Anemone Stuck in the Powerhead AGAIN

MsRoeseSciClass

New member
We have a suicidal Anemone in our 7th and 8th grade Science classroom tank.

:worried:

We call him Snot Ball (Snotty--for short) and it keeps "wandering" to the filters and power heads and gets caught. We have already lost one to this and we are wondering, (1) if there is something wrong with our system that makes it want to end its own life and/or (2) if there is something we can do to our system that will prevent this.

20" Long-T5 HO Lighting-Only other occupant is a clarki clown that wants NOTHING to do with it-All water quality parameters are optimal-mechanical filtration-one power head-2.5"argonite substrate with 30lb Live Rock

Thanks for your help!

Ms. Roese 7th and 8th grade Science Classes
 
foam covers over your powerheads and filters will fix it from getting chopped up. But there is still the problem with it wandering. What are you water parameters?
 
What kind of anemone is it? A photo will help as well. This way we can determine the species and can provide advice on best habitat (rock-dwelling versus substrate, high light versus decent light, etc.). My guess is that it's wandering because it needs more light.
 
I wrote this up awhile ago, and have copy-pasted it a few times. Hopefully some of this will help:


Wandering BTA's has been talked about quite a bit. I covered it a bit in depth before, here's a cut and paste:

Here's my thoughts on the matter of wandering BTA's:

On the topic of a BTA moving "all the time" as some say...I would argue strongly against this statement. In my experience, from reading, and discussions with other people with far more expertise than me, a BTA will remain in its spot if all of its living conditions are being met satisfactorily. There is no benefit to the anemone (risk of being stung/sliced by corals, risk of not finding another rock in the ocean, predatory animals, etc) to "just move around" IF all conditions are appropriate.

Water quality, light, food, Flow, and foot - the five conditions that must be satisfactorily met for all anemones.

Water quality: In the ocean, if local currents drastically change after storms, rivers dump crap into the ocean etc, the nem may want to move to conditions which better suit its liking. In our tanks, however, there are no other areas which have better water - but the anemone doesn't know that. This is my #1 pick for why anemones move without apparent reason. It may even be something in your water which you do not test for - or it may be BECAUSE you just did a water change and didn't match tank water close enough. The anemone is searching for something it just can not find inside a glass box, hence the so called "anemone's just sometimes walk around for no reason". We can't see the reason - so we assume there isn't one.

Light: Lighting in the ocean is quite strong. Far more than our little electrical lights we use. Even on a cloudy day the par is very high - ever had a sunburn on a cloudy day? When you introduce a BTA, you may have a spot picked out that you really want it to go, but it may decide it is too bright or too dim and promptly move. As it gets light-acclimated to your tank, it may move to a spot that is "just right" for its health in the long term. This acclimating and moving to a new home may also cause confusion to BTA's "moving a lot".

Food: Yikes! There is a lot of misconceptions about the "proper" diet for anemones. I did a write-up on RC a while back about the topic: http://www.reefcentral.com/forums/sh....php?t=1835320 A basic summary of that thread is.....assuming a healthy nem, food is likely unnecessary. If you would like to feed, feed small (pencil eraser max) meaty, raw, SW-found foods. Unhealthy nems need more food to gain energy and should be fed more. Feeding leads to faster growth. Feeding can also in some cases overcome less-than-ideal lighting because the food is supplementing the light source. More in-depth information can be found at that link.

Flow: You need to determine the flow requirements of the species of nem you want, and make it match in order to decrease the likelihood of movement. BTA's will like moderate flow, but not too high or too low. Either of those may cause it to move around. Some can be very picky. I know someone who's Haddoni moved across the sandbed after her cleaned a powerhead and replaced it (he thought) in the exact same spot. Apparently it wasn't quite exact. Haddoni's like low flow - if their oral disk is being moved by the current, it's too much and will cause it to move.

Foot: This is my #2 reason why BTA's apparently move without known cause. The foot of most anemones also requires special concern. Some anemones like to bury in the sand, some at the sand/rock interface, and some directly onto rocks. BTA's like to have their foot in a deep crevice, hole, or cave. Basically, it's a safe zone for them to hide in if they need to retract. It's also a way for them to regulate the amount of sun it gets. These deep holes are key to keeping a BTA happy with it's current spot. They like their foot shaded, and head out in the sun.

Hope that's a good summary of what I think about BTA's.


Also, you didn't mention what size tank you have.
Please post your parameters with numbers (optimal) is different for different people.
How many bulbs? What color? individual reflectors?
As already requested, a picture will help tremendously.

Any tank with anemones should have covers on all powerheads just in case it moves.
 
If it looks like a snot ball, wanders continuously, and even a clarkii doesn't want anything to do with it, I'm thinking condylactis. :lol: If you don't know the species a picture would be great, and the questions that Bues included at the end of his post will be very helpful in determining why it won't stay put.
 
If it looks like a snot ball, wanders continuously, and even a clarkii doesn't want anything to do with it, I'm thinking condylactis. :lol: If you don't know the species a picture would be great, and the questions that Bues included at the end of his post will be very helpful in determining why it won't stay put.

Not ALL condys look like snot, I've had good looking ones.
 
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