The_Blenny357
New member
Its only a 12" depth, would it really need that much light?
I read that if they die they nuke your tank? Is that true?
I will have to do alot of research before i make the decision on whether to get one or not. How do you keep them from moving around alot? If thats possible
hmm. I don't know how long bubble tip anemone will last before they die from having bad light. I have been using that light on my anemone for 6 months. These are photo of my anemones how they looked like in that light before I injured one anemone's foot. :headwally: Btw, I took those photo with my phone. When i removed the anemone that is at middle, its foot got injured. After it got injured, its size reduce to 2/5 size of in the photo, and lost the majority of red color. The only color left was green and little red on tentacles. It lost its ability to bubble, and its mouth gap opened a bit. Then the other small anemone which is on the left side died. It was so sudden.:sad2: My frogspawn didn't wanna open up fully too, so probably because of the chemical released by the injured anemone. Since the small one died, i bet there were so much chemical in the water. So I put carbon in the tank, and my frogspawn got so much better. Now my anemone got so much better compare to the time it got injured. It bubble up again, the tentacles gained their sticky ability back, its mouth is close, and it has appetite too. It recovered some of the red color, and it is still recovering. So i can't really tell you how fast it will grow quickly in that light. I guess all I can say for now is it will live...:hmm2: TBH, I would try the chinese LED if I found out about it before I bought current usa orbit marine LED.
So it was doing fine before the foot was injured? Sorry i got a little confused. I will take a look at the chinese LEDs