QOTW # 1

MUCHO REEF

2003 TOTM Recipient
Premium Member
Question of the Week

1. Which do you have more of, Palys or zoas?

2. Why?

3. Do you find one easier to care for, keep alive, etc than the other?

4. Have you had issues with one or the other that caused you to choose one way or the other?

5. What issues have you had?

6. Were you able to solve the issues and found a way to prevent them from reoccurring in the future?



Mucho Reef
 
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1. Which do you have more of, Palys or zoas?
Zoanthids....More color combos, seem to be more availiable
2. Why?
I like the colors....I have quite a few Palys though
3. Do you find one easier to care for, keep alive, etc than the other?
Nope, have had problems with both at differant times. Both can be frustrating so much for the easy to care for title.
4. Have you had issues with one or the other that caused you to swing one way or the other.
Nope problems with both.....I still like both, I don't swing....
 
1. have more palys than zoas.
2. I like the size and they seem to have more personality.
3. i find palys more durable and zoas unreliable regarding color.
4. same issues as everyone else, occasional sundial on both, however the zoas are easier to frag imo
 
i shouldn't have said more durable, because they are super durable. I find though that palys i buy in the store stay true to there color and that sometimes zoas can change depending on lighting. sometimes for the better sometimes for worse.
 
1. More zoanthids
2. No reason, most of mine were givin to me.
3. Palys seem a little easier
4. I have had zoa colonies suddenly close up and melt away, but that didnt make me like one better than the other.
5. Melting of zoas
6. I wasnt able to solve it and it has'nt happend again.
 
I have more zoanthids than paly's, but would like to change that.

I have had problems in the past with different tangs eating my zoanthids, while not touching the paly's.

Not sure if there is a connection there or not.
The paly's that were in the tank at the time were very plain ones and the zoanthids that did get eaten were very nice, very expensive ones.
I think that I would consentrate on paly's if I knew for sure if they would be left alone by the tangs.
 
There was an unofficial list somewhere of the Tangs that have been seen eating zoas. Does anyone have a link?

Mooch
 
1.) I have more Palys than Zoas, I think. (Some of my "palys" are probably just large polyped zoas but with one key difference from the small polyped zoas, they don't get Zoa Pox!)

2.) For me that is very important and the reason I now shy away from regular zoas. All it took was one case of Zoa Pox to go from mostly zoas to mostly palys. I also like most of the color combos more, and the size of the polyp showing that color off.

3.) Zoa pox not considered, both seem to be of the same difficulty, minimum. If you feed the palys, they would then be a little more work, but not enough to make someone shy away from them IMO.

4. & 5.) Zoa pox.

6.) Two weeks, daily 10% waterchanges, and a few small colonies later it fixed itself.
 
Yeah, I think the listing Paly is not what most people think Paly's are. Palythoa's take sand into their coenenchyme (stalks), so they look kind of sand papery. Zoanthus do not (smooth staolks or mats). Size of the polyp has nothing to do with Genus, though it can be a rough indicator. The standard Protopalythoa psammacora (which will likely be absorbed into the Palythoa Genus sometime in the somewhat near future) is the typical Palythoa, but most call large zoas Paly's.

1. That said, I have a lot more Zoanthus than Palythoas (probably 50-60 different morphs of Zoanthus and 3-6 morphs of Palythoas). There aren't too many Palythoas out there (PD's, green buttons/Protopalythoa psammaphila, and some others that are similar to those growth characteristics including Proto grandis).

2. There just aren't as many Palythoa sp. offered compared to Zoanthus.

3. The Palythoa sp. I've had have been bullet proof (Protopaly psammaphilla specifically-or one that looks pretty much identical to the commonly accepted Proto psammaphilla) . I've had them for over eight years now, while others seems to wax and wane. The Rabbitfish that took out 8 colonies in 2 days didn't touch any Z. gigantus or Palythoa sp., so I would assume they either don't taste as good or have more toxin.

4. Just options.

5.I've had pox, unexplained melting (probably chop-shopped or something like that), and a rabid Scibbled Rabbitfish that took a seat at the zoa buffet (only the nice ones, though, then it moved on to my Acan lords and echinatas and micro's).

6. Increased water changes and temperature control worked for me on the pox on multiple occassions. Stopped buying from people who were known or suspected of chop shopping. Removed the Rabbit.
 
1. I'm not sure which I have more of, but I would guess palys.

2. Pox started to do some damage to my colonies so I switched to collecting palys. I also like the bigger size of the polyps and I find them easier to keep.

3. I find that Palys are easier to keep because they are more tolerant of extreme conditions in the tank plus there are fewer predators or diseases that affect them.

4. See answer #2

5. See answer #2

6. I have yet to try the furan dip, but then again I don't have an outbreak of pox right now. Once I see the first signs of an outbreak all my zoas will be dipped (but not palys).
 
Re: QOTW # 1

Question of the Week

1. Which do you have more of, Palys or zoas?

I'd say right now its about even

2. Why?

I like them both and they add a nice size differance. Breaks it up a bit in a Zoa/paly tank

3. Do you find one easier to care for, keep alive, etc than the other?

Really depends on the individual zoa or paly. Some do good some don't

4. Have you had issues with one or the other that caused you to choose one way or the other?

no

5. What issues have you had?

see above

6. Were you able to solve the issues and found a way to prevent them from reoccurring in the future?

see above above =)
 
1. Zoa.

2. Can't seem to find the Palys.

3. Palys seem hardier...bigger is better.

4. Nope.

5. Pox on zoa, Nudis on zoa,

6. Left the pox alone...it went away. The Nudis I dipped what I could and spent countless hours hunting for the rest and sucking them out with a baster and torturing them to death.
 
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