Why would you not want them?Ooh, that's scary looking! If it is sea hare eggs, now is the time to decide if you want thousands of them in your tank, and take appropriate action.
I am in the process of removing hundreds of them from my tank. Kinda tedious! I wish I had removed them at the egg stage. In my opinion, one is cool, thousands, not cool.
Ah I see. Well I have the opposite problem lol. My tank is basically an unplanned refugium. My tank was spotless a few years ago and I had a bad crash while out of town and everything died. I kept the rock and sand. Had a bad cyano problem for a year. Got rid of it... And now have a bad hair/turf algae/halmaeda problem. This is the first I've heard of sea hares reproducing in a tank and I think I would love to have that happen.I guess it depends on the kind of sea hare and the kind of tank you have. For example, my tank is a macro algae and seagrass tank. The sea hares I have eat macros. They have almost wiped out one species of caulerpa that I'd prefer to keep. That's why I do not want them.
I suppose if you had a micro algae problem and your sea hares ate micro algae, you would want them. But what happens when thousands of sea hares run out of food?
I love natural solutions. But that is a huge egg mass. Thousands of anything bigger than pods is a bit much in the confines of an aquarium.
I'm not a sea hare expert, so I may be overlooking something. Why WOULD you want them?
Thanks, mikenh77. Now I see your side of it. At least you can grow halimeda. I've had no luck with it.
I thought it was cool too, when sea hares reproduced in my tank, until I realized they were wiping out my caulerpa racemosa. It's kinda like the bristle worm thing. They're great detrivores but when their population explodes and your tank is literally crawling with them, it's just a bit too much.
I'm curious, m3ch, have you decided what to do with your giant egg mass?