One of our tanks has a mat of GSP that's about a foot wide and maybe 4-5" across living mostly down on the sand.
Yesterday, I noticed a small section right in the center was retracted, and when I looked closer, it appears a young aiptasia has set up shop with its base lodged down into a depression in the GSP's mat.
Normally, I'd kalk inject it, but I'm hesitant to do that when it's embedded in a coral. And now today, the GSP is retracted in a larger radius, with even the more remote areas not fully extended.
I can't stick peppermint shrimp or a nudibranch in to eat it due to a predatory yellow coris wrasse that lives in that tank, so does anyone have a suggestion for removing it safely from the GSP?
My husband was laughing at me this morning because I actually sat there for quite some time, surgical clamp in hand (I'm a PA), and tried to grab its stalk every time it extended.
Needless to say it was . . . Aiptasia 999: Me 0 for a final score. :debi:
Help!
Yesterday, I noticed a small section right in the center was retracted, and when I looked closer, it appears a young aiptasia has set up shop with its base lodged down into a depression in the GSP's mat.
Normally, I'd kalk inject it, but I'm hesitant to do that when it's embedded in a coral. And now today, the GSP is retracted in a larger radius, with even the more remote areas not fully extended.
I can't stick peppermint shrimp or a nudibranch in to eat it due to a predatory yellow coris wrasse that lives in that tank, so does anyone have a suggestion for removing it safely from the GSP?
My husband was laughing at me this morning because I actually sat there for quite some time, surgical clamp in hand (I'm a PA), and tried to grab its stalk every time it extended.
Needless to say it was . . . Aiptasia 999: Me 0 for a final score. :debi:
Help!