Help with ID

ThurlowR

Member
I noticed a couple patches of this. It looks kind of fuzzy and brown.

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see if you can get a better pic - if they are tube worms then its no problem. However, they may be hydroids, and if they are you'll want to take quick action to get rid of them.

Brad
 
Well I read you can suck them up with a turkey baster but the receded back into their tubes just like a feather duster. If anyone wants to stop by for a beer and check it out Id b grateful. Thanks. Also it doesn't look like any pics of Hydroids I can find.
 
i used a little butane torch to burn them off my rocks, and about half of them still came back. a turkey baster will do no good. i have even put putty over them and they grew out around the putty.
 
I am with mike on this one, they are tuff to rid. How much rock do you have them on. Some Butterfly fish eat then but I am sure they are not reef safe. I would say get rid of the rock, or take it out and bake it.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14634098#post14634098 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by ade
I am with mike on this one, they are tuff to rid. How much rock do you have them on. Some Butterfly fish eat then but I am sure they are not reef safe. I would say get rid of the rock, or take it out and bake it.

I totally agree. I had them on one rock and pulled it out before they spread to other rocks.
 
ThurlowR,

Unlike aiptasia, majanoes, bubble algae, or other pests, hydroids are a force not to be reckoned with. They have no natural predator that we know of. There are anecdotal reports of a butterfly fish picking at them or even a wrasse nibbling them away. It won't work. The main problem is that they have the ability to bore beneath the surface of live rock, so if you kill them with Joes Juice or kalk paste, or if you cover them with super glue of putty, they simply migrate. To give you perspective on how bad it can get, I have a 90 gallon tank. At its best I was getting $1500-2000 worth of frags out if it a year. Now it is in ruins because I thought I could conquer the hydroids. My system is now hydroid free and I am rebuilding. What worked? I removed every piece of live rock that had a singly hydroid on it and let it sit dry for two weeks (there are reports of hydroids surviving a few days out of water). Be patient and keep watching - move your rocks around looking on undersides of rocks. If the rock has a hydroid, the whole rock must be considered bad.

Prior to battling hydroids I never paid much attention to the need for a quarantine tank. Now, nothing will go near my tank before first spending a few weeks in the quarantine tank. Good luck.

Brad
 
Well I'm going to remove the rock when I get home, currently I only have seen it on two pieces but I will inspect it a lot more tonight while I'm in there. Thanks for the help.
 
i've had them come and go in my tank, never really seemed to be a huge problem. When i did want to get rid of them, tweezers seemed to work ok.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14637385#post14637385 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by manderx
i've had them come and go in my tank, never really seemed to be a huge problem. When i did want to get rid of them, tweezers seemed to work ok.
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The only thing I dont get is what Ive read is they are a danger to mushrooms but I have mushrooms on the rock that don't seem to be affected and are growing great.
 
they never hurt anything in my tank. I just did not want them to spread to every rock in the tank
 
Decided I didn't want to risk it so I removed the rock. I'm going to order some new rock from Premiumaquatics.com . Thanks for help guys. My tank looks so empty now :-(
 
Couple of thoughts:

First,

Some people describe having hydroids which seem to peacefully coexist. This may be true. However, though they may not directly sting and kill other corals, they may be detrimental through chemical warfare or by competing for common food sources. I believe this was the biggest harm to my tank. I noticed that my pod population plummeted as the hydroids were proliferating..

Second,

Even if they do peacefully coexist, having a pest that I cannot eliminate drives me nuts and takes away from the overall beauty of the tank. I don't mind seeing an isolated aipatasia, because I know that at any time I could easily kill it and eventually will. Not so with the hydroids.

Regardless, keep the rock that you took out. Give it a few weeks to gurantee hydroid kill, and then you can cure it and reintroduce it back into your tank. And, in the end, remember to quantine!

Brad
 
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