How long can my zoanthids go without light?

Versus

New member
I have a fair amount of ppe's rpe's peach paly's etc .. I am changing my lights over to T5 ( 6x54 ) but I need the money from my halide fixtures first .

Will they be ok without light for 5 days ? ( i can take them to a lfs to hold , im just scared of cute lil nudi's eatin em there. )
 
ya 5 days is fine i actually had mine with no light for about 2 weeks but they had some amount of sunlight every couple of days u should be fine
just if possible give them some sunlight when u can
 
Sweet thanks , ya the tank is in a open area of my house so they will get "ok" light ( as if the ocean had a storm over head or something )

Thats good to know though.
 
5 days will be no problem. They will slightly fade and may take a while to color back up but they will live.
 
setting aside the 5-day circumstances that Versus will be experiencing, that's an interesting academic question...

how long can zoanthids go without light?

of course it's going to be on a case-by-case basis. not all zoanthids are equal and some more finicky than others... but, think of this:

i've had zoanthids closed up for 15 days before re-opening. and i've read stories on RC of 3 weeks before they opened up... but both scenarios were in a tank - which was lit.

does it stand to reason that everything else being equal (no oxygen deprivation, adequate flow, etc.) that a zoanthid could survive 3 weeks without light if it could remain closed for 3 weeks? does a closed zoanthid still benefit from light perhaps by penetration through it's stalk?

hrm....
 
Yes, they will survive, possibly, since all zoas and palys aren't a like, but I would never risk depleting those polyps of light, here's why.

I once left some frags in a bucket after fragging for almost 2 weeks, they were still alive when I found them. Just because they will surive, doesn't necesarily mean you want to intentionally subjest them to light deprivation, especially in your case. Why? You will stress your polyps out big time and you could very well and possibly kill them, POSSIBLY. You have 6 -54 watt T's, which is what they are accustomed and acclimated to. You're going to subject them to no light for 5 days, then you are going to blast them with MH lighting. Good lighting, to no lighting, to the most intense lighting on the market. Will they surivive and thrive, yes, possibly, most likely. But do you want to risk that, I wouldn't. I like to error on the side of caution. Now if they were common easy to find and replace inexpensive zoas, yes, I'd do it. But not with P's, R's and palys. I'm no lighting expert, but I would hate to see you lose them. If you can, why not borrow a comparible fixture from a fellow reefer in your area. It's done everyday. Is it possible to explore some other options to secure the funds? I just wouldn't risk my polyps at the cost of possible bleaching from the blast of your new MH. Of which you should slowly acclimate your corals to the new more intense lighting from the MH's.

As Whodah said, not all zoas and palys are a ike.
"does it stand to reason that everything else being equal (no oxygen deprivation, adequate flow, etc.) that a zoanthid could survive 3 weeks without light if it could remain closed for 3 weeks? does a closed zoanthid still benefit from light perhaps by penetration through it's stalk?" That's a great question too.


Unprofessionally, I'd say yes, they do indeed benefit from the tank lights. I believe that it has been proven that zoas do fed since they have a gastral intestinal tract, however lighting is also proven to be their main source of nutritonal uptake. That said, Whodah's point is a valid one. Do I have the proof, no, do I believe that closed zoas in a lite system will fair better than closed zoas without any light, yes. I wouldn't call it proof, but zoas are known to cup/close up for periods of time as a means of externaly cleaning themselves. I've witnessed them closed for up to 6 to 9 days before opening back up without any signs of decline in character, color and overall appearance.

Just my 2 cents.

Mucho
 
Ya , I wasnt really sure as what todo ( im going from MH to T5 ) and needed the money from my old setup before getting the t5's ..

Sure wish someone would invent a magical qt tank , Like little transportation portals in your main tank to the little ones heh .


Im getting the lights on tues or weds ( ordered them today , turned off MH's at 1pm est and sold them ) .

We have a "water fall" on our pool , I put my power heads in the tank , a heater and set the oceanic cube in the middle of the waterfall stream before it dips off into the pool .. So far its been keeping the water cool at around the same level as the pool ( +1.3 F )


I knew that thing would serve a purpose for more than "looks" one day heh , water sits around 8 inches on the tank . so i doubt ill be getting any pool water in there.



Of course I just remembered they are on a timer and could of shut off and stopped cooling the tank . heh oops brb :) need to turn that timer off heh.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=7960506#post7960506 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by MUCHO REEF
I once left some frags in a bucket after fragging for almost 2 weeks, they were still alive when I found them.
I did the same just last month. I lost a frag in a bucket after rearranging stuff in my tank. Found the zoa almost 2 weeks later after it had been sitting in the stagnant water with stinky LR and no circulation. It recovered, but I sure wouldn't want to do that again.
 
We had a hot spell in July where I unplugged my timers for 4 days on all tanks,to save electric and help the AC a little. The Zoas seamed happier than ever on the 5th day when I fired back up the halides. I think its better to go without lights on very hot days than to cook your tank.
 
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