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View Full Version : Hello!! Newbie to SDR and fairly new to reef tanks.



teamgroff
10-12-2016, 09:37 PM
Thank you so much for allowing me to join SDR, I have already seen a lot of valuable information on it!!

I do have a question about aiptasia, how do I get rid of it??? I heard if you fight with chemicals or manually, they feel threatened and then can release spores into water to form new buds. Someone else mentioned they used a Copperband Butterfly fish, and luckily it only ate the aiptasia and left the rest of their reef alone. Any ideas, please?

Thank you so much!!

Jenni

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XO PRESENTS
10-12-2016, 09:44 PM
Welcome to SDR Jenni,

Several ways of getting rid of aptasia but I would just look for an established aptasia eating file fish, they come and go on the boards but I have not really paid attention lately. I'm sure the rest of the members will give their thoughts as well.

One thing that would be helpful is utilizing the search box option on the top right, trust me.. we have all been there and many of us have asked the same questions.

Best wishes and enjoy the hobby, lots and lots of cool reefers on here :)

teamgroff
10-12-2016, 10:04 PM
Thank you!!!

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CMD2213
10-13-2016, 05:06 AM
Welcome to SDR!


As for aiptasia....
1.Established aiptasia eating filefish
-Sometimes need to be removed once aiptasia is gone. Some are reef safe some nip at corals once done.

2. Copperband Butterfly Fish
-They are a hit or miss some might eat the aiptasia,others starve and dies often.

3.Peppermint shrimp (proven aiptasia eaters)
-Just research the type of fish you have with them, for example some wrasses may eat them,other shrimps might not be compatible.

But good luck,enjoy the forum.

teamgroff
10-13-2016, 07:09 AM
Thank you

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teamgroff
10-13-2016, 07:39 AM
Welcome to SDR!


As for aiptasia....
1.Established aiptasia eating filefish
-Sometimes need to be removed once aiptasia is gone. Some are reef safe some nip at corals once done.

2. Copperband Butterfly Fish
-They are a hit or miss some might eat the aiptasia,others starve and dies often.

3.Peppermint shrimp (proven aiptasia eaters)
-Just research the type of fish you have with them, for example some wrasses may eat them,other shrimps might not be compatible.

But good luck,enjoy the forum.
Thank you again for your advice. After trying to research and finding a lot of conflicting information, what would you suggest:

I have:
Soft corals, live rock/sand, conch, hermit crabs, snail, 2 snowflake clowns, purple firefish, blenny, goby, brittle stars, sea apple, and 1 little chromie (left out of 6, never found what happened to the others).

Should I get a peppermint shrimp, skunk cleaner shrimp, file fish? 🙄

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dc2sd
10-13-2016, 07:53 AM
how big is your tank? and how hard is it to reach the aptasia by hand? if it's not hard, i would recommend aptasia x. post some pics of your tank if you can. how bad is the aptasia problem? if it's only a rock, and you can remove that rock, that's an option too.

teamgroff
10-13-2016, 07:56 AM
how big is your tank? and how hard is it to reach the aptasia by hand? if it's not hard, i would recommend aptasia x. post some pics of your tank if you can. how bad is the aptasia problem? if it's only a rock, and you can remove that rock, that's an option too.
It's a 55 gal...not in huge amounts but is on several rocks and on the bottom of my leather coral. I did read that if they feel threatened (fighting them with chemicals or trying to pluck them manually) they could release spores which would create more.. sorry to ask so many questions, I am very new at this.

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teamgroff
10-13-2016, 08:03 AM
http://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20161013/fe2a4c5600b23bbf2e635cddff153850.jpghttp://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20161013/bffa72cca55b9044934050d7a3fb2f81.jpghttp://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20161013/641002f69ee37ca76588d658cb09f79a.jpg

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dc2sd
10-13-2016, 08:48 AM
if that was my tank, i would just take the rocks out and manually remove. use a knife or something to scrap it off, then a toothbrush to clean it up and rinse a few times. then back in the tank it goes. seems like with your rock structure, it's easy to take the rocks out. every option will have it's pros and cons. with your problem being pretty small, i would not recommend getting the filefish or butterfly. you risk them eating corals and also, the butterfly is not too hardy in my opinion (usually need frozen food).

teamgroff
10-13-2016, 08:49 AM
What about the ones on my leather corals

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dc2sd
10-13-2016, 08:49 AM
nice in wall tank, btw.

dc2sd
10-13-2016, 08:50 AM
same thing, take the rock out the leather and clean. the corals will be totally fine out of water for 5-10 minutes if need be.

teamgroff
10-13-2016, 08:51 AM
Oh ok...thank you so much!!!

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teamgroff
10-13-2016, 08:52 AM
This tank used to only be a SW fish tank with only 2 little live rocks, in process of changing over to a reef tank.

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jason142
10-13-2016, 09:01 AM
Welcome to sdr and great start on the reef!!!!

inurmind
10-13-2016, 10:15 AM
Welcome to sdr, this is a great community with lots of info and can be a great resource...especially as you're starting out!

Here's my 2¢ on dealing with aips

So AipX is a good thing to have on hand for the random nem that pops up on a new frag or something, kalk paste works well too. Nudis are awesome but they can get costly depending on what size tank you have and how many you have to add before they start breading. Filefish are good...As long as they have the taste for pest nems and not your corals (I also feel like they can't get into the tiny crevices in a lot of liverocks to eat the whole thing so you need to always have the fish to keep the nems at bay). Same goes for cbb but as already noted above they can be less hardy.

But I have to say hands down, my favourite choice is peppermint shrimp. Now just like the filefish, not all of them have the taste for aips. What I do is get a couple shrimp from two or three places (meaning more than one shrimp from more than one place), that way if one batch doesn't like eating them hopefully the others will.

Your system looks like you'd be ok zapping them with aipX or adding peppermint shrimp

Good luck and again welcome to sdr!

2ManyTanks
10-13-2016, 10:40 AM
I used aptasia x. Worked really well and didn't hurt the corals.

goof89
10-13-2016, 11:27 AM
WELCOME!
My tank is 60g. I took care of my aiptasia problem with a little aipasia x. (carefull using around other coral) and bought 3 peppermint shrimps. My tank has been aiptasia free since then and still have 2/3 shrimps in my tank.

fijisrfr
10-13-2016, 11:47 AM
If it's just a few, take some coral putty, flatten into a disc & smother those sons of bee hives!!'


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teamgroff
10-13-2016, 11:48 AM
What's coral putty...please bare with me...very new to reef

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fijisrfr
10-13-2016, 11:49 AM
The putty used to attach corals to rocks


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teamgroff
10-13-2016, 11:50 AM
Ooh!!! Would that get rid of them? And would it look funny on top of the rock?

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fijisrfr
10-13-2016, 11:51 AM
After a while it will blend in with the rocks


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Techknowledgy
10-13-2016, 01:09 PM
Aptasia X works great. Then spray the residue off with a turkey baster. Wait two hours. 20% water change. Gone.

teamgroff
10-13-2016, 04:15 PM
Thank you so much everyone

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