View Full Version : get rid of Aiptisia
jim
April 5th 05, 01:20 AM
My tank is a 220 gal.
What is the easiest and best way to get rid of aiptisia.
I tried injecting boiling hot water it didn't work. I tried injecting them
with kalk. That seems to work but I have a lot of them. I can't try
butterfly fish because I have multiple corals. I was going to try peppermint
shrimp. But I have a hawkfish I heard they eat the shrimp. I heard of joe's
juice not sure of it. Vinegar ? All this requires injection. There are too
many. Any other suggestions?
Jim
wxtbs
April 5th 05, 03:50 AM
I have a copper banded butterfly and it doesnt touch any corals.
Biggest problem with him was buying it. It took a couple of months to
find one that looked healthly and eats frozen food.
Had him for 6 moths now and the aiptasia is gone. Only think I have
noticed in my tank since getting him is that along with the aiptasia
being gone, i dont see any pods anymore, or i should say I see a lot
less then i use to.
I should add that i had tried various treatments including the hot
water and was never able to rid my tank. It is a 92 gal with a 30 gal
sump.
Ken
jim wrote:
> My tank is a 220 gal.
> What is the easiest and best way to get rid of aiptisia.
> I tried injecting boiling hot water it didn't work. I tried injecting
them
> with kalk. That seems to work but I have a lot of them. I can't try
> butterfly fish because I have multiple corals. I was going to try
peppermint
> shrimp. But I have a hawkfish I heard they eat the shrimp. I heard of
joe's
> juice not sure of it. Vinegar ? All this requires injection. There
are too
> many. Any other suggestions?
>
> Jim
George
April 5th 05, 04:10 AM
"jim" > wrote in message
...
> My tank is a 220 gal.
> What is the easiest and best way to get rid of aiptisia.
> I tried injecting boiling hot water it didn't work. I tried injecting them
> with kalk. That seems to work but I have a lot of them. I can't try butterfly
> fish because I have multiple corals. I was going to try peppermint shrimp. But
> I have a hawkfish I heard they eat the shrimp. I heard of joe's juice not sure
> of it. Vinegar ? All this requires injection. There are too many. Any other
> suggestions?
>
> Jim
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/marine/inverts/cnidaria/anthozoa/aiptasia/aiptasia.htm
Nudibranchs,
Most popular is the little, almost invisible Berghia verrucicornis, are great
obligate (this is all they eat) Aiptasia destroyers... do remember to "pass your
specimen(s) on" a few weeks after your Glass Anemones are apparently gone.
Otherwise the Berghia will perish from lack of food.
Hermit Crabs;
Perhaps the best (cheapest, most readily available, easiest to track and
remove...) Aiptasia nemesis are a few Hermit Crabs. In particular the more
common "Red Legged ("Hairy") Hermit Crab, Dardanus megistos (Image) is an
almost-all-the-time reef-safe animal that also eats pest algae. One or two to a
tank is all it takes.
Mark Elliott
April 5th 05, 10:10 PM
A double saddle backed butterfly worked fine for me and left most corals
alone. After two and a half years he took a dislike to anything blue and
soft (especially discosomas) and now lives in my sump, waiting to be part of
a part exchange deal.
Mark
"George" > wrote in message
news:Wkn4e.1143$g65.361@attbi_s52...
>
> "jim" > wrote in message
> ...
>> My tank is a 220 gal.
>> What is the easiest and best way to get rid of aiptisia.
>> I tried injecting boiling hot water it didn't work. I tried injecting
>> them with kalk. That seems to work but I have a lot of them. I can't try
>> butterfly fish because I have multiple corals. I was going to try
>> peppermint shrimp. But I have a hawkfish I heard they eat the shrimp. I
>> heard of joe's juice not sure of it. Vinegar ? All this requires
>> injection. There are too many. Any other suggestions?
>>
>> Jim
>
> http://www.wetwebmedia.com/marine/inverts/cnidaria/anthozoa/aiptasia/aiptasia.htm
> Nudibranchs,
>
> Most popular is the little, almost invisible Berghia verrucicornis, are
> great obligate (this is all they eat) Aiptasia destroyers... do remember
> to "pass your specimen(s) on" a few weeks after your Glass Anemones are
> apparently gone. Otherwise the Berghia will perish from lack of food.
>
> Hermit Crabs;
>
> Perhaps the best (cheapest, most readily available, easiest to track and
> remove...) Aiptasia nemesis are a few Hermit Crabs. In particular the more
> common "Red Legged ("Hairy") Hermit Crab, Dardanus megistos (Image) is an
> almost-all-the-time reef-safe animal that also eats pest algae. One or two
> to a tank is all it takes.
>
>
perkinskr
April 6th 05, 02:45 AM
Joe's juice works great no injection just squirt over mouth and feed it to
the aiptisia. They should die off quickly. It's reef safe but I wouldn't
squirt directly at any corals.
"Mark Elliott" > wrote in message
.. .
>A double saddle backed butterfly worked fine for me and left most corals
>alone. After two and a half years he took a dislike to anything blue and
>soft (especially discosomas) and now lives in my sump, waiting to be part
>of a part exchange deal.
>
> Mark
>
>
> "George" > wrote in message
> news:Wkn4e.1143$g65.361@attbi_s52...
>>
>> "jim" > wrote in message
>> ...
>>> My tank is a 220 gal.
>>> What is the easiest and best way to get rid of aiptisia.
>>> I tried injecting boiling hot water it didn't work. I tried injecting
>>> them with kalk. That seems to work but I have a lot of them. I can't try
>>> butterfly fish because I have multiple corals. I was going to try
>>> peppermint shrimp. But I have a hawkfish I heard they eat the shrimp. I
>>> heard of joe's juice not sure of it. Vinegar ? All this requires
>>> injection. There are too many. Any other suggestions?
>>>
>>> Jim
>>
>> http://www.wetwebmedia.com/marine/inverts/cnidaria/anthozoa/aiptasia/aiptasia.htm
>> Nudibranchs,
>>
>> Most popular is the little, almost invisible Berghia verrucicornis, are
>> great obligate (this is all they eat) Aiptasia destroyers... do remember
>> to "pass your specimen(s) on" a few weeks after your Glass Anemones are
>> apparently gone. Otherwise the Berghia will perish from lack of food.
>>
>> Hermit Crabs;
>>
>> Perhaps the best (cheapest, most readily available, easiest to track and
>> remove...) Aiptasia nemesis are a few Hermit Crabs. In particular the
>> more common "Red Legged ("Hairy") Hermit Crab, Dardanus megistos (Image)
>> is an almost-all-the-time reef-safe animal that also eats pest algae. One
>> or two to a tank is all it takes.
>>
>>
>
>
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