If it's the snot looking stuff, it's a sponge of some sort. I'm wondering about the white/milky slime looking stuff. Quote Link to comment
RayWhisperer Posted September 30, 2016 Share Posted September 30, 2016 Yeah, that's a sponge of some sort. Quote Link to comment
el_ote Posted October 7, 2016 Share Posted October 7, 2016 Any thoughts on these bad boys. They are freaking me out! They are in a bad corner of my tank and i cant clean the glass very well so sorry about the bad picture. They look to have strings or mucous coming outta the tops. maybe a spaghetti worm or hair worm or a vermetid? This is after i nudged them with my poking stick: How worried should i be. They gave me the heebie-jeebies Quote Link to comment
RayWhisperer Posted October 7, 2016 Share Posted October 7, 2016 I have no idea, but those are freaking cool. By your description, I was thinking vermetid snail. Buy your picture, I'm stumped. My guess is they are probably a filter feeder, or detrivore. So, I don't THINK you have much to worry about. 1 Quote Link to comment
Reef Queso Posted October 10, 2016 Share Posted October 10, 2016 Looked through 17 pages and could not find anything that looked like this. Can anyone help? Here it even looks like its forming a Mouth. Thats a bacterial bloom. Clear slime covering the rock? Cloudy looking? Not sure wheat the tubes are for scientifically, but I have the same looking tubes poking out. About 6 years ago when I started my first tank and cycled with fish, I had that stuff covering the artificial coral decorations. It went away after about a month and I didn't lose any fish. I have the same thing going in my 15g on currently after adding rock from craigslist causing a cycle a few weeks ago and somehow I have that slime on rocks that have been stable in the tank for years. Quote Link to comment
AVReefer Posted October 12, 2016 Share Posted October 12, 2016 Can anyone ID this? I believe it's a sponge but I haven't been able to find anything. it's about 2" long total, attached to the underside of live rock. Body appears to be made of a couple of long lines of tubes which form one large tube. I would not imagine that it's harmful but I'm more curious than anything. Thanks! Quote Link to comment
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