Coral reefer
Past President
Hawaiian? I didn’t realize there are different types...
Exaiptasia diaphana (the most updated scientific name for the anemones most reefers call aiptasia) are a "cosmopolitan" species, meaning they grow in tropical and sub-tropical waters all around the world. It appears that some populations have been reproductively isolated from each other for a very long time, but we can get anemones from Hawaii to reproduce with anemones from South Carolina in the lab (although we can't get the larvae to settle and metamorphose into adults, but that's another story...). Interestingly, aiptasia from different parts of the world associate preferentially with different species of symbiotic algae (all formerly called xoozanthellae), and different aiptasia populations also invest more or less resources into asexual vs sexual reproduction. The Hawaiian variety we keep in lab (strain H2) reproduces asexually via pedal laceration many times faster than the Floridian or Carolinian strains we keep. My hope is that strain H2 will provide more food for the Berghia nudis more quickly than other strains, but don't let it into your main system or it may become a true plague!!!Hawaiian? I didn’t realize there are different types...
Nice! That’s promising.5 Berghia were given to @gaberosenfield. He gave me some Hawaiian Aiptasia. He‘s planning to breed the Berghia for the club in his lab at Stanford!
Wow, love those photos and discussion!So far, the 5 Berghia nudis given to me by @JVU have grown and appear healthy. They've laid quite a few egg ribbons and I've noticed a number of tiny nudis crawling around, although all seem to disappear within a few days. Maybe they are just hiding somehow. Anyway, I took a few pics for everyone's enjoyment:
A Berghia with one of the first egg ribbons to appear.
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Berghia with egg ribbon and aiptasia lit from below.
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Berghia egg ribbon magnified about 40x; the embryos are rotating around in their little egg sacs.
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Zoomed in view of the previous picture to about 80x; each embryo appears to have two little black eye-spots that aren't apparent in the adults.
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After seeing the eyespots in the embryos, I looked more closely at the adults and found the eye-spots: one behind each rhinophore!
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Although the animal pictured above is still pretty white, you can see the brown color of Symbiodinaceae algae taken from their aiptasia diet in the nudibranch's cerata (the tentacles sprouting from their sides that contain extensions of their gut). This demonstrates a phenomenon seen in a number of sea slug species known as kleptoplasty: the transport and maintenance of photosynthetically active cells or organelles from a food source (e.g. algae in the case of Elysia species and aiptasia in the case of Berghia species) to specialized organs on the sunward facing parts of a predator. It isn't clear whether kleptoplastic slugs actually derive nutrition via photosynthesis in the pilfered photosynthetic cells/organelles they isolate from their food, but studies on Elysia indicate these cells/organelles remain photosynthetically active in the slugs. These animals may have evolved kleptoplasty as a form of camouflage; if you live among your only food source, it is best to look like your only food source. What better way to look like your food than to fill the most visible layers of your body with the same cells that give your food its color?
@JVU has been breeding them and should have some...very reasonably priced.Me too. Tired of killing them with Aptasia-x. Seems like a temp solution. I’ve tried peppermints and against my own judgement a copper band. So far I see new baby aptasia popping up everywhere. Don’t know what else to do.
Can anyone on this thread spare a few? I have a IM-30 AIO.
@JVU has been breeding them and should have some...very reasonably priced.