Care Of Stichodactyla Gigantea

landy

New member
looking for info on caring for Stichodactyla Gigantea

I have been searching for a while and haven’t found anything great. can someone help me out, a few links maybe? Or experience?

that would be Great.

here is 2 pics.
from what i HAVE found this carpet is a Gigantea, if anyone disagrees PleasE let me know.



thank you in advance


129743DSC02291.jpg


129743DSC02290_1.jpg
 
This is a gigantea, I have the same one. I have had him for 3 weeks and the road is bumpy. Lots of light and random flow will help, good luck.
 
Gary,

I read this paper, and it was a great start. Do you know of anything else, specifically for Gigantea, maybe?

Thank you very much:D
 
Heavy intermittent water flow, intense lighting, regular feedings and stable water parameters seem to be common denominators amongst those successfully maintaining S gigantea
 
those are some good links, thank you!!

does anyone still agree that Gigantea like temp in the high 80's as the two link suggests?

when i get off work i will try to take a few picture of the mouth.

i am a little concerned, it seem that he shrinks badly during the night, looking BAD when the lights first turn on. Then by the time i get home from work looks good again. The mouth seems to gape a little, but then is closed tightly. I cannot get him to eat a small silverside chuck, but seem to eat a few shrimp when I feed the rest of the tank.


Any info is greatly appreciated

Thank you!!!

landy
 
Absolutely, the people who were successful in those threads i believe if not all most still have they're anemone's alive and they still recommend the 80's. In recent posts they have said that so i can be sure of it. good luck, I'll try to help with anything else i can when i see the pictures.
 
I have a gigantea that is doing very well in the high 70's low 80's. The biggest help that I have noticed is when I added an alternating large diffuse flow. Blasting a powerhead is not nearly as effective as trying to simulate a wave motion.
 
^^ what phender said.

I have two gigantea's, I keep them at 78-80. I'm nearing the 2.5 year mark with them (well one of them anyhow).

Simulated wave motion is an absolute must with this species IMO. I use powerheads on a wavemaker and play with their positions and settings until I have a wash of water over the anemone in one direction, followed by a wash of water in the other direction. You can't do this on a tank wide scale because what goes one way means something is going the other way at the same time, so you have to focus on a localized area where this effect happens, and try to get the lighting and substrate positioning right for the anemones in that focal spot. Hope this makes sense.

Good luck with that anemone... I'm sorry to say this, but I think you're going to need it, it looks very iffy in that first pic and the behaviour you're describing also makes me a bit nervous for you.

I think 98% of the formula for success in this species is lucking out with one that hasn't been compromised to the point of no return by the time you buy it. I don't know what goes on in the collection/distribution/retail chain of custody but these guys fare very badly in the first month or so, the statistics are grim. :(

Sorry to be a downer ... good luck though, if it lives it will become a fabulous specimen for you.
 
I really appreciate the information that all of you have shared.


Tony,

I agree with you, this anemone’s behavior is making me nervous as well. Is there ANYTHING I can do to help him with recovery? Should I be feeding his mouth directly? He has only been in my tank for 72 hours, does that make any difference.

Right now he is 30” below a 400w SE XM 10K MH that runs about 4.5 hours a day, with two 175W SE XM 20k MH bulbs on each side running about 11 hours as day.

The flow looks good as he sways back a forth, but is not blown around fierily.


Again thank you very much for all the info.

Landy
 
I would worry more about flow and good oxygen in the water than feeding for the first few days. I know it's hard to resist the urge to "see if it will take this piece of food", I can't really do it either. I just moved one of mine on the weekend from one tank to another, it was a bit hard on the anemone and I promised myself I would just "leave it alone for a day"... of course I was trying to feed it that night already. So I'm not very good at following my own advice.

If you can get your hands on some mysis I would try feeding him that instead of a silverside at this point. My main worry about feeding is that if fed a piece of food too large, it could introduce some risk in that the food may decompose faster than it can be digested. If it does eat some shrimp though that is a promising sign.

It's so touch and go for the first little bit. It's hard to know what to do. That first week is just so stressful. I know what you're going through and I wish I could offer something more tangible in terms of advice .. But I think the best you can do at this point is just do the best you can do, and hope for the best (sorry I know that sounds kinda corny).

If he is shrinking at night ... hmmm. This is just speculation now on my part, but I wonder if it could have something to do with oxygen in the water. Typically during "lights on" periods, because of photosynthesis, I would expect the O2 level to be much higher than during "lights out." Could there be something to that? I honestly don't know, but wonder if it would be worthwhile trying something like an air bubbler, or a powerhead with a venturi, to inject bubbles into the water (if not continuously then maybe on a timer to do it periodically, like for a minute once an hour or something) during the night period. If it were me, that's something I might try.

Some shrinkage is of course normal for night periods, though. Mine do "close up and pull in" during the night, and then expand out again during the day. Soo.. it could be just a normal thing, I'm not sure. That first week or so is really a tough slog, you won't really know if you'll make it until you actually get there.

Best of luck!
 
Here are the pictures as requested.

129743DSC02295_e.jpg


129743DSC02293_e.jpg



And here is no flash
129743DSC02297_e.jpg


this is about the best looking he/it gets. tommorow in the morning i will take a picture when he looks like complete poop.

keep the links and advice coming!

landy
 
Nice tightly closed mouth, that's good. It's actually not looking too bad in those 2 pics.

I'm a little puzzled as to why it's keeping half under an overhang, I would have thought it would try to reach around instead. However I guess anything goes during that acclimation process.

Seriously though, from these pics, it doesn't look too bad. I hope that means something ...
 
I agree. I think it looks very good in those pics. Hoping for the best for you and the nem. I'm very jealous though. I'm looking for a nice healthy blue gigantea myself but having no luck.
 
well i didnt need to wait till morning for some picture. i took these about two hours after the other ones....

129743DSC02302_e2.jpg


129743DSC02299_e1.jpg


Thank you all for the kind words.

do you think i have any hope?
 
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