Monday, March 8, 2010

Long Tentacle Anemone

After changing my mind about purchasing a Copper Banded Butterfly fish (who wants to feed a fish live food twice a day?!), I decided to go with an anemone at Vets-Pets. An anemone still requires feeding, but it'll catch food during feeding time and I'll hand feed it once a week or so.
I created plenty of space for this new, purple animal on the right side of my 110 gallon reef aquarium. The LTA (Macrodactyla doreensis) is known to expand to 18" in diameter. I think after reefkeeping for a few years, my tank (and I) would be mature enough to support the anemone. Plus, this is one of the more hardy species of anemones to keep in a reef aquarium.
The clowns were not happy because I moved their egg-bearing mushroom rock to make room for the new anemone. They were swatting at the new arrival with their tails and pouring sand on it after I introduced it to the tank.
Here is the poor anemone trying to adjust after a 1 hour drip-acclimation:

This is the adjusted anemone the next morning. I even added several cups of sand to surround the foot. The clowns don't see it as a threat anymore. I think they may considering using the new real estate containing the purple mansion as an upgrade home for their expanding family.
Here's a flash picture of the anemone. The tentacles are conforming to the corkscrew shape characteristic of the "corkscrew anemone". Now, the trick is to keep this animal comfortable enough to stay in one place. Otherwise, it'll wreak havoc by stinging my other corals to death. How do you keep an animal with no brain happy? Feed it!
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Monday, March 1, 2010

Purple Tang Removal

I tried using the 2-liter empty bottle method for capturing the Purple Tang, but the fish was too large. I even tried a plastic spaghetti holder with food placed at the bottom, but was only able to capture the Naso Tang. So, after moving the Naso Tang to the QT tank, I locally rented a larger fish trap from Aquatic Warehouse.
The Purple Tang took a few hours trying to figure out how to get inside the acrylic box trap. I had to use the turkey baster to swirl the Mysis Shrimp food to gain back his interest. He kept pecking from the outside of the box. When he finally entered the box, I yanked on the fishing line to close the trap. The box went up in the excitement, landed on my yellow bird's nest coral and broke it off.
Once the Purple Tang was caught, I called up the guy waiting to purchase the fish. He came to my house within 1/2 hour to take the fish to its new home.
While I was waiting, the Naso Tang was taken from the QT tank and placed back in the main tank. He was a little disoriented, but seemed to be saying his goodbyes to the old bully as he swam against the fish trap containg the Purple Tang.
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