Ok, I have tried a variety of solution for this pest:
+ Joe's Juice (ok but not permanent)
+ Concentrated Pickling lime (which is similar to above)
+ Copperbanded Butterfly fish (and Muellers); some eat them, some do not and some are reef safe, others are not
+I did not try peppermint shrimp because they eat other stuff
and now, finally, Berghia nudibranchs.
Berghia nudibranchs eat only one thing: the dreaded aiptasia anemone, AKA glass or rock anemone. That’s all Berghia eat, nothing else, not one other thing. And, they are completely reef safe.
Now, this was not a super quick solution (in my 240 gallon tank it took about 3 months) but those little buggers did their job. I rarely saw them but somehow they mated and disposed of my Aiptasia. However, they are not inexpensive.
The only problem that I encountered was putting them into the aquarium. They do not easily grab onto things and tend to blow around. I solved this by putting them into a test tube and placed the test tube somewhere protected and they then crawled out. Any similar strategy would likely work as well or better. In retrospect, I would have divided them into three test tubes so they disbursed better initially. They will eventually disburse any way so it is not a problem.
So, for those who have this issue, this may be of interest.
+ Joe's Juice (ok but not permanent)
+ Concentrated Pickling lime (which is similar to above)
+ Copperbanded Butterfly fish (and Muellers); some eat them, some do not and some are reef safe, others are not
+I did not try peppermint shrimp because they eat other stuff
and now, finally, Berghia nudibranchs.
Berghia nudibranchs eat only one thing: the dreaded aiptasia anemone, AKA glass or rock anemone. That’s all Berghia eat, nothing else, not one other thing. And, they are completely reef safe.
Now, this was not a super quick solution (in my 240 gallon tank it took about 3 months) but those little buggers did their job. I rarely saw them but somehow they mated and disposed of my Aiptasia. However, they are not inexpensive.
The only problem that I encountered was putting them into the aquarium. They do not easily grab onto things and tend to blow around. I solved this by putting them into a test tube and placed the test tube somewhere protected and they then crawled out. Any similar strategy would likely work as well or better. In retrospect, I would have divided them into three test tubes so they disbursed better initially. They will eventually disburse any way so it is not a problem.
So, for those who have this issue, this may be of interest.