Zoos blooming.

florida joe

Well-Known Member
Just thought it would be nice to post a pic as soon as the lights came on and one after my zoos started to bloom

 

salt210

Active Member
I know this is gonna be out there, but I like the featherduster in the pic. I think it looks like the one my LFS had that looked fake.
 

salt210

Active Member
I know they are real, but their appearance made them look fake. couldnt really tell, but the only thing I could see was something that looked out of place on the zoas.
 

uneverno

Active Member
I like the blue ones. Those are gorgeous.
Also answers a looming question in my tank as to whether or not the encroaching GSP and my Zoas will play nice together.
 

florida joe

Well-Known Member
It is actually a double edges sword. As the GSP will not sting zoos, at least I have not found them to. They will encroach after time on their area and may in fact cover them with their mat
 

nycbob

Active Member
nice pics. watch out for the gsp. it will overgrow ur zoas and suffocate them over time.
 

uneverno

Active Member
Ah - thanks for the info.
They're far enough apart that is not an immediate threat, and on separate rocks as well, so shouldn't be a long term issue.
Next up in my education: learning how to frag. (I do know to wear gloves - not much beyond that tho...)
 
A

abeandlulu

Guest
Originally Posted by florida joe
http:///forum/post/3121882
Just thought it would be nice to post a pic as soon as the lights came on and one after my zoos started to bloom


I LOVE the pic. I want something like that growing in my tank..
 
V

vince-1961

Guest
Do you feed phytoplankton to them or what? Back in February, I spent a lot of $ buying various zoos, goniopora, pom pom, etc.. Most of them died within a few months (starvation?), but what survived has thrived. What survived were frogspawn, mushrooms, and several ricordea.
 

florida joe

Well-Known Member
Originally Posted by vince-1961
http:///forum/post/3122432
Do you feed phytoplankton to them or what? Back in February, I spent a lot of $ buying various zoos, goniopora, pom pom, etc.. Most of them died within a few months (starvation?), but what survived has thrived. What survived were frogspawn, mushrooms, and several ricordea.
Actually my phytoplankton feeding is hit and miss. I do not feed on a regular basis. I just find Zoos really easy to keep
 
V

vince-1961

Guest
I am having the worst luck with them. Just bought another little rock with 5 polyps on it. My GF glued it to another rock. Then I somehow accidentally managed to knock that off it's perch, and the polyps broke off during the fall from height, never to be found again. Another $20 down the drain .....
 

lietz06

Member
This picture is really cool! Did you buy a muncha different colors and then glue them next to each other or did you buy one big rock w/ all of them on it?
 

florida joe

Well-Known Member
Originally Posted by lietz06
http:///forum/post/3122925
This picture is really cool! Did you buy a muncha different colors and then glue them next to each other or did you buy one big rock w/ all of them on it?
I actually started a thread where I glued several oyster shells together and made a vertical platform for some frags. What you see is the result
 
Top