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#1
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I remeber hearing about this before, and I thought I knew the answer to this
question. I thought a strainer on the inlet of the powerhead would stop an anemone from getting sucked in. Well, my powerhead PULLED my BTA through the veins of the strainer that were no more than 1/16th of an inch. Is there another solution besides using a foam pad over the inlet? TIA ~Mort |
#2
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No, the pad is your best defense. Just put the foam over it when the anemone is
near it, and once it is parked somewhere, you can safely remove the pad. Just rinse it out every week, or more often. Marc Mort wrote: I remeber hearing about this before, and I thought I knew the answer to this question. I thought a strainer on the inlet of the powerhead would stop an anemone from getting sucked in. Well, my powerhead PULLED my BTA through the veins of the strainer that were no more than 1/16th of an inch. Is there another solution besides using a foam pad over the inlet? TIA ~Mort -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com |
#3
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My problem is I have the P.Heads hidden behind LR so you cant see them.
Personally, I think they are an eye sore but if that is what I need to do for a happy reef then so be it =) ~Mort "Marc Levenson" wrote in message ... No, the pad is your best defense. Just put the foam over it when the anemone is near it, and once it is parked somewhere, you can safely remove the pad. Just rinse it out every week, or more often. Marc Mort wrote: I remeber hearing about this before, and I thought I knew the answer to this question. I thought a strainer on the inlet of the powerhead would stop an anemone from getting sucked in. Well, my powerhead PULLED my BTA through the veins of the strainer that were no more than 1/16th of an inch. Is there another solution besides using a foam pad over the inlet? TIA ~Mort -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com |
#4
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I always had my powerheads where I could reach them.
Here's an alternative for you Mort. Take a 12" long piece of PVC, and drill about 40 holes in it. Insert the intake basket of the pump in that PVC, and even if the anemone does get near, there are so many holes all over the pipe that it can crawl away. I made a pipe like that for my closed loop. Marc Mort wrote: My problem is I have the P.Heads hidden behind LR so you cant see them. Personally, I think they are an eye sore but if that is what I need to do for a happy reef then so be it =) ~Mort "Marc Levenson" wrote in message ... No, the pad is your best defense. Just put the foam over it when the anemone is near it, and once it is parked somewhere, you can safely remove the pad. Just rinse it out every week, or more often. Marc Mort wrote: I remeber hearing about this before, and I thought I knew the answer to this question. I thought a strainer on the inlet of the powerhead would stop an anemone from getting sucked in. Well, my powerhead PULLED my BTA through the veins of the strainer that were no more than 1/16th of an inch. Is there another solution besides using a foam pad over the inlet? TIA ~Mort -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com |
#5
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Great idea Marc. I'll have to see if I can incorporate that. Thanks!
~Mort "Marc Levenson" wrote in message ... I always had my powerheads where I could reach them. Here's an alternative for you Mort. Take a 12" long piece of PVC, and drill about 40 holes in it. Insert the intake basket of the pump in that PVC, and even if the anemone does get near, there are so many holes all over the pipe that it can crawl away. I made a pipe like that for my closed loop. Marc Mort wrote: My problem is I have the P.Heads hidden behind LR so you cant see them. Personally, I think they are an eye sore but if that is what I need to do for a happy reef then so be it =) ~Mort "Marc Levenson" wrote in message ... No, the pad is your best defense. Just put the foam over it when the anemone is near it, and once it is parked somewhere, you can safely remove the pad. Just rinse it out every week, or more often. Marc Mort wrote: I remeber hearing about this before, and I thought I knew the answer to this question. I thought a strainer on the inlet of the powerhead would stop an anemone from getting sucked in. Well, my powerhead PULLED my BTA through the veins of the strainer that were no more than 1/16th of an inch. Is there another solution besides using a foam pad over the inlet? TIA ~Mort -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com -- Personal Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com/oanda/index.html Business Page: http://www.sparklingfloorservice.com Marine Hobbyist: http://www.melevsreef.com |
#6
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"Mort" wrote in message m...
Well, my powerhead PULLED my BTA through the veins of the strainer that were no more than 1/16th of an inch. Little off-topic here, but what did you do with your anemone remains? Are they just shredded to small pieces or maybe you have one bigger one? If you have a bigger piece left I would recommend keeping it in some spot with slow water movement and maybe your animal will heal - you know how robust Aiptasia anemones are - even when you cut them to pieces they will recover from a bite-size piece - BTA anemone has the same body structure, so it should recover from it in my opinion. I have not made any experiments on my own, but in the event of such a mishap like yours I would give it a try. It makes sense it should recover like Aiptasia does... |
#7
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![]() "Pszemol" wrote in message ... "Mort" wrote in message m... Well, my powerhead PULLED my BTA through the veins of the strainer that were no more than 1/16th of an inch. Little off-topic here, but what did you do with your anemone remains? Are they just shredded to small pieces or maybe you have one bigger one? If you have a bigger piece left I would recommend keeping it in some spot with slow water movement and maybe your animal will heal - you know how robust Aiptasia anemones are - even when you cut them to pieces they will recover from a bite-size piece - BTA anemone has the same body structure, so it should recover from it in my opinion. I have not made any experiments on my own, but in the event of such a mishap like yours I would give it a try. It makes sense it should recover like Aiptasia does... Yes Pszemol, so far it is healing quite nicely. It found its own spot with a lot of flow and a little light and has been there for three days now. Today was the first day I can see some tentacles again. It's a little smaller but you can barely tell anything happened to it =) I'll keep you posted... ~Mort |
#8
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"Mort" wrote in message ...
Yes Pszemol, so far it is healing quite nicely. It found its own spot with a lot of flow and a little light and has been there for three days now. Today was the first day I can see some tentacles again. It's a little smaller but you can barely tell anything happened to it =) I'll keep you posted... Maybe it is a good method of multiplying them to keep powerheads unprotected? ;-) |
#9
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We had a green carpet anemone about 10 years ago and a stone crab poked a
hole in the base of the animal, it went from a foot in diameter to the size of a quarter, my wife found the hole, she would take a turkey baster filled with brine shrimp and stick that in its mouth with her finger stuck in the hole and feed it for over a month like this till the anemone healed, I was amazed, they say anemones do not have a life span, they can live indefinitly in the rite conditions. BR549 "Pszemol" wrote in message ... "Mort" wrote in message m... Well, my powerhead PULLED my BTA through the veins of the strainer that were no more than 1/16th of an inch. Little off-topic here, but what did you do with your anemone remains? Are they just shredded to small pieces or maybe you have one bigger one? If you have a bigger piece left I would recommend keeping it in some spot with slow water movement and maybe your animal will heal - you know how robust Aiptasia anemones are - even when you cut them to pieces they will recover from a bite-size piece - BTA anemone has the same body structure, so it should recover from it in my opinion. I have not made any experiments on my own, but in the event of such a mishap like yours I would give it a try. It makes sense it should recover like Aiptasia does... |
#10
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IMHO, your BTA was looking for water flow, the intake of the pump is high
flow, you stated about power heads: "I think they are an eye sore but if that is what I need to do for a happy reef then so be it". get the pump out of hiding and point the power head so current is making the BTA sway, power heads are a necessary to alter the current in specific places. My wife, is responsible for the inside of the tank, (I am responsible for the outside hardware) she will move power heads or the animals 'till they look the best, we have a brown Caribbean carpet anemone it has moved twice (an inch or two) in the last year and when it moves she FREAKS and adjusts the power heads accordingly, that either stops the movement or causes the anemone to move back, by observing the way she directs the power heads, I believe your BTA is in search of water flow. The Reef that you created is not your home, it belongs to the inhabitants of the tank and you have to set it up for, an eyesore here or there will be setoff by the beauty of the animal if you set it up for them not you. IMHO. BR549 "Mort" wrote in message m... I remeber hearing about this before, and I thought I knew the answer to this question. I thought a strainer on the inlet of the powerhead would stop an anemone from getting sucked in. Well, my powerhead PULLED my BTA through the veins of the strainer that were no more than 1/16th of an inch. Is there another solution besides using a foam pad over the inlet? TIA ~Mort |
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