fwe should kill them
those are not aefw's
if you werent already...up your dosage of fwe.
If there arent tons of them you can safely double or even quadruple(or more) the dosage of fwe
Following along. I have the same Flatworms on my glass. Just lost a bushy acro last night but was able to save a small piece. I had a buddy come over from our local club today and he said don't worry about them they are not aefw. However, this is just to coincidental this happened to you as well.
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Sound's like you have a water quality problem. Those are red planaria and are harmless to sps.
Not sure what it could be though. Po4 is around .05-0, alk is around 9.75-10, cal is around 480. I run chemi-pure elite. Few days ago u lowered the light from 7 inches off the water to about 4 thinking maybe the light was to far up, so I'll have to wait another couple of weeks to see of that helps. I'm thinking about running phosguard or something. I'm also dripping kalk in my top off water. My temp goes from about 77 lights off to 78.9 light on. Photo period is 6 hours a day. What are your thoughts?
It could be a huge number of factors. I can guarantee that those flatworms are not harming you SPS, though.
I would be very careful making attempts to *fix* the problem when you are not entirely sure what the problem is. For example, phosphate are probably not the problem so running phosban could make the problem significantly worse.
It sounds like your tank is very stable and your parameters are in check, so lets see if we can root out any other variables. What is your salinity and how are you measuring it? Do you have a magnesium test kit?
How is the flow in your aquarium? Red planaria tend to show up in aquarium with too little flow.
It could be a huge number of factors. I can guarantee that those flatworms are not harming you SPS, though.
I would be very careful making attempts to *fix* the problem when you are not entirely sure what the problem is. For example, phosphate are probably not the problem so running phosban could make the problem significantly worse.
It sounds like your tank is very stable and your parameters are in check, so lets see if we can root out any other variables. What is your salinity and how are you measuring it? Do you have a magnesium test kit?
How is the flow in your aquarium? Red planaria tend to show up in aquarium with too little flow.
Two more things I just thought about.
About two weeks ago or so, I had to treat the tank for cyno because it was growing all over the sand like crazy.
Also I do not feed the corals, should I start feeding them something like coral frenzy?
About those worms. My vote is for a H. melanurus(Hoeven's wrasse) wrasse or a H. Chrysus wrasse (yellow wrasse). Both are great tank mates and are pretty docile and will eat the flat worms right up!
Here is a pic of my old Melanurus. She did great on my flatworms.
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