sjpresley Posted March 16, 2003 Share Posted March 16, 2003 Here are links to some albums I put together on Nikonnet. Not all, but most (95%+) of the organisms in the photos are still in the tank. I sold the Capnella and lost both the clam and porcelain crab. If the links do not work you can go to nikonnet.com and sign in as "sjpresley" and copy the nikoneditor password from the link (e.g., nikoneditor_-1030437393). Fish and Algas http://home1.nikonnet.com/servlet/com.arcs...WHO=memberguest Stony Corals http://home1.nikonnet.com/servlet/com.arcs...WHO=memberguest Soft Corals http://home1.nikonnet.com/servlet/com.arcs...WHO=memberguest Arthropods http://home1.nikonnet.com/servlet/com.arcs...WHO=memberguest Echinoderms http://home1.nikonnet.com/servlet/com.arcs...WHO=memberguest Molluscs http://home1.nikonnet.com/servlet/com.arcs...WHO=memberguest Sponges and tunicates http://home1.nikonnet.com/servlet/com.arcs...WHO=memberguest Link to comment
The Unit Posted March 17, 2003 Share Posted March 17, 2003 wow....that is some crab........what kind is it?........thats so cool...nice pictures...and is that a kenya tree[campnella]?? Link to comment
The Unit Posted March 17, 2003 Share Posted March 17, 2003 ok i didnt read the post...but i havet seen any porcelain crabs that look like that Link to comment
sjpresley Posted March 17, 2003 Author Share Posted March 17, 2003 The "anemone crab" is also a porcelain, but it is Neopetrolisthes, this guy is a Petrolisthes. Yeah, that was a Capnella, I sold it off the day before the break and bought a Pterogorgia. The Capnella was getting so large it touched all kinds of things when it would lean one way or another. They are also one of the leathers that emit toxins (and these emissions seem to increase when they touch other corals as a competetive response) and I was noticing my brains weren't opening up as much so I decided to get rid of it all together. Link to comment
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