<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9826554#post9826554 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by MUCHO REEF
I'm not arguing with you at all here
No worries

. I'm not very argumentative unless someone really pushes my buttons, which is rare (though it has happened a few times in some forums over the years

).
I certainly see your point. It's just that such a big deal is made over palytoxin and how deadly it is, but no one has every died, so... It just seems somewhat alarmist to me. The article by Knop in Coral magazine really set me out on the defensive on palytoxin (I've got issues with Knop, not because he is so full of himself, but because he makes wide generalizations that he passses off as fact-he has a lot of knowledge, don't get me wrong, but I think he uses 'poetic license' too often). He proudly took (takes) credit for ridding Europe of zoas because they are such nasty creatures and sooo deadly (he used a wire brush to kill them off in a tank and it in turn killed a lot of SPS in the tank, so of course the palytoxin was to blame-sorry, but that was more likely the scrubbing out of a large mass of living creature into the water column than the toxicity of the Palythoa sp. he was trying to eradicate-even people with some intelligence do wildy stupid things sometimes, I guess).
Caution is definitely a good thing, though. You've got to take care of yourself. I can't say that palytoxin wasn't responsible for the dizziness and numbeness (I actually attribute that episode to palytoxin, but with there being so many other factors, how could I say it was that... maybe my arm was numb from the position and I was dizzy because I'd been staring at zoas and making frags for hours

). It's like when the cat knocks the turkey off the counter and the dog gets blamed

.
To go 180 out from your point on the regal tangs (I like banter

), I had asked around about Scribbled Rabbitfish to take care of my razor caulerpa problem and every person I talked to (two in person and about five others, if I remember correctly, in threads) talked about how theirs had never hurt anything and would be recommended to anyone. I got one. He took care of my razor caulerpa in about a week. Then he moved on to zoa colonies and got four or five in a day before I realized what was happening. I got the zoas out of the tank, then he went after my acans (the more expensive ones must taste better

). I pulled all of them and he seemed to be looking for something else to munch on. I have since heard of people having similar issues on zoas with Scribbled Rabbitfish, but none with problems on LPS (and I suspect him of eating my neon green Pocillopora, as he was pulling tissue off-just can't be positive that something else didn't cause it to start losing tissue, though only the spots the fish was hitting were damaged). I guess the moral is anything can happen...