A
Anonymous
Guest
Got him last night. Came home from work, checked the xenia frag he's been consuming and there he was, wrapped tight around it. Removed the frag to a small container filled with tank water and plucked the worm from it with a pair of tweezers.
Wish I'd had the presence of mind to snap some pictures, but I'm afraid I didn't. The worm was around 3" long, pure white and covered in incredibly fine long bristles that were colorless with a bit of a metallic sheen to them. I could actually see xenia polyps in his gut, they were darker than it's skin and showed through. Between coloration and diet I think this guy must have been specialized as a xenia predator and I'm very relived to have gotten him out this quickly, considering my stocking plans for this tank
Go figure, though. This is the first time I've had to deal with a predatory worm since about 1986... back then it was a 30" long fireworm from some caribbean live rock in a fish only tank. And Fluffy, as he was known, at least kept the crushed coral substrate in that tank absolutely spotless.
My wife has friday off from work this week so I've taken advantage of that to place some orders for delivery then. I've got some ricordea coming from coralmorphologic, as well as an order from liveaquaria for a second frag of the octopus ink xenia (the original looks really bad; I'm doubtful it will recover from the worm's predations), an unidentified xenia (possibly umbellata), another xenia they call "thick stem", a rusty gorgonian and some red mushrooms. Meredith's decided she really likes the way they look, so I figured I'd include them for her.
Wish I'd had the presence of mind to snap some pictures, but I'm afraid I didn't. The worm was around 3" long, pure white and covered in incredibly fine long bristles that were colorless with a bit of a metallic sheen to them. I could actually see xenia polyps in his gut, they were darker than it's skin and showed through. Between coloration and diet I think this guy must have been specialized as a xenia predator and I'm very relived to have gotten him out this quickly, considering my stocking plans for this tank
Go figure, though. This is the first time I've had to deal with a predatory worm since about 1986... back then it was a 30" long fireworm from some caribbean live rock in a fish only tank. And Fluffy, as he was known, at least kept the crushed coral substrate in that tank absolutely spotless.
My wife has friday off from work this week so I've taken advantage of that to place some orders for delivery then. I've got some ricordea coming from coralmorphologic, as well as an order from liveaquaria for a second frag of the octopus ink xenia (the original looks really bad; I'm doubtful it will recover from the worm's predations), an unidentified xenia (possibly umbellata), another xenia they call "thick stem", a rusty gorgonian and some red mushrooms. Meredith's decided she really likes the way they look, so I figured I'd include them for her.