feather duster lost her head

They can replace the head several times, but there may be some need we can't supply in the aquarium. If the head gets smaller each time, eventually it will die. Feeding them zooplankton and phytoplankton may keep them around longer since it does seem they starve either from not enough or the wrong kind of food.

There are miniature calcarious-tubed feather dusters that grow and reproduce in the aquarium. Usually they prefer to grow on the underside of rocks and in unlit parts of the sump and inside reverse sand bed filters. In some systems they will take off, but they seem hard to get started. You are more likely to succeed with them if your live rock is the Florida cultured type. They are probably Carribean. They are quite different from the sessile snails although the tubes and shells bear a passing resemblance.
 
I had mine drop its head about 2 months ago and thought it was a goner but left it alone. It seems to have grown back a larger one. I didn't think they needed to "shed or molt" to grow but maybe if there is a problem they can drop their head and it might be a survival type of thing.

I'm no expert but if I were you I would just keep an eye on it for signs of life.
 
I was under the understanding that the head itself was the worm, and it was leaving the protection of the tube due to needing to find a way to survive.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14944170#post14944170 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Kreeger1
I was under the understanding that the head itself was the worm, and it was leaving the protection of the tube due to needing to find a way to survive.
The worm itself reminds me of a polychaete worm to which they are somehow related. If they leave the tube, they do have to loose the feather headdress so they can travel and pick a new location. I don't think they regularly molt the head, it is more stress or inadequate diet. This is an animal that we don't have a handle on yet. I believe the consensus is that it lives for many years in nature, but it is hard for us to keep them alive for more than two or three years. It is at a point like corals were decades ago when we knew little and what we knew was often wrong.

If you have been in this hobby long enough, you will remember when some biologists accused aquarists of a hoax and flatly declared corals could never live for long in an aquarium. When photos documented the growth of coral frags, the scientists were sure the dating had been reversed and the corals were shrinking. We need to learn more about these worms and in some ways the reef keeper has an advantage over researchers on this kind of problem. There are small ones that propagate in the aquarium. Maybe that is a start to understanding them.
 
As long as the tube doesn't start to fall apart, the worm is still in there and alive. Mine didn't open for over 2 months but I had left it in there to see. The tube always looked to be in good shape and lo and behold it came back and is now HUGE. I would wait it out.
 
so let me get this right ... a feather ducter is liek a scallop in that it slowly starves in the tank because of a lack of something... good to know
 
not totally true I have kept a scallop for over two years now still alive and growing ... guess it depends on yout tank ?mey its the 30 some odd fish i have in my tank ??
 
i have a coco worm. is it similar? had for over a year and my yellow watchman/pistol shrimp buried it. siphoned the sand from the tube and moved it now it comes out but with only a tiny head, hoping it will grow.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14948010#post14948010 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by DiscoReefRover
not totally true I have kept a scallop for over two years now still alive and growing ... guess it depends on yout tank ?mey its the 30 some odd fish i have in my tank ??

Yeah, but for the most part, 99% they die a slow death. I 've had one for almost 2 years now but I feed shelf fish diet to keep it alive. Most don't feed enough to have a clean tank and one with enough food for it to live.
 
Not so fast. It probably is dead, but there is a chance, a really good one, that you'll have 10,000 new babies all over the place very soon......that is what happened to one of mine about 12 years ago. Circle of Life....LOL
 
Back
Top