![]() |
|
Bristle worm
Hey,
I have been trying to catch a destructive bristle worm in my tank for quite a while now, and I just caught a half of him! (he is AFAIK about 12 inches...all I have seen of him). My question is: With only catching a half of it, will it regenerate as a shorter worm, or will the rest of it decay inside the rock? Should I be expecting jumps in levels? Any help appreciated! S. -- -- GNU/Linux is user friendly... it's just picky about its friends. |
get a arrow crab I have one and now I have no Bristle worms at all!
-- www.reeftanksonline.com www.nydiver.com ONLINE meeting rooms "Steve" wrote in message ... Hey, I have been trying to catch a destructive bristle worm in my tank for quite a while now, and I just caught a half of him! (he is AFAIK about 12 inches...all I have seen of him). My question is: With only catching a half of it, will it regenerate as a shorter worm, or will the rest of it decay inside the rock? Should I be expecting jumps in levels? Any help appreciated! S. -- -- GNU/Linux is user friendly... it's just picky about its friends. |
My question to you is what is the worm doing that is so destructive?
Most bristle worms are scavengers and do a great job of keeping your tank clean. I have found some over 2 feet long in my reefs and I leave them in. Kim Steve wrote: Hey, I have been trying to catch a destructive bristle worm in my tank for quite a while now, and I just caught a half of him! (he is AFAIK about 12 inches...all I have seen of him). My question is: With only catching a half of it, will it regenerate as a shorter worm, or will the rest of it decay inside the rock? Should I be expecting jumps in levels? Any help appreciated! S. |
"kim gross" wrote in message ... | My question to you is what is the worm doing that is so destructive? | Most bristle worms are scavengers and do a great job of keeping your | tank clean. I have found some over 2 feet long in my reefs and I leave | them in. Bristle worms that large *do* tend to get destructive, though not all the time. Once reaching these sizes, they can start munching on corals. |
kim gross wrote:
My question to you is what is the worm doing that is so destructive? Most bristle worms are scavengers and do a great job of keeping your tank clean. I have found some over 2 feet long in my reefs and I leave them in. Kim snip Hey, I have caught him on a number of occasions pulling (or rather, trying) tenticles of my Hammer Coral into his lair, and he really freaks out my brain coral on an almost hourly basis. He has picked at various polyps on occasion as well, which may explain the bottom part of my rock being cleared out. On that one, it is either the bristle worm, or a predatory crab that I am trying to catch (snail eater this one...). I do have other bristle worms in there that are smaller, and I don't want to touch those as they are really good cleaners. This guy was/is to, until he got caught! S. -- -- GNU/Linux is user friendly... it's just picky about its friends. |
same here they eat my hammers and tend to clip the tank of what they want!
-- www.reeftanksonline.com www.nydiver.com ONLINE meeting rooms "Steve" wrote in message ... kim gross wrote: My question to you is what is the worm doing that is so destructive? Most bristle worms are scavengers and do a great job of keeping your tank clean. I have found some over 2 feet long in my reefs and I leave them in. Kim snip Hey, I have caught him on a number of occasions pulling (or rather, trying) tenticles of my Hammer Coral into his lair, and he really freaks out my brain coral on an almost hourly basis. He has picked at various polyps on occasion as well, which may explain the bottom part of my rock being cleared out. On that one, it is either the bristle worm, or a predatory crab that I am trying to catch (snail eater this one...). I do have other bristle worms in there that are smaller, and I don't want to touch those as they are really good cleaners. This guy was/is to, until he got caught! S. -- -- GNU/Linux is user friendly... it's just picky about its friends. |
Rich R wrote:
same here they eat my hammers and tend to clip the tank of what they want! Yep, I hear you! There are lot's of good ideas here for getting rid of a predatory Bristle worm, but my original question has not been answered! I managed to 'clip' half of the Bristleworm, will he regenerate and come back, or will the rest of him die in the rock? S. -- -- GNU/Linux is user friendly... it's just picky about its friends. |
Fortunately, or unfortunately depending on how you look at it, it will most
likely regenerate. "Steve" wrote in message ... Rich R wrote: same here they eat my hammers and tend to clip the tank of what they want! Yep, I hear you! There are lot's of good ideas here for getting rid of a predatory Bristle worm, but my original question has not been answered! I managed to 'clip' half of the Bristleworm, will he regenerate and come back, or will the rest of him die in the rock? S. -- -- GNU/Linux is user friendly... it's just picky about its friends. |
Ah, say it isn't so! Took me long enough to get even half of him!
Well, maybe he will be a little more selective on what he munches on now... :) Thanks very much for answering that. S. Philip wrote: Fortunately, or unfortunately depending on how you look at it, it will most likely regenerate. "Steve" wrote in message ... Rich R wrote: same here they eat my hammers and tend to clip the tank of what they want! Yep, I hear you! There are lot's of good ideas here for getting rid of a predatory Bristle worm, but my original question has not been answered! I managed to 'clip' half of the Bristleworm, will he regenerate and come back, or will the rest of him die in the rock? S. -- -- GNU/Linux is user friendly... it's just picky about its friends. -- -- GNU/Linux is user friendly... it's just picky about its friends. |
go get him!!!! lol it worked for bobit
-- www.reeftanksonline.com www.nydiver.com ONLINE meeting rooms "Steve" wrote in message ... Ah, say it isn't so! Took me long enough to get even half of him! Well, maybe he will be a little more selective on what he munches on now... :) Thanks very much for answering that. S. Philip wrote: Fortunately, or unfortunately depending on how you look at it, it will most likely regenerate. "Steve" wrote in message ... Rich R wrote: same here they eat my hammers and tend to clip the tank of what they want! Yep, I hear you! There are lot's of good ideas here for getting rid of a predatory Bristle worm, but my original question has not been answered! I managed to 'clip' half of the Bristleworm, will he regenerate and come back, or will the rest of him die in the rock? S. -- -- GNU/Linux is user friendly... it's just picky about its friends. -- -- GNU/Linux is user friendly... it's just picky about its friends. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 11:59 AM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FishKeepingBanter.com