A local reefer gave me a lovely tube anemone yesterday. I acclimated it then buried it under a few of inches of sand, with what appeared to be the head end near the surface. Within the hour it was poking the tips of its pink tentacles out. Not the feeding tentacles - those are neon green. And to my surprise those tentacles were attacked!
By what you might ask? By none other than my aptasia anemone killer: a peppermint shrimp.
I watched it play out several times. The shrimp would find a nearby perch, and just wait for the tip of a pink tentacle to emerge - and it would pounce. In fact one time the posterior end of the worm emerged (a black round ended tube) and the shrimp pounced on that. Clawed it, and then retreated a distance and ate whatever it had in its claw. So it looks like it got a small piece.
I put some PE mysis in the tank hoping to distract the shrimp. Why wait for a worm to pop up when you can have more mysis than you can eat now? But this shrimp dropped its mysis and attached to tube anemone the next time it tried to pop out. Clearly there is a strong predatory preference for anemone like things.
Is it possible that the anemone is vulnerable to such until it gets its tentacles fully out, instead of just tips emerging? If so, since the peppermints hide in the daytime, it should have a chance to come out today. It's hiding now, but maybe I'll see it later today...
Anyone else have any experience with this?
I must admit that having this animal threatened by something already in my tank was that last thing I expected.
PS - Apologies if this is the wrong forum, as these are not really true anemones. Seemed like the best place.
By what you might ask? By none other than my aptasia anemone killer: a peppermint shrimp.
I watched it play out several times. The shrimp would find a nearby perch, and just wait for the tip of a pink tentacle to emerge - and it would pounce. In fact one time the posterior end of the worm emerged (a black round ended tube) and the shrimp pounced on that. Clawed it, and then retreated a distance and ate whatever it had in its claw. So it looks like it got a small piece.
I put some PE mysis in the tank hoping to distract the shrimp. Why wait for a worm to pop up when you can have more mysis than you can eat now? But this shrimp dropped its mysis and attached to tube anemone the next time it tried to pop out. Clearly there is a strong predatory preference for anemone like things.
Is it possible that the anemone is vulnerable to such until it gets its tentacles fully out, instead of just tips emerging? If so, since the peppermints hide in the daytime, it should have a chance to come out today. It's hiding now, but maybe I'll see it later today...
Anyone else have any experience with this?
I must admit that having this animal threatened by something already in my tank was that last thing I expected.
PS - Apologies if this is the wrong forum, as these are not really true anemones. Seemed like the best place.