Who is munching these corals...

StephaniePlyPet

New member
Customer sent me these photos of two different leather corals in his tank, one just starting to be nibbled and the other one eaten almost completely within a week. Huge chunks taken out overnight, as usual can't find any culprit during the day. Any ideas?
 

Attachments

  • 15780698_10154676242566970_4569576380405970599_n.jpg
    15780698_10154676242566970_4569576380405970599_n.jpg
    74.5 KB · Views: 5
  • 15698071_10154676242681970_4202933925346923910_n.jpg
    15698071_10154676242681970_4202933925346923910_n.jpg
    76.8 KB · Views: 5
FWIW the same thing was happening to some of the leather corals at my LFS. Once the owner started flipping rocks over he found a crab that was about the size of a baseball. Problem solved. My guess would be that you have some sort of unwanted hitchhiker lurking among the rocks. You might want to look into some traps and see what you come up with.
 
What fish are in the tank? I had a foxface that bit corals like that

Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-N920A using Tapatalk
 
Says only yellow coris wrasse and two clowns. It's a large tank with LOTS of rock... was hoping it wouldn't need to be torn apart to find the culprit but assumed that was the case.
 
I don't even want to suggest it...but bobbit worm.

Bobbitt worms are ambush predators that eat fish...

That said I am sure there could be done shirt off large worm in the tank (the elusive fireworm) that would eat coral...

I would think fish or crab first though..given that fish list I doubt fish...
 
thinking of softcoral eating nudislug... i have removed one of those in my tank last week... they are some colorfull and comes out bij night...
The one i had was white with blue.
 
LOL'd @ bobbit worm.

those are very nice, rounded bite marks... i would imagine a crab would leave it a bit more... shredded. Fireworms are possible but for one-they're super rare and I feel like the owner of the tank would have noticed a bright red worm chilling on the rocks eating coral in the middle of the day, since that's what they're supposedly known to do.

I see too much coraline on the rocks to imagine there would be an urchin in there. Starfish would still be a possibility though.


Alright alright, I'll have my go at it.


If it's ocean harvest live rock I'm placing my bet on;

1) Rapa Rapa Snail
2) Nudibranch
3) Spider/Decorator crab
4) Fireworm as unlikely as it may be



If it's man-made rock seeded with a little live rock my guesses are bacterial or fungal patch, but it could still be something above if it was seeded.
 
A pencil urchin are more carnivorous then other urchins. They will eat anything. Spong, corals, crabs, etc. And they are usually very hard to find during the day in a larger tank.
 
Peppermint shrimp or any sexy shrimp (closely related to pepp's) in the tank? I recently caught my shrimp eating my toadstool after a very long time of leaving everything alone. They are now in the sump.
 
Bobbitt worms are ambush predators that eat fish...

That said I am sure there could be done shirt off large worm in the tank (the elusive fireworm) that would eat coral...

I would think fish or crab first though..given that fish list I doubt fish...

People have reported hobbit worms mowing down zoanthids, chewing across, etc. It does happen. Or maybe it's just something that looks remarkably like a bobbit worm. There is a thread on the sps forum where a guy reported catching a 3-4 footer that had been gnawing on his sps.
 
I have personally had bristle worms devastate leathers. I didn't think it was possible till I watched my big green lucky charm get eaten from the inside out by a nasty flaming bristle b*s***.
 
Found the culprit

Found the culprit

Thanks for all your awesome ideas guys, the culprit has been caught and put in isolation! Stone crab hitchhiker...
 

Attachments

  • 17097215_10154864153971970_570250384711172329_o.jpg
    17097215_10154864153971970_570250384711172329_o.jpg
    54.8 KB · Views: 5
Back
Top