View Full Version : Xenia elongata
exotec
November 27th 05, 03:46 AM
We have tons of the Pom-Pom Xenia, but any Xenia elongata we've tried
to keep has withered away. Some of it came from the same tank (even on
the same rock) as the Pom-Pom. It was suggested to me that our water
quality is "too good" for the elongata, that they like a murky
environment. I surely don't want a murky tank! but if there's
something in the murk that I could supplement without the cloudiness,
I sure would like to have some other Xenias in the tank. The Pom-Pom
is sort of taking over!
=^..^=
.... the problem with people these days is that
they've forgotten we're really just animals.
Ray Martini
November 27th 05, 03:39 PM
There's an interesting article in the Jan 06 issue of Tropical Fish Hobbyist
on Xenia. Definitely worth checking out. Your Xenia may just be going
through a natural seasonal "crash" and will regrow itself if left alone.
There's no 100% certain cause of these animals crashing but the drift of the
article indicates that they WILL regrow themselves over time.
Worth a looksee.
"exotec" > wrote in message
...
> We have tons of the Pom-Pom Xenia, but any Xenia elongata we've tried
> to keep has withered away. Some of it came from the same tank (even on
> the same rock) as the Pom-Pom. It was suggested to me that our water
> quality is "too good" for the elongata, that they like a murky
> environment. I surely don't want a murky tank! but if there's
> something in the murk that I could supplement without the cloudiness,
> I sure would like to have some other Xenias in the tank. The Pom-Pom
> is sort of taking over!
>
> =^..^=
> ... the problem with people these days is that
> they've forgotten we're really just animals.
Pszemol
November 27th 05, 07:21 PM
"exotec" > wrote in message ...
> We have tons of the Pom-Pom Xenia, but any Xenia elongata we've tried
> to keep has withered away. Some of it came from the same tank (even on
> the same rock) as the Pom-Pom. It was suggested to me that our water
> quality is "too good" for the elongata, that they like a murky
> environment. I surely don't want a murky tank! but if there's
> something in the murk that I could supplement without the cloudiness,
> I sure would like to have some other Xenias in the tank. The Pom-Pom
> is sort of taking over!
What are the nitrates and phosphates in your tank ?
Xenia feeds directly taking nutrients from water.
The same happened to me - elongata and pompom lived together
in one tank. As the water quality improved after adding lighted sump
with deep sand bed and macroalgae the elongata disappeared first.
Pompom Xenia seems to live cleaned water than Elongata and I still
have some pompoms left in the tank but they struggle hard and with
every water change there is less and less healthy look on the polyps.
Right now I have undetectable nitrates and I am fighting with high
phosphates - Xenia is disappearing and I do not have any healthy
xenia polyp left. Couple of months ago I was producing a lot of Xenia
and took many times to a local fish store for a credit. Now it is all gone.
Sadly, my bubble tip anemone is not looking too good either...
The price you pay for haveing too clean water ?
Try dosing nitrates to your tank if you do not mind some of the
unwanted algae growth.
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