Mertensii Growth and color changes

robert s b.

Active member
Ok I have had this Mertensii for about 3 months, and the growth has been incredible, it seems it has grown at least 5 times the size since I got him. Little scary because it seems too fast, top it off I have not once directly fed it. Also it has been changing color, it has white tips and the body is pinkish/burgundy color and always really darker at night time. I feel if he continues this growth rate, I would need to buy him his own tank.
Need some Mertensii owners or an expert to chime in, to tell me if this growth rate will slow down or keep its pace until full grown? And does change color as it grows?
 
Mertens

Mertens

Good News its healthy, Bad news yea they grow like that.

They can get up to 6-7 feet across in the wild. I have seen 1-2 feet in a tank.

Given right conditions and flow and food they will def over take your rock work.
 
My opinion, I don't know... I've had mine for several years (maybe 5?). Mine started out small and bleached. I have a thread on here somewhere with pictures, you'll have to search (I'm almost computer illiterate). Here are some pictures of mine.

Here's a closeup of the tentacles. At around 7 oclock position, there's a patch of tentacles that can turn white, not sure if you can tell.


Here it is during the day, photo from a few months ago (tank is dark right now). It's all brown or orange. What most consider a drab color. Hard to tell in the pics, but, it's got at times, a kind of flourescent tint to the brown/orange color. I like it.
This is typical of how it looks during the day, every day.


I rarely feed it. But, have, and do once in a while. It does fine with no food, but the health of the tentacles and overall nem look better with a little food.
Here is it bunching up with food. It is pretty slow, but deliberate, in it's food reactions. Always has been like this




Here's a FTS. I don't know how long ago, maybe 6 months ago? Tank size is 210 (24x72x 29 tall). Anemone can stretch to 24+.



This anemone has 2 very distinct mouths it can eat with, and about 10 different slits that I think are mouths that react with food, but never really "eat" the bigger meals. In this pic, there's a white patch. I tried to get a pic, but it looks like a bud, the patch of white is actually lots of really tiny tentacles with a piece of flappy skin. It's still attached, but looks like it's trying to break off.


As for the white coloration, Reefvette has suggested back a while ago, he thought the white patches were stress induced. I agree. The white patches on mine can appear in minutes when I really make this guy mad. THey are usually never there, the anemone is always brown/orange. At night, with no light, I can see very faintly, where the white patches are, but under stress, they really develop and display. Happens right away after stress. Congrats on buying a nem that IMO, is the best for a fish only or a reef setting, provided you have a big enough tank for it. I have only lost fish to it (all of them) when it wandered a couple years ago into my MP40, shreaded, killed all my fish except my clowns. Mine hasn't really grown much in the past couple years, but it doesn't get fed often. I would think yours will continue to grow to the size it was in the wild before it was caught (if you've only had it a few months, I'm thinking it's still adjusting). For clowns, I think most or all use it as a host. It is a very forgiving nem, when it comes to flow, water quality, and light. When established, it's very hardy and easy to keep happy. Compared to gigs and haddoni, by far the easiest, but also the biggest. The nicest for a mixed reef, provided it doesn't roam.
 
IME, what you are experiencing is not really growth, its acclimation.
When they are shipped and not kept in favorable condition they push a lot of water out of their bodies(much more that the other species of carpets). Since their bodies are mostly water, they shrink up quite a bit (sometimes less than half their original size). Once they get into good stable conditions (like in your tank) they slowly, over the course of a few weeks to a couple months, bring water back into their bodies. This acclimation to your tank and return to their original size makes it seem like they are growing very fast, but they aren't really growing new tissue, they are just re-inflating the existing tissue. Once it is fully inflated the growth will slow down considerably. That being said, they can still grow to a very large size, but allowing them to catch food meant for the fish instead of target feeding will slow down their growth without affecting their health.
 
IME, what you are experiencing is not really growth, its acclimation.
When they are shipped and not kept in favorable condition they push a lot of water out of their bodies(much more that the other species of carpets). Since their bodies are mostly water, they shrink up quite a bit (sometimes less than half their original size). Once they get into good stable conditions (like in your tank) they slowly, over the course of a few weeks to a couple months, bring water back into their bodies. This acclimation to your tank and return to their original size makes it seem like they are growing very fast, but they aren't really growing new tissue, they are just re-inflating the existing tissue. Once it is fully inflated the growth will slow down considerably. That being said, they can still grow to a very large size, but allowing them to catch food meant for the fish instead of target feeding will slow down their growth without affecting their health.

Completely agree
 
I hope your right about it inflating back to normal, the LFS I believe had it for about a month, maybe more and it was a little bit bigger then my hand and was bleached. Now this thing is huge!!

<a href="http://s576.photobucket.com/user/booman_13/media/Mertensii/IMG_3180.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i576.photobucket.com/albums/ss202/booman_13/Mertensii/IMG_3180.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo IMG_3180.jpg"/></a>

<a href="http://s576.photobucket.com/user/booman_13/media/Mertensii/IMG_3181.jpg.html" target="_blank"><img src="http://i576.photobucket.com/albums/ss202/booman_13/Mertensii/IMG_3181.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo IMG_3181.jpg"/></a>
 
It looks good, but not really very big for a merten's.
This one took up almost half of my 4' tank. :)
picture.php
 
Lol

Lol

I thought he was talking about the bud from Taylor's Mertens but now that i saw your response i realize and woah.

Phenders is probably the first one i saw living and thriving in a tank most of the ones i have seen years ago showed up bleached and in bad shape. Phender is a maverick.
 
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