Small Heavens
New member
All living things have immune system and fight/suppress infection. Just because they have immune system, it does not mean that their immune system win every time, especially given the stress associated with collection and transport across the world in a small bag of contaminated water. Stress free environment is essential but not possible in transport unless we want to pay prohibit high cost. Like I said on my treatment protocol, antibiotic is essential for the survival of many of these anemones when first import. The survival rate improved drastically when we treat these anemones with antibiotic especially when they are newly imported. I never have to treat any of my anemones with antibiotic after the first few weeks. This is very similar with us taken antibiotic for pneumonia or kidney infection or sepsis. With antibiotic, fewer of us died from these infections. Survival of these animal long term will depends on the environment that they keep in.
Small Heavens,
I am not trying to convince you of anything, but I hope at least you read the introduction of the antibiotic protocol I wrote.
Regarding allelopathy, one cannot proof negative, other than seeing that they live with each other without problem. I cannot proof that the anemones do not kill each other with allelopathy, but you should be able to proof positive if there is actually allolepathy. Where is your proof that there are allelopathy, what substance release that will harm another anemones and not harm the anemone that releasing it?
Logically, any toxin release will damage the anemone that is releasing it the most. Injection toxin into another animal is another mater. Anemones and corals already have mechanism to wages wars by direct injection, much more potent and efficient method of killing competitors. They don't need to evolved toxin to be release into the water to attack other animals around them. Other than Octopus releasing ink to escapes(not killing their attacker), I cannot think of any living thing releasing anything into the air or water to kill competitors. Secreting antibiotic or toxin on land where it stay where it release does not count (not the same thing). There are plenty of these examples on land organism, mostly plants.
Are my animal stressed or not? I let the results speak for themselves.
*Wow, there is this social dynamics, mostly found in teenage girls, where people decide there is only one way of being, and then try to freeze out any other type of behaviour other than that. I am honestly not sure why you care to make such a big deal out of it.
Minh, I suggest that you read lots more about this, you thinking something sounds logical does not compete with laboratory tests of what toxins does to tissue of living things, that is fact, here we are just sharing observations because we want to help eachother. Corals, Anemones and Jellyfish, are all cousins, that learned to live different places. The jellyfish is a polyp flowing around because it learned to stay mobile, they can have some braincells for mapping food source and such but they lost most of their photosynthetic behaviour which is found in only few species today. Anemones are jellyfish that didn't care to move and have a strong bond of photosynthetic organisms that it actually just captured once upon a time, now they give them to their eggs and clones and don't have to capture them because evolution is beautiful that way.
One type of soft coral, it is very red, looks like a branching coral or something hanging from a jellyfish, and it actually lives inside caves in the wild.
That is caves with low flow, so they can poison the entire cave.
They do this to capture prey without the prey putting up a fight. Yes Minh, corals understand flow through ages of evolution driving them to act automated in a world of competition and they do most certainly bomb eachother over large bodies of water if they can get the flow to hit right, which is...rather simple in a tank, because as you said, it does require pretty strong toxins to hit eachother in a body of water such as the ocean itself .... ... . .. . .