SSGHackett
New member
Found this in my tank today after watching a section of zoos going missing........
Guess I'm on watch for the next few weeks
Guess I'm on watch for the next few weeks
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=9964934#post9964934 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by MUCHO REEF
"How long do the eggs take to hatch out?"
DaveJ, I have tried and tried to get a number that was consistent, but the range I came up with was a 3 to 7 day incubation period. That is not set in stone, so I stand corrected. I have been trying to get a hold of some nice size nudis but now I can't find a single one in a store anymore. I guess that's a good thing.
Can nudis spread by taking to the sand or are they mostly surface animals (rock and glass hard surfaces)?
Yes, not only will they migrate across the sand, they will travel via the glass and on other rocks. I will go even further to say this, as I have been trying to prepare an article to write but I'm simply too busy in my personal life to getting around to it. So here goes, nudibranch can and will hide in a fine sandy substrata. My buddy was doing some basic tank maint and found one alive and moving a full inch beneath the surface of the sand. That is scary to know. Whatever method you use to eradicate nudis, make sure it is thorough. Even after you have dipped and treated your tank and you have been nudi free for a week, you must still flick your actinics on in the middle of the night and randomly dip rocks just to be sure. Nudis will hide on/in rock holes and crevices without zoas on them. This means they can hide behind your tank and emerge and continue to devastate long after you thought you have killed/removed them all.
Do they only lay eggs on the polyps or do they do so in the rock as well?
When I had them, I found them literally everywhere. On the side of polyps, on the crown of a retracted polyp, on rocks, on the glass, everywhere. This is why it is so important to extend your treatments even after no visible signs of them remain. Just be sure to turn on your actinics and check for whitish egg sacks that will be illuminated by the actinics. With everything retracted, you can see and remove an awful this way. Keep in mind the sacks are sticky, so using a dedicated set of tweezers will works wonders to remove them.
Sorry to be so longwinded.
Mooch