you won't lose all the water, you just need to do a good water change and run some carbon. the thing is, if you put all the water you have into the display then do the corals somewhere else, there's a very good chance you'll have flatworm larvae in the water as well, and then you'll be dealing...
in my opinion, I'd take out the fish and do the flatworm exit in the 75, otherwise you risk cross contaminating your new tank if you do the flatworm exit improperly, along with putting more stress on your corals...
just my 2 cents... :)
how big is the tank you have now, and how many inches of sand are in it, out of curiousity? also, yeah, your watchman gobies will eat the pods up, not all of them, but they'll definitely thin the numbers a lot
either way you should be ok with adding a few more pounds of live sand, the question...
usually plates won't eat cyclopeeze, they like larger meatier foods like mysids or chopped squid, also, most lps and sps don't consume phytoplankton in any significant amounts... can you post up your water parameters? what about the lighting and flow it's in? also, what kind of substrate is...
well, if the serpent star is big enough it could certainly snack on them, or they could be hiding in the rockwork, depends on what kind of shrimp they are, have you tried peeking in there with a flashlight at night, or are they definitely gone?
Originally posted by JacknJill
the links worked for me.... :notsure:
oh, I mean they didn't work with the img thing to have the pics come up on here... man, just looking at these pics makes my skin crawl again... :scared:
this thing is really creepy looking, I found it buried in one of my corals, just looking at it makes my skin crawl... can anyone id?
in the coral
top
bottom
heh, I think everyone came off in ways they didn't mean to come off, so no worries, I just think that yeah, although everyone does have an opinion and is free to express it, it's certainly very rude to do so in that manner, in my opinion