reefmutt
Active member
Hey Guys and Gals,
I reefing buddy of mine who runs a commercial system for selling corals and frags has had an invasion of a tiny green tunicate throughout ONLY PART of his system..
He can't get it to go away. He has sent it to a couple universities for identification and info on how to kill it off but most institutions are more interested in keeping it alive and haven't been of any help. Actually, most biologists he has talked to tell him how lucky he is to be able to keep and reproduce this "˜difficult to keep' species of tunicate!!! Not helpful to him, unfortunately...
He has two systems connected to one sump- both have mostly sps in them..
One is lit by a mix of MH, T5 and led. And the other system, where the tunicate didn't seem to grow is under Radion g4 pros..
I guess it could be as simple as lighting.. but.. could it??
Anyways the tunicate is called:
Dioplosoma virens
Pics..


Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
I reefing buddy of mine who runs a commercial system for selling corals and frags has had an invasion of a tiny green tunicate throughout ONLY PART of his system..
He can't get it to go away. He has sent it to a couple universities for identification and info on how to kill it off but most institutions are more interested in keeping it alive and haven't been of any help. Actually, most biologists he has talked to tell him how lucky he is to be able to keep and reproduce this "˜difficult to keep' species of tunicate!!! Not helpful to him, unfortunately...
He has two systems connected to one sump- both have mostly sps in them..
One is lit by a mix of MH, T5 and led. And the other system, where the tunicate didn't seem to grow is under Radion g4 pros..
I guess it could be as simple as lighting.. but.. could it??
Anyways the tunicate is called:
Dioplosoma virens
Pics..


Any insight would be greatly appreciated.