<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=14395700#post14395700 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by davocean
It is pretty, wouldn't mind seeing more pics.
Okay, I'll post a few more pics just to show what a single tiny RBTA can turn into in only five or six years. Remember, this is not my tank, it's my friend's 110-gal tank. As the anemone began taking over more and more space in his tank, he moved his corals to a 75-gal reef tank. That first pic that I posted was actually from almost a year ago, so it's not exactly current. It's a good representation of what the tank looks like today because the anemones are climbing all the walls, so he has to remove them constantly.
Wall-to-wall RBTA. If you look carefully, you will see a few bubble tips in the middle of the pic.
This pic is from more than two years ago, less than four years after adding a single tiny RBTA to his tank.
This pic is from 2-1/2 years ago, approx. 3-1/2 years after adding one tiny RBTA.
This pic is from four years and two months ago, just a couple of years after adding one tiny RBTA to his tank. So the answer to the question that is the topic of this thread, "How fast can an RBTA grow?" Pretty fast!
This is the 75-gal tank that he had to move all of his corals to so that the anemone would not swallow them up. It took less than three years for one little tiny RBTA to eat his entire 110-gal tanik!
P.S. -- Now I have to go tell him that I have been posting his pics over here. :rollface: