phender
Active member
Re: phender
Re: phender
Gigantea normally live in shallow sand with their foot attached to a rock under the sand, but they can live up in the live rock as well.
I put it up there for two reason. One, I only have 150 watt MH lights and I wanted it as close as possible and two, I could get the current I want up there. The current was really not that strong. The surge usually didn't lift the oral disk that much. The video sort of caught the "Perfect Storm".
The anemone lived there for over a year until it died mysteriously. One of the suspects was feeding it silversides. The other was a purple H. crispa on the other side of the tank that was going through a growth spurt that may have been emitting some chemical agents.
Re: phender
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=12065779#post12065779 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Zoom
I don't know but the S. Gigantea in that video looks like is ready to be blowing off the rock![]()
Looks like the Anemone is on the live rock .
Is this the right way to introduce one in my tank? I just put the anemone on the top of the live rock ?
Looks like Copes anemone is on the sand.
Gigantea normally live in shallow sand with their foot attached to a rock under the sand, but they can live up in the live rock as well.
I put it up there for two reason. One, I only have 150 watt MH lights and I wanted it as close as possible and two, I could get the current I want up there. The current was really not that strong. The surge usually didn't lift the oral disk that much. The video sort of caught the "Perfect Storm".
The anemone lived there for over a year until it died mysteriously. One of the suspects was feeding it silversides. The other was a purple H. crispa on the other side of the tank that was going through a growth spurt that may have been emitting some chemical agents.