Got AEFW, help please

heller792

New member
Hi all, ive got aefw!!!! Ive set a qt tank and ordered a couple of bottles of rx but how long will it take to get rid of? I will remove all acros and milli's, should this be enough and does it also effect stags too? Only other corals i have are montipora, stylaphora and hystrix.

Thanks, Dave
 
Yes, AEFW will munch on stags. Remove all AEFW food (coral) from your display tank and place in QT. Dip your qt corals every 2 weeks for 6 weeks atleast. I would not put any acros back in your display tank for atleast 6 weeks. Give some time for any stray AEFW and AEFW eggs to hatch and die. AEFW can be very tricky to get rid of. The eggs are not affected by dips and some AEFW are very resilliant. You might not get all of them with one dip. Keep dipping your QT corals until all the eggs are hatched and the cycle is broken. good luck .
 
after discovering them i did a quick ro dip and these are whet fell off, they were invisible to the eye when they were on the coral

IMG_5568.jpg


Dave
 
Yup, thats them. Man what a nightmare. I really feel your pain. I lost a whole tank of Acropora from AEFW when I first started with SPS corals. Not sure where your AEFW came from but every mara cultured coral I have ever seen has them. I try to stay away from mara cultured coral much as possible. About 3 weeks ago I went to a not so local fish store for me and bought two mara cultured pieces. This store is a reef central sponsor so you probably know them. I found two killer maricultured acros. I explained to the store owner about my AEFW experience. He flat out old me dont worry.. we dip all are corals multiple times. We have a reputation to worry about. He made me feel a little comfy as they are a pretty reputable fish store. Also, the acros I wanted were in their main frag display so I decided to take a chance. I ended up purchasing two corals. Brought them home and followed my set protocall of dips. I had to call him back the next day and give him the bad news. AEFW!! Man I was so upset. I am now out $120. I had to take the corals to a freinds house for a few months of QT. Just dipped them again yesterday and found 5 worms. This is crazy!! There were no visible bite marks on coral, no egg sacks. I have no doubt the coral was dipped at the fish store a few times. Ive dipped them a few times... And still AEFW is present!!! I am leaving them in QT for atleast another month and a half and will dip every two weeks until then. I am not sharing this story to scare the hope out of you. You can beat AEFW, it just takes time and careful observation.
 
i think they came in on a mail ordfer coral but hey big lesson lernt here too. I think im gonna start by treating the effected corals as ive just read this on melves reef

Acropora sp. can be plagued with red bugs, acropora-eating flatworms, and evil crabs. The worst of the three are the AEFW because they are virtually invisible. The dip in ReVive (or Fluke tabs, or TMPCC) are what we use to determine if they are even present. The flatworms bite into the coral tissue and leave bite marks that are visible, once you know what to look for. Many reef keepers have lost many corals to this one particular plague, and I'd have to say that those losses could have been prevented had they not been quite so zealous in their efforts. Once they find their tank is stricken with AEFW, the hobbyist immediately goes into panic mode, then into surgeon-mode. They remove each and every acropora, dip them and move them out of the main tank into a secondary set up that will house the corals for several weeks. The idea is to starve out any stragglers still in the display tank, but with that many stressors (handling, dip, new / different water, different flow, different lighting, different coral neighbors, different temperature swings, different water parameters...) corals go up in smoke and even wipe out other corals in a domino-effect. The best thing for you to do is deal with the infested corals individually, rather than to rip the system down with the lofty goal of erradicating AEFW completely. It just doesn't seem to work. Instead, look for the AEFW-candy in your reef, which tends to be smooth-skinned acropora, and most especially A. valida. That one coral is like a canary in a coal mine, and will be a great indicator if the tank has this pest.
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Flat worms

Flat worms

I read somewhere that melanrus wrasse love these guys as snacks. I have a happy worker in my tank. I believe it too, as it is not "what will" this guy eat.. Rather, what won't he eat. Every new coral is immediately inspected and gone over by this fella.

The problem truly is getting ahead of the worms if they are there. Usually we find them when it is already WAY too late.

This is a very active, pretty well tempered wrasse. And if he keeps the pests under control - all the better.

Once you are under control, I reccommend this wrasse as future aid in prevention.
 
The best thing for you to do is deal with the infested corals individually, rather than to rip the system down with the lofty goal of erradicating AEFW completely. It just doesn't seem to work.

Heller - I disagree with you. There are plenty of people (including myself) who have completely erradicated AEFW with minimal coral loss (only lost the ORA Hawkins since it doesn't like the Coral Rx treatment). I do agree that going into panic mode will lead to a lot more issues down the road, but eradicating AEFW is possible with a bit of work and patience.

The process I came up with fully eradicated them and I still advocate it for those who have smaller colonies of Acroporas. Pull out all acropora and dip daily in Coral Rx for the recommended time/dosage for a week. Next week, dip every two days. Third week, dip every three days. So on & so forth until 7 weeks has gone by. Theoretically you only need about 3 weeks...but if you're going through all the effort, you might as well keep going to be 100% sure. I never saw an AEFW after the first week, but who knows if eggs hatched...so that's why I continued so long.

I don't recommend dipping every two weeks as someone else mentioned. That's a bit too long for the eggs to hatch & have them grow to lay more eggs.

Just my $0.02
 
In my experience with AEfW the woms take about 2-3 weeks from hatching before they grow big enough to start munching on coral and reproducing. Dipping corals every day or every other day is surely going to cause more stress the good. I'd say give a week between dips minimum. That has worked well for me.
 
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