Honestly though, they aren't all that bad as people make them out to be.
You've obviously never seen a tank completely overrun with them. They are enemy #1 in all my years of reef keeping. No other pest has given me more headaches over the years than aiptasia. They are common, resilient, prolific, and have a nasty sting. Do not take them lightly, or you'll have an aiptasia tank. Treat even a single one seriously and aggressively.
Also, they easily survive rock cooking. I speak with experience on that one.
Not true, I've been overrun with them. Thousands. A few huge ones too. But they were easily treated... One filefish to rule them all.
I'm getting a resurgence in them since I got rid of the filefish. I'll be getting some peppermint shrimp. I don't know, I just don't think they're that bad, compared with other pests. Rather have aiptasia than red bugs, acro eating flatworms, or bryopsis any day.
Yes, exactly.I've heard that some peppermint shrimp are misidentified at the wholesale or LFS level for Rhynchocinetes durbanensis, which is not the correct shrimp.
:lmao:Personally I'm always confusing the two. I can't tell you how many other things, even simple household items I confuse with Rhynchocinetes durbanensis.
I have done this with great success on several different tank setups. Just be glad it is not mejano anemones. I have to battle that now with a new 1w laser!
LOL! I really wasn't kidding! I kept some rock going in a dark bucket for months waiting to use it on a new tank...the aiptasia were clear, but very much alive! I also had a couple mushrooms that survived as clear little blobs of jelly...nearly dead, but did recover with light...this had to be at least 4 month in dark with just a powerhead and infrequent fw topoffs. They are tough!
BTW, I've also been the peppermint shrimp and aiptasia-eating nudibrach route, too. They all work to some extent, but, always, a couple months after the last aipt dissappears, they come back! None of the natural methods will 100% eliminate them...can't...or the nudibrachs would become extinct. They always leave enough viable aiptasia material for the aipts to come back. So...my best advice is to learn to live with them, just controlling them as needed. :bigeyes:
I have an opportunity to take over a friend's tank. Actually, to take any and all of it's inhabitants.
The problem is, he has had Aiptasia for years. He's tried many ways to rid them from the tank without success. I would like to take on alot of the corals he has but would rather not start with a problem that so many people have.
What do you suggest? Take them or start from scratch?