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Black Fireworm?


Mr. Microscope

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Mr. Microscope

Hello All,

 

I came back to my tank this morning and found this moving around. It goes very slow and was easy to catch. It looks flat, blackish, and has these red/orange spots. Also, it's got spikes!

FireWorm.jpg

I've got it in a small container that I use for feeding the tank. Right now the container is floating the in the tank to maintain temp. What do you think it is? Should I keep it?

fireworm-1.jpg

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When in doubt throw it out!

 

Hard to tell from the pics but the head kinda looks like a Eunicid. However since it was easy to catch its probably something else, but still why take the chance.

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Looks like a standard bristle worm to me.. but without a microscope (haaa!), it's hard to tell.

 

I wouldn't sweat it.

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Mr. Microscope
Looks like a standard bristle worm to me.. but without a microscope (haaa!), it's hard to tell.

 

I wouldn't sweat it.

Are bristle worms were flat? This thing is wide and maybe inch long.

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It's not the standard bristle worm. It may be another harmless variant but it looks different.

 

Mr. Microscope you must have regular bristleworms in your tank too to compare to?

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Mr. Microscope
It's not the standard bristle worm. It may be another harmless variant but it looks different.

 

Mr. Microscope you must have regular bristleworms in your tank too to compare to?

 

Yeah, I've had plenty. Mostly they look spiky and round with orange/red heads. I've never seen anything like this before. It seems to move as slowly as a bristleworm. How fast do fireworms move?

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Looks like a scale worm to me! Lepidonotus squamatus maybe. They look like bristleworms, but are flat and have scales - you can tell the species by the amount of scales they have. We see them a lot up here in the field, but I'm not sure how it acts in an aquarium.

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Mr. Microscope
Looks like a scale worm to me! Lepidonotus squamatus maybe. They look like bristleworms, but are flat and have scales - you can tell the species by the amount of scales they have. We see them a lot up here in the field, but I'm not sure how it acts in an aquarium.

Okay. So, I just looked at it under the microscope. Here is a quick sketch I made. You're right! It does have scales. I counted 11 sets of 2. Does that help? Do you know if scale worms are scavengers, coral eaters, etc?

worm.jpg

 

Edit: After a little research, it looks like these guys are predators. Hmm..trying to find out what they eat.

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As far as I know, they are omniovores, eating anything from algae and small crustaceans like copepods, caprellids (skeleton shrimp), to bryozoans and hydroids. There's nothing I've read about them eating corals, but we don't really have many corals up where I am either so if you want to keep it, keep an eye on it. They are pretty cool little things though.

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yup the scaled polychaete. I'm guessing that the scales help armor the animal, how does it feel? tough? Its a very interesting animal to see in a pico, I have not seen one in mine yet, heck I've never seen one in real life yet either, just read about them :P

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Mr. Microscope

Love that resource. Forgot about it. Thanks!

 

yup the scaled polychaete. I'm guessing that the scales help armor the animal, how does it feel? tough? Its a very interesting animal to see in a pico, I have not seen one in mine yet, heck I've never seen one in real life yet either, just read about them :P

Seemed pretty well armored. 'Wouldn't want to touch that thing. :lol:

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Seemed pretty well armored. 'Wouldn't want to touch that thing. :lol:

I've touched them before...maybe on purpose.. :lol:

The scales actually come off really easily like if you pick them up with forceps too forcefully (they're worms and hard to hold on to :angry: ). Most of the time it's hard to identify the species because many scales are missing.

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Mr. Microscope
I've touched them before...maybe on purpose.. :lol:

The scales actually come off really easily like if you pick them up with forceps too forcefully (they're worms and hard to hold on to :angry: ). Most of the time it's hard to identify the species because many scales are missing.

Did you get stung? Mine has spikes. I just picked mine up with a stick. Nothing fell off unless it did in the tank.

 

Judging from your illustration it appears to be the ever-illusive Titty Worm, or Mammaramis Squigglotus.

Say what??! Is that real or a joke? LOL! I'm at work and afraid to google it.

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I didn't get stung and as far as I know they don't sting. He might bite you though I guess if you got a finger too close to his mouth :P

Are you sure the spikes aren't just his parapodia?

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Judging from your illustration it appears to be the ever-illusive Titty Worm, or Mammaramis Squigglotus.

 

HAHAHAHAHAHAHA

 

I'm at work and read this, but knew I didn't need to google it, because that's what it looked like to me too!!!

 

LOL! :D

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