Bristle worm help

If you hate it because it's ugly. Fair enough. Best of luck removing it. lol my tank has thousands. They're harmless


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
 
While I mostly agree bristles are fine and part of your CUC, they can become an issue when they get real big, and they can get real big.

I had a sand dwelling anemone start to shift and looked bothered, and one night saw very big bristles under it.

I got a trap from marine depot for about $8 and I caught 4 of these guys, all of them 2 feet long.

Anemone was fine after I pulled them.

For me little ones can stay, but I too don't like big ugly ones in my tank.

These blinds are 2" wide, and bristle is not fully relaxed, but to give size reference...

 
Now i know ima dip all my coral in coral rx, do u guys have a link to a goof container i can buy that will be good for coral dipping?



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
LOL, I don't know if those dips will rid bristles, and I still do agree small bristles are good.

Also keep in mind there are a lot of worms very similar, fireworms being one, and those can be problematic, and they look almost identical
 
LOL, I don't know if those dips will rid bristles, and I still do agree small bristles are good.

Also keep in mind there are a lot of worms very similar, fireworms being one, and those can be problematic, and they look almost identical



The one in my tank is like half blackish brown and half orange, is it a bristleworm?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
If you have 1, you'll have more. They're harmless and beneficial - as others have said - they don't kill anything, just clean up dead or decaying stuff. I'd like to see, in a couple of years, if you can keep up with removing them so you have none. I doubt you can. :D
 
I don't think it's been mentioned, a wrasse will eat bristleworms. I have a wrasse in qt right now. I know it doesn't help you... Lol but yeah.
 
when I first got my reef tank I was totally grossed out by BW also. However you get over it. And I never saw one that large like that one in front of those wooden blinds and hope I never do. You probably have more than that one in your tank. And that BW looks like its in that snail shell in that pic so I'm guessing that snail is likely dead already. Also, dont eat em. Dont touch them - they sting like a bee and cause blisters etc
 
177b9fe0bc1887449698bb24a448c31b.jpg


Prepare to meet your maker



Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
A million LOL's upon you when you find another 3 in a week. :D :D

They are like earthworms for soil man. Helpful. You are just making your reef worse off by removing it.
 
A million LOL's upon you when you find another 3 in a week. :D :D

They are like earthworms for soil man. Helpful. You are just making your reef worse off by removing it.

If the removal of one large bristleworm makes your tank worse you've got problems!

There are so many animals that make a decent CUC, if op wants to pull the one they find is ugly and does not like it, big deal, it's not the end of their tank...:deadhorse:
 
3-4 feet extended. I had two of these guys when I moved from and old tank to another about 10-15 years ago. They do get big and they are smart. There were unbelievable trails and burrows in the sand that they used to hide and navigate. If the trap doesn't work you probably won't get him out without tearing everything down and removing rocks. But like most said they are very beneficial when smaller...


<a data-flickr-embed="true" href="https://www.flickr.com/photos/121530657@N06/16032693996/in/dateposted-public/" title="DSCN0749"><img src="https://farm8.staticflickr.com/7484/16032693996_7af0d2c33c_b.jpg" width="1024" height="768" alt="DSCN0749"></a
 
If you got one you probably have a dozen. Quite likely it (and others) came in your live sand.

Like others have said, just don't pet it. They aren't like cats.
 
Back
Top