A
Anonymous
Guest
Do these things reproduce by division? I have a Sarcophyton elegans (Fiji yellow) that had one when I got it. Now there are at least half a dozen, and they frequently perch on top during the day. At night they get all their feathers all tangled up in a big mess. The feathers drape all ofer the surrounding corals and extend to reach over half the tank. Not hurting anything, I guess.
If you don't know what a Ctenophore is, you probably have contacted them when swimming in the ocean. They are small jellyfish-like blobs that in the northeast are frequently about walnut-sized. There is a sessile version that generally perches on the trunk of sarcophytons at night and crawls up near the top during the night to extend long filter-feeding feathery extensions. If you have a wild-caught Sarcophyton chances are very good you have one- take a look at night.
If you don't know what a Ctenophore is, you probably have contacted them when swimming in the ocean. They are small jellyfish-like blobs that in the northeast are frequently about walnut-sized. There is a sessile version that generally perches on the trunk of sarcophytons at night and crawls up near the top during the night to extend long filter-feeding feathery extensions. If you have a wild-caught Sarcophyton chances are very good you have one- take a look at night.