BonsaiNut
Premium Member
We have spent years on this forum talking about how to keep clown anemones alive. The good news is that it appears (at least to me) that many more marine hobbyists are understanding the environmental needs of anemones and are being more successful at keeping them alive in captivity (even including some people who have successfully captive-raised clones, and witnessed spawning events in their tanks).
To continue to improve the general care knowledge of clown anemones, I wanted to start a thread for people to share things that they believe killed their anemones outright. In other words, you obtained a healthy individual, it acclimated well to your tank, and then somewhere down the road it died and you think you know (or have some hypotheses about) why it died.
Causes probably can be categorized into:
(1) Mechanical effects. (Something went wrong with your system)
(2) Physical injury.
(3) Disease.
(4) Diet.
(5) Predators.
Just to remove "new anemone syndrome" from clouding our list, let's try to only comment on anemones that were healthy in tanks for at least 3 months after being introduced, and still looked healthy at that time (no shrinkage, bleaching, stubby tentacles, etc).
Mention what happened, why you think you know the cause of death, and what you would do differently in the future.
Perhaps we can compile the info into a care document in the future...
To continue to improve the general care knowledge of clown anemones, I wanted to start a thread for people to share things that they believe killed their anemones outright. In other words, you obtained a healthy individual, it acclimated well to your tank, and then somewhere down the road it died and you think you know (or have some hypotheses about) why it died.
Causes probably can be categorized into:
(1) Mechanical effects. (Something went wrong with your system)
(2) Physical injury.
(3) Disease.
(4) Diet.
(5) Predators.
Just to remove "new anemone syndrome" from clouding our list, let's try to only comment on anemones that were healthy in tanks for at least 3 months after being introduced, and still looked healthy at that time (no shrinkage, bleaching, stubby tentacles, etc).
Mention what happened, why you think you know the cause of death, and what you would do differently in the future.
Perhaps we can compile the info into a care document in the future...