yellow polyps

zibnata

Member
I have a yellow polyp rock wher some polyps are big and healthy but some are getting smaller or dying. It gets a lot of flow,could that be a problem ? thanks
 
Probably not flow. Yellow polyps seem to do fine in high flow and moderate flow. What do you mean they are dying off? Are they just closed up? Do you have a pic? What are your water parameters?
 

zibnata

Member
Water quality is good. I have numerous soft corals that are thriving. Here is a picture. I had another small yellow polyp rock that all the polyps disappeared. Could there be something eating them ? Thanks
 

bang guy

Moderator
LOL.... Blood Shrimp (like the one in the picture) are polyp munchers ...
Sorry to chuckle... I just found it ironic.
 

cindyski

Active Member

Originally posted by zibnata
I have a yellow polyp rock wher some polyps are big and healthy but some are getting smaller or dying. It gets a lot of flow,could that be a problem ? thanks

i had the same thing happen to both my yellow and button polyps. i only have a few buttons left and maybe 1 yellow. i have 2 peppermints and a cbs :confused:
in a thread i posted a while back i dont believe anyone mentioned the peppermints eating them?, i was thinking more on the lines of a hitchhiking crab or something like that.:confused: :confused:
i want to get more, but i would like to know for sure what is going on also.
 

zibnata

Member
I just noticed the red shrimp harrasing the toadstool leather.Maybe I should remove it. I thought they were reef safe
 

dburr

Active Member
I made a sign that I am posting in the tank.
LOL, that should read, "keep off the grass":eek:
 

ekclark

Member
I lost an entire polyp rock to my peppermints...Really tough to find something 100% reef safe and a tank full of just turbos is really dull.
 

bang guy

Moderator

Originally posted by zibnata
I just noticed the red shrimp harrasing the toadstool leather.Maybe I should remove it. I thought they were reef safe

They can't eat a toadstool, I think they're compatible with that.
 
not sure if its true or not, but ive read that tank raised peppermints are reef safe, and sea raised ones will much on stuff. not sure if that goes for skunk and blood red cleans too or not. but just something i heard.
 

cindyski

Active Member
i just found this bit of info
Hardiness: Yellow polyps are very hardy. They do seem to be one of the tastier soft corals and if there is something in the tank that might munch on the occasional coral, yellow polyps are frequently the first ones eaten.
Lighting: Can withstand most reef lighting schemes, but seems to do best under at least moderate lighting..
Water Current: Yellow polyps prefer low to moderate water motion.
Temperature: Does well within a range of at least 76º to 84º F.
Aggressiveness: Very low.
Feeding: Yellow polyps are photosynthetic and do fine with no feeding, but occasional feeding of small meaty foods like brine shrimp is benefitial.
Supplements: No special requirement are noted. Normal acceptable water parameters seem to suite it just fine.
Tank Positioning: No special requirements other than keeping them out of forceful water flow. These specimens are usually placed near the bottom of the tank.
Propagation:: Yellow polyps will naturally propagate in the reef tank and the colony will tend to grow in size.
Home Specimen Database Index Soft Coral Index
 

schadiest1

Active Member
so is it just the fire shrimp that will munch on yellow polyps? i have a cleaner shrimp and a peppermint shrimp.
 

rickb29

New Member
Can bristle worms eat the yellow polyps and green star polyps?Because I did not have any shrimp and my all seemed to die off.My water perameters were all great! Any help to this mystery because it has had my mind boggled for some time now.:confused:
 

bang guy

Moderator

Originally posted by RickB29
Can bristle worms eat the yellow polyps and green star polyps?

There is one that I know of that can eat star polyps, it's rare but does show up sometimes.
I don't know of any that can eat Yellow polyps.
 
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