apastasia good for something?

I use them in one chamber of my refugium (the first) as a filter. I don't know if they add value or not, but it does not seem to hurt.
 
I've heard this, too. I haven't seen anything to verify it, though; it's always just been anecdotal or hearsay.
 
if i remembe right there is an article about this on melev's reef. but if i am wrong pm me and i will find it for you.
 
They can make a good mechanical filters in that they capture everything that they can for food. But I do not suggest it, they can spread into the main tank.

Kim
 
i have one huge one in the sump and about 3 tiny ones in main display. i have never seen them hurt anything,,,,but i dont have any sps ,,,i have had the same # of them for about 3 years now. do they just kill sps corals? i have heard horror stories and have heard that one good thing about them ,,,just looking for the truth :)
 
They have a very strong sting. I have seem them damage LPS and soft corals as well. I have seen them in the middle of a zoanthid colony, and the zoas around the aiptasia are all closed down.

Kim
 
Anthony Calfo wrote in his Book of Coral Propogation, A Large population of intentionally cultured Aiptasia in a sump or leading to the sump, serve as effeicient, living mechanical filters with their stinging cells grabbing organic particles from the water.
 
theres prob somthing to the filter madness, but when they get out of my plumbing and into a tank they must die. Their kind of like insects and field mice, will survive un harmed as long they stay where they belong. Out side of my space!!
 
I was thinking if you put a UV sterilizer in the return it would kill the aptasia so there would be no risk for them colonizing your display tank.
 
But you will also be killing everything else that moves from the sump to the tank via the return, pods etc.

Kim
 
I believe Calfo also stated in Coral Prop. that aiptasia could be used as a natural filter for ich, as they would pull early life stages out of the water before they could settle on the fish.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14057744#post14057744 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Henryreef
I was thinking if you put a UV sterilizer in the return it would kill the aptasia so there would be no risk for them colonizing your display tank.
UV won't kill an Aiptasia passing by it
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14049860#post14049860 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by EnderG60
yup, but xenia or GSP can do almost as good a job and can be harvested and sold.
Xenia and GSP don't remove large particulates (Aiptasia does)
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14058256#post14058256 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by kgross
But you will also be killing everything else that moves from the sump to the tank via the return, pods etc.

Kim
not true
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14048750#post14048750 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Elan L.
Anthony Calfo wrote in his Book of Coral Propogation, A Large population of intentionally cultured Aiptasia in a sump or leading to the sump, serve as effeicient, living mechanical filters with their stinging cells grabbing organic particles from the water.
truth!

I just realized we're in the advanced forum. Holy smokes.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14068348#post14068348 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Gary Majchrzak
not true

I have to ask you what would survive. If you had a high enough zap dosage to kill a floating aiptasia, what other common critters would be able to make it through the UV unit?

Kim
 
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