possible brittle worm issues?????

bbanks-bryant

New Member
My lighting is a Current "satellite" system. 2x65w Dual Daylight and 2x65w Dual Actinic
Been trying to figure out what kind of filtration I need. I know I need to upgrade. Any suggestions?
 

bbanks-bryant

New Member
Originally Posted by alix2.0
oh, i missed the other one. well i dont know much about them but if you keep different species of anemone in the same tank they will release chemicals "chemical warfare" into the water until one of them dies. also most anemones need really strong lighting like strong T5s or metal halides. plus in such a small tank with such a heavy bioload, water conditions are likely not good enough to keep them happy for long.
Both anemones have been in the tank for a while...a few months anyway.
 

alix2.0

Active Member
you have the same amount of lighting i have. it is called power compact, and sadly it is not enough to support your anemones or definately your clam for long. i realize they have been in your tank for a while, but in this hobby, it is generally agreed that success is decided after 18-24 months. you inverts could be suffering, starving, or bleaching very slowly, but there is little to no doubt it is happening.
are you running a protein skimmer?
 

mie

Active Member
That is 260 watts. Your clam will die, Some anenomes require stonger lighting than others, And the key word is DIFFERENT spiecies of anenomes will have chemical warfare, this is not visible but it happens.
 

peef

Active Member
Do you test for nitrates, ammonia, or nitrites? I am just curious what they are if you have been feeding up to two times a day. Don't worry though your tank will be fine! Everything that Alix and Mie have said to you is correct as far as I know and good advice. Your LFS is just like mine, too bad to, it makes me sad. Good Luck!
 

bbanks-bryant

New Member

Originally Posted by peef
Do you test for nitrates, ammonia, or nitrites? I am just curious what they are if you have been feeding up to two times a day. Don't worry though your tank will be fine! Everything that Alix and Mie have said to you is correct as far as I know and good advice. Your LFS is just like mine, too bad to, it makes me sad. Good Luck!
My levels have been consistantly
fine....even without a protein skimmer and only 1 small filter. I haven't had any issues with the levels going crazy at all (which is why I wasn't worried about feeding too much).
I've been feeding every morning and evening like clockwork and whenever I want to during the days I am home. I do stay on top of water changes though. Perhaps that has something to do with it...I obviously have no idea.
I am planning on adding more filtration real soon. Don't really know much about protein skimmers though.
 

ophiura

Active Member
That looks like detritus to me - basically waste. Possibly several things - lack of circulation, clean up crew, overfeeding, etc.
It is unlikely, IMO, your rocks are being "eaten." In fact, an increase in bristleworms would be correlated with increase in detritus...most bristleworms are scavengers so if you have excess food/waste around you will likely get more worms as a result (they have more food).
How much and how often do you feed?
(EDIT - I see sometimes twice a day? That is a lot, IMO, and could explain the detritus).
 

bbanks-bryant

New Member
Originally Posted by ophiura
That looks like detritus to me - basically waste. Possibly several things - lack of circulation, clean up crew, overfeeding, etc.
It is unlikely, IMO, your rocks are being "eaten." In fact, an increase in bristleworms would be correlated with increase in detritus...most bristleworms are scavengers so if you have excess food/waste around you will likely get more worms as a result (they have more food).
How much and how often do you feed?
(EDIT - I see sometimes twice a day? That is a lot, IMO, and could explain the detritus).
I'm now cutting back on the food in hopes that will help. Obviously they aren't eatting it all anyway. It does seem to be happening only in the corner of the tank where there is a lack of circulation (directly underneath the powerhead).
I am concerned about aggression with cutting back on food though.
 

ophiura

Active Member
Aggression in tanks has little to do with food, and more to do with establishing territories. You will have issues with the clowns and the tang simply because of the tank size and the type of fish they are.
 

t316

Active Member
Originally Posted by bbanks-bryant
So what do I do then? The LFS just aren't helping me much on this. I guess that's the price you pay for being in a small town

Maggie Valley might be small but I love that place

Is that the worm(s) there in the last pic behind the clam? If so, that's a big one.
 

t316

Active Member
And I have seen aggression related to feeding, especially with my chromis. If I go a day without feeding, the chromis eat like mainiacs and will fight off other fish aggressively until they are full.
 

ophiura

Active Member
It is not to say you need to cut back so you are not feeding every day, but don't feed more than you need to. The overwhelming majority of people overfeed, I think it is safe to say. It is also not good to feed too "abnormally" if you will based on the behavior of the type of fish you are keeping. If you have certain fish - seahorses are the obvious example - that are nearly constantly eating, then you try and provide something similar.
 

bbanks-bryant

New Member
Originally Posted by T316
Maggie Valley might be small but I love that place

Is that the worm(s) there in the last pic behind the clam? If so, that's a big one.
no, that purple and white is part of a spiney serpent starfish
 

t316

Active Member
Originally Posted by ophiura
It is not to say you need to cut back so you are not feeding every day, but don't feed more than you need to. The overwhelming majority of people overfeed, I think it is safe to say. It is also not good to feed too "abnormally" if you will based on the behavior of the type of fish you are keeping. If you have certain fish - seahorses are the obvious example - that are nearly constantly eating, then you try and provide something similar.
Ophiura...please elaborate further on knowing when enough is enough. My fish beg each time I pass the tank as well, but I have restrained and not given in. But, as mentioned prior, when I noticed the aggression and hyperness after cutting back on the feedings, I bumped it back up to once a day. I still go by the "no more than can be consumed in 5 minute rule", but this usually means very little (or none) of the food is making it to the bottom for the inverts, which causes them to become more active and thus causing the inverts to be more aggressive towards one another. All of this, while trying not to over do it which causes a nasty skimmer, bristle worm overpopulation, dirty substrate, etc.
 

paintballer768

Active Member
Ok I just skimmed the thread for a bit, and heres my 2 cents. It seems highly unlikely that bristle worms would be linked to crumbing live rock. I can see if theres alot and they move around frequently, they may chip off some pieces, but not as much as the debris on the sand in the pictures.
I would think the crap on the bottom is either detritus or die-off from the rock. Die-off should have happened in the first few months of introducing the rocks, or during the curing process. Detritus is rotting organic matter. If youve been overfeeding, Im willing to put all my chips on it being detritus.
The rule that I first read when I was learning was dont feed more than what your fish can eat in 2 minutes. Usually thats about 2 small feedings for mine. Small is your choice, but adding it in small increments helps assure you arent overfeeding, because at the worst youve only added a tiny bit too much. Over time you will get used to how much they eat.
Bristle worms feed off of detritus and dead/dying organisms. Stop overfeeding = less detritus = bristle worm die off. Your starfish should do a good job of taking care of their corpses with minimal ammonia, since they might die in the rocks and that would be inaccessible for you.
 

bbanks-bryant

New Member
Originally Posted by paintballer768
Ok I just skimmed the thread for a bit, and heres my 2 cents. It seems highly unlikely that bristle worms would be linked to crumbing live rock. I can see if theres alot and they move around frequently, they may chip off some pieces, but not as much as the debris on the sand in the pictures.
I would think the crap on the bottom is either detritus or die-off from the rock. Die-off should have happened in the first few months of introducing the rocks, or during the curing process. Detritus is rotting organic matter. If youve been overfeeding, Im willing to put all my chips on it being detritus.
The rule that I first read when I was learning was dont feed more than what your fish can eat in 2 minutes. Usually thats about 2 small feedings for mine. Small is your choice, but adding it in small increments helps assure you arent overfeeding, because at the worst youve only added a tiny bit too much. Over time you will get used to how much they eat.
Bristle worms feed off of detritus and dead/dying organisms. Stop overfeeding = less detritus = bristle worm die off. Your starfish should do a good job of taking care of their corpses with minimal ammonia, since they might die in the rocks and that would be inaccessible for you.
So if I pay more attention to the amount I'm feeding then in time the bristle worms will die off from lack of detritus and my starfish will eat the dying/dead bristle worms?
 
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