monicaswizzle
Premium Member
Hi all--
I regret to report that I have recently killed two BTA in my tank. Both of them developed a "soft spot" (white tissue that began to sluff off) where the foot and oral disc connect. Eventually this spread until the entire anemone died.
The first anemone had been in my tank for about a week when it wandered up to my SEIO powerhead. When I found it the foot had been sucked part way into the powerhead. I turned the powerhead off and allowed the anemone to withdraw its foot on its own. There was no broken tissue or other apparent damage and I returned the anemone to the LR and put screen around the intakes on the powerheads to make sure it didn't happen again. About a week later the anemone developed the "soft spot" and died about a week after that (it was a 6" BTA, so it took a while).
I assumed the damage was caused by the powerhead incident, and since I had screened things off purchased another BTA. The second one appeared healthy and happy for about three weeks and then suddenly had a similar soft spot with no cause that I could determine. The anemone had moved around some on the rocks, but hadn't been anywhere near powerheads or overflow and had seemed healthy, happy and starting to settle in. The undamaged part continued to respond well to light (nicely inflated, etc) and even fed on some silversides, but again the "rot" spread and the anemone died about a week later.
My tomato clowns loved hosting in both BTA (especially the male which spent 90% of its time burried in the BTA), so I would love to get another, but don't want to do so unless I have corrected whatever the problem is.
My tank parameters are all good--no nitrates, nitrites or amonia register on the tests, SG 1.024, ph 8.3. Other than the clowns, a DSB, LR, macroalgae and a few mushrooms that came with the LR, there are no inhabitants in the tank (other than DSB microfauna). 45 gallon tank with a 30 gallon sump.
Any ideas what might be causing the damage to the BTA? The clowns host, but don't appear to bite or "attack" the BTA. I am puzzled.
One last item. The tank is in a basement and with recent hot and humid weather the copper water pipes above the tank have been sweating and dropping water into the tank. I don't know if that would be enough copper to cause a problem, but I did add pipe insulation to stop the problem when I noticed it. Even if it did add enough copper to be toxic, I wouldn't expect the reaction of the BTA to be tissue rot, but I am not exactly sure how copper toxicity would manifest.
Thanks for any suggestions/help.
I regret to report that I have recently killed two BTA in my tank. Both of them developed a "soft spot" (white tissue that began to sluff off) where the foot and oral disc connect. Eventually this spread until the entire anemone died.
The first anemone had been in my tank for about a week when it wandered up to my SEIO powerhead. When I found it the foot had been sucked part way into the powerhead. I turned the powerhead off and allowed the anemone to withdraw its foot on its own. There was no broken tissue or other apparent damage and I returned the anemone to the LR and put screen around the intakes on the powerheads to make sure it didn't happen again. About a week later the anemone developed the "soft spot" and died about a week after that (it was a 6" BTA, so it took a while).
I assumed the damage was caused by the powerhead incident, and since I had screened things off purchased another BTA. The second one appeared healthy and happy for about three weeks and then suddenly had a similar soft spot with no cause that I could determine. The anemone had moved around some on the rocks, but hadn't been anywhere near powerheads or overflow and had seemed healthy, happy and starting to settle in. The undamaged part continued to respond well to light (nicely inflated, etc) and even fed on some silversides, but again the "rot" spread and the anemone died about a week later.
My tomato clowns loved hosting in both BTA (especially the male which spent 90% of its time burried in the BTA), so I would love to get another, but don't want to do so unless I have corrected whatever the problem is.
My tank parameters are all good--no nitrates, nitrites or amonia register on the tests, SG 1.024, ph 8.3. Other than the clowns, a DSB, LR, macroalgae and a few mushrooms that came with the LR, there are no inhabitants in the tank (other than DSB microfauna). 45 gallon tank with a 30 gallon sump.
Any ideas what might be causing the damage to the BTA? The clowns host, but don't appear to bite or "attack" the BTA. I am puzzled.
One last item. The tank is in a basement and with recent hot and humid weather the copper water pipes above the tank have been sweating and dropping water into the tank. I don't know if that would be enough copper to cause a problem, but I did add pipe insulation to stop the problem when I noticed it. Even if it did add enough copper to be toxic, I wouldn't expect the reaction of the BTA to be tissue rot, but I am not exactly sure how copper toxicity would manifest.
Thanks for any suggestions/help.