My Aptasia Eating Nudibranch Multiplied!!

jayreef1213

New member
I was watching tv the other night and I looked over at my tank and saw two nudi's crawling on the glass I thought to myself hey there still alive. Meaning the two I put in there a month or two ago and then I noticed they were significantly smaller and noticed two more so there are four baby nudi's in there. Does anybody know of there breeding habits? or how long they live? I was told there life span was short. They do a wonderful job with the aptasia slow but they do the job. Thanks---Jason
 
i've have nudi's split (fission) before and usually they died shortly after. Not sure my experiences mean anything, just sharing.
 
They do reproduce, they will probably multiply even more. Until no aptasia left, then their goners.
 
I have raised 100+ berghia, all started from 3 original individuals that I got from www.inlandaquatics.com (Inland is a great company for aquacultured livestock - have ordered many items from them, and they are awesome). If you do a little searching on the web, you can find out all about their breeding habits. The short story is that they're hermaphrodites, which means that all individuals can lay eggs. Self-fertilzation is rare; mostly, they reproduce sexually with each other (rarely by fission). Gestation is 10-14 days, and the young eat the tiny little Aiptasia that split from the larger ones. Bizarrely enough, if you want to keep your berghia and raise them to adulthood (which makes a nice cottage industry - trust me!), you'll need to start a separate Aiptasia "food farm" tank right away to breed enough food for them. Each berghia lives about 1 year, so if you run out of Aiptasias before then, you should collect the berghia and pass the little tykes along to another RCer in your area. I traded for, geez, something like a few dozen frags and miscellaneous tank stuff. A few hints: berhia are nocturnal, so you won't see much of them during the day. If you want to collect them to give away, a turkey baster works really well. Also, you can tell the health of your berghia by their color - they absorb the brown Aiptasia symbiotic algae. If you berghia are pale and white, that means that they're starving - time to pass 'em along. Each adult berghia can eat something like 3-5 BIG Aiptasias a day - they eat a lot more than you think, and if they start multiplying, they'll clean every last one out of your tank within a few weeks. I went from an Aiptasia-infested tank (I mean like every surface covered) to NONE in ~3 months. They quickly overwhelmed the capacity of my Aiptasia farm (I know that sounds so strange, but that's what you have to do if you want to raise them), and I ended up trading all of them away.
 
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