Buying a New Carpet?

bheron

Active member
Hi all, I've had alot of experience and success in my tank with GBTAs. My tanks is in much better shape now. Today I saw a "carpet anemone" at PECTO. While I try to never buy from there it looked healthy and was half off at $25. So I thought, why not? I guarantee if I dont get it out of there it will degrade as everything else does.

So, w/out know exactly what type it is, I was thinking I'd take a shot.

I have:
220g display tank, 30" high/deep
8x80w of T5 lights driven by 3 ice cap ballasts w/ good reflectors
Water qual in great condition
Tank is over 1 yr old (since crash last year where I lost all GBTAs)


Any thoughts? Guidance? PS - I know they like to "eat" things like inverts and I love my inverts :-)
 
Would need to know what type of "carpet" before going forward, since the two common ones (( Haddonis and Gigs )) have somewhat different care requirements.

Can you at least get a pic of it?
 
ok, will try to go and snap a pic. also, will look online for pics and see if I can tell.
 
PS - what's "GIG" stand for?

EDIT: ok, looks like Gigs have long tentacles? this one def did not have that. still searching....
EDIT: S. gigantea

Finally, from Wet Web Media:

Stichodactyla gigantea (Forsskal 1775), the Gigantic (Carpet) Anemone. Family Stichodactylidae. Has characteristic deeply folded bare-appearing oral disc, rest of disc with short, tapering, blunt, waving tentacles that are very sticky. Often found attached via a relatively narrow column to something solid while surrounded by sand in very shallow water. Come in browns, blue, green, pink, purple tentacle colors. A beautiful blue specimen in Fiji and a close-up in captivity. Distr.: Red Sea, Australia, S. Japan to Micronesia.

Stichodactyla haddoni (Saville-Kent 1893), Haddon's (Carpet) Sea Anemone. Family Stichodactylidae. Variably folded disc surface, open near surface. Has a tentacle-free central area (10-20 mm.). Very small tentacles with narrow stalks, globose ends; internal rings have smaller tentacles than external, often vary in color. Have larger columns... Lives in sand in which it can/does completely retract when disturbed. Close up and overall images of aquarium specimens. Distr.: Red Sea, east Africa to Madagascar, Australia, S. Japan to Noumea.

Stichodactyla mertensii Brandt 1835, Merten's (Carpet) Sea Anemone. Family Stichodactylidae. Oral disc flat. Folded disc exceeding a meter in diameter in some specimens. Lives on hard surfaces that it covers closely. Small pedal disc, striated by disc-spreading verrucae of orange or magenta color. Short, finger-like tentacles (1cm) of uniform color. Have narrow columns of grey to white color. Close up and further back on specimens in Pulau Redang, Malaysia. Detail of mouth in KBR, N. Sulawesi, Indonesia. Distr.: Eastern African coast (excluding the Red Sea), to Australia, S. Japan, Micro- and Melanesia.

http://www.wetwebmedia.com/carpetanemones.htm


Will take this to PETCO...
 
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And if it helps, here are some pictures of my S. Haddonis,

Red13-1.jpg


greenhaddonicrab.jpg


BWsaddleback2.jpg


And they will sometimes have a stripe pattern,

greenstripe.jpg
 
Ok, at the store now. Def a Haddi for sure. Ok color. Mouth is open tho, def gaping IMO. Maybe I'll try to offer them a deal and try to save it. Nothing makes it too long at my PETCO -- or any I've been to for that matte.
 
well i got it. (nope, no haggling. the people there are pretty much robots). Anyway, aside from the open mouth it really seemed to be responsive. And, its pretty huge. when opened it might be up to a foot, who knows. But for 1/2 price at $25 I figured we'd both take a chance with each other.

its downstairs now acclimating. Forgot to pick up the krill so will have to go back and get some.
 
Make sure to acclimate it to your lights --- sure it hasn't been under the best lights for a while. I would use 3 layers of window screening b/t the lights and the tank -- supported by egg crate. Then remove a layer every 5-7 days.

Tomorrow or Sunday I would do a water change, and then run some fresh carbon.
 
Keep us updated on how it does. I wish you the best. I would like to see a picture once it is settled in.
 
hi everyone thanks so much for your help and interest.

Ok, time for an update. Brought the new carpet home Friday night and acclimated it for a few hours. Here's some pics I took - this is a 15 gallon holding tank I use for acclimation. Its plumbed into my main system:

IMG00303-20100903-2355.jpg


You can see it had some trouble holding itself upright, which was worrisome. In the store it was seated pretty steady.

IMG00306-20100903-2359.jpg


Here's a shot of the gaping mouth, it actually worsened later

IMG00308-20100904-0005.jpg


And then it did this, like I had fed it something, but it didnt:

IMG00307-20100904-0000.jpg


I didnt try to feed it and eventually shut off the lights hoping it would get some rest. The water quality in my tank has to be leaps and bounds ahead of Pectos. So I figured some time to recover would help.

Then, the next day I turned the light back on (the light over my holding tank is only a 30W flourescent $10 fixture from HD).

Here's how it looked yesterday - some of these were after I fed it. You can also see I used a small rock to help keep it proped up.

DSC_3646.jpg


DSC_3645.jpg


DSC_3649.jpg


So I fed it some pieces of krill and raw, fresh shrimp from the grocery store. It seemed to eventually eat all of it - it did the fold up which Im not sure if thats normal behavior when eating and so far I've found no remnants of leftovers in the tank.

Here's a shot of how the mouth looked later last night, 24 hours after being home:

DSC_3650.jpg


DSC_3651.jpg


So, not sure if I leave it here where I can target feed and observe easily, but under weak light. Or should I move to the display which has better flow and much higher lighting? Of course I'd use the screen approach recommended by Toddrtrex. Any thoughts?
 
Tomorrow or Sunday I would do a water change, and then run some fresh carbon.

IMHO, that is a very important step. You don't want to skip that one.

You want to move an anemone as little as possible. If its foot is attached, I'd leave it where it is to recover. If its not attached, I'd move it to the display now. It NEEDS to hide its foot. I don't believe it can recover with its foot exposed. I would tuck it under a rock where it can dig down into the sand.

Those are low wattage lights, but its hard to say what the PAR level is on the anemone. Even low wattage lights can put out a great deal of PAR if the target is close enough. The lights seem to be very close, where it is now. It may actually have higher PAR now, than at the bottom of your display.
 
Ok. thanks. i remember toddrtrex saying something about a WC and carbon. Will do that today. Will check t osee if the base is settled. If not, I'll move it to the display with screening over the eggrcrate on my tank.

What about feeding? I figured the more I could feed it the better it would recover. But I guess you can overfeed.
 
What about feeding? I figured the more I could feed it the better it would recover. But I guess you can overfeed.

Feeding newly imported host anemones is a debated issue.

Personally, I've never seen or heard of any symptoms that can be positively linked to an anemone over eating. We know that newly imported anemones have gone for extended periods of time with no food and insufficient lighting. We also know that many of these anemones have shrunk and may be using their own tissues for nourishment. This indicates, at least to me, that food is critically important for these anemones. I have fed such anemones, small portions every single day with nothing but positive results. So, IMHO, yes. If they are healthy enough to feed, they should be fed.
 
I personally like to wait a couple of days, but that isn't super important. What is important is to make sure that you use small pieces of food -- too big of a piece may not get fully digested.
 
Update: Problems

Update: Problems

Ok, so this morning I check on the carpet around 9 and 10 am, all is fine. Looks just like the above picks. Well, about 4 hrs later I go back down and its completely degraded, shrunken down to almost nothing. The photo doesnt do it justice - it was really flattened to nothing for a bit.

This photo is actually shown when it puffed back up some, laying on its side:

DSC_3652.jpg


DSC_3653.jpg



So, I immediately made arrangements to move it to the display. When I removed it from the holding tank it was somewhat holding to a rock, but not much.

Had a tough going b/c it wouldnt stay upright or plant its foot. I threw 3 layers of screening on top. Also turned one of my powerheads back on. Am pretty much expecting to find it toppled over again when I go back kdown. This is what it looks like in the display (man those screens really work)

DSC_3655.jpg


DSC_3657.jpg


I removed the backing on my display and took this from the back

DSC_3659.jpg


In the end I wedged another rock to keep it in place:

DSC_3660.jpg


Anyway, I have a feeling Im going to lose this one. Maybe the lights and improved current will help?

:sad2::sad2::sad2:
 
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