ThRoewer
New member
I just found some tiny bugs on one of my new acroporas. They are definitely not red bugs.
Their body shape is flattened like an isopod and their color I would describe as tan - pretty much the color of the coral I found them on. They stay on the coral when it is taken out of the water and seem to be unaffected by 10 minute Coral Rx dip.
The coral showed something that could be bite marks.
To rid the coral of these I picked them off one by one with a fine tipped tweezers under my microscope.
Another thing I found on the plug, at the edge of the coral base were 3 clutches of green eggs. I don't know if these are related to the bugs - they seemed to big to be from them (unless these bugs were freshly hatched).
I removed all of those manually.
I also found a tiny critter that looked like a black bodied mite with clear to tan legs. I had seen these before on the rock of a decaying Parazoanthus colony.
Inside the dip I found a large, about 6 mm long flatworm that had a color pattern like the coral. I think it is safe to assume it feeds of the coral. It may also have been the source of the eggs.
I didn't notice that guy under the microscope because I was looking for tiny things and it was huge.
Has anybody encountered these before.
Would Bayer Advanced be more effective against bugs than Coral Rx?
Unfortunately I wasn't able to install my microscope so I couldn't take any pictures of them.
Their body shape is flattened like an isopod and their color I would describe as tan - pretty much the color of the coral I found them on. They stay on the coral when it is taken out of the water and seem to be unaffected by 10 minute Coral Rx dip.
The coral showed something that could be bite marks.
To rid the coral of these I picked them off one by one with a fine tipped tweezers under my microscope.
Another thing I found on the plug, at the edge of the coral base were 3 clutches of green eggs. I don't know if these are related to the bugs - they seemed to big to be from them (unless these bugs were freshly hatched).
I removed all of those manually.
I also found a tiny critter that looked like a black bodied mite with clear to tan legs. I had seen these before on the rock of a decaying Parazoanthus colony.
Inside the dip I found a large, about 6 mm long flatworm that had a color pattern like the coral. I think it is safe to assume it feeds of the coral. It may also have been the source of the eggs.
I didn't notice that guy under the microscope because I was looking for tiny things and it was huge.
Has anybody encountered these before.
Would Bayer Advanced be more effective against bugs than Coral Rx?
Unfortunately I wasn't able to install my microscope so I couldn't take any pictures of them.