So here’s what I’m thinking. I was planning to leave the Aiptasia in the tank for a few days to se if the berghia eats it. (Would rather give it back to my friend rather than kill it) If the Aiptasia isn’t eaten in a few days, I’ll manually remove it with tweezers. Would that work?
Also 2 questions
1. What is this purple spot that is growing in the sand?
2. Any idea what this brine shrimp looking thing is?
If your talking about aptasia, removal with tweasers won't work, if the tiniest bit is left it will regrɔw into a full one. (If anything put super glue over the entire thing don't scrap or try manual removal same issue as described above)
They can be so small that you can't see them with your eyes. You pat yourself on the back thinking problem solved weeks later instead of that one you had now you have 5.
What ever you do don't try to remove them inside your tank If you piss them off in the tank they can release tons of spores through out your tank and in stead of 1 a few weeks from now you will awake to find dozens.
What your presently faced with is a tough question is the risk worth the potential rewards? No one here wants to see you just starting out facing a uphill battle. You have just started the tank the easist thing for you to do is just restart it. It gets very diffcult when you have tons of coral and plenty of fish. We would hate to see you get excited starting out only to later give up outta frustration from fighting potentially endless battle in reefing as many do. Just so you know all the imput here is intended to encourage you first and second to ensure you will start with the best chance for success.
There are people here who's probably been reefing longer than I've been alive and they struggle with aptasia. You really don’t wanna start off by dealing with it.
A alternative suggestion for you.
Get a 5 gallon bucket, or container of some kind large enough to fully submerge your rock and keep it in there. Super glue the aptasia. Keep a ɛyɛ on the rock for maybe 2 weeks to see if any more pop up. Meanwhile drain all the water from your tank and refill with rodi.
Leave it that way for 2-3 days. Than you can add salt directly to your tank to mix it. (Fyi Never do that with anything living inside your tank) it won't hurt you as you have no coral or live stock.
The mushrooms you have on the rock, breifly pull the rock out the water so they shink up a little, take a hammer and flat head screw driver or chisel and tap until the rock right under the foot of the mushrooms breaks off. It should give you one or two frags. You can get a seprate container smaller just to cover the frags with salt water, you can float those in the tank of rodi with heater going. Or use one of the little plastic clamps to hold the container they are in so no fresh water gets into that container that's holding the mushrooms. They will be fine for 2-3 days while you let the fresh water take out anything unwanted that may have gotten into your tank. Capture the nudibranch and return it to your friend.
With the size of your tank you can easily get enough live rock from members near you. If you where closer I'd be more than willing to even drop some off to you.
Some of us may respond with slightly different tones but we all wish for you to be successful.
If you want some live rock just ask who's near you that may have some they can spare. You maybe surprised of the response you get.
Good luck!!!
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