terrynjess
New member
Hi all,
Our first posting so please bear with us if it's been asked before.
We have a bubble tip anenome that until recently was a host to a Tomato Clown (sadly taken by white spot three weeks ago). Since then the Coral Banded shrimp we employed to help with white spot and cleaning duties appears to spend a lot of time next to the Anenome now. The Anenome seems to spend a lot of time now doing the "granny boob" look now (hanging down and shrivled) and most of it's bubbles appear to be fully withdrawn or occasionally highly inflated. The base colour is very pink and the tenticles are a sickly cream colour.
All the chem balances appear to be ok.
We have isolated the anenome now from the shrimp in an attempt to help it recover.
OK the questions are.
Is it possible the shrimp is attacking the anenome?
Whats the best way to help it recover from these attacks or whatever is causing it to be what looks unhealthy?
Regards,
TerrynJess
Our first posting so please bear with us if it's been asked before.
We have a bubble tip anenome that until recently was a host to a Tomato Clown (sadly taken by white spot three weeks ago). Since then the Coral Banded shrimp we employed to help with white spot and cleaning duties appears to spend a lot of time next to the Anenome now. The Anenome seems to spend a lot of time now doing the "granny boob" look now (hanging down and shrivled) and most of it's bubbles appear to be fully withdrawn or occasionally highly inflated. The base colour is very pink and the tenticles are a sickly cream colour.
All the chem balances appear to be ok.
We have isolated the anenome now from the shrimp in an attempt to help it recover.
OK the questions are.
Is it possible the shrimp is attacking the anenome?
Whats the best way to help it recover from these attacks or whatever is causing it to be what looks unhealthy?
Regards,
TerrynJess