Anemone accident

Fin Jackson

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Nov 7, 2020
Messages
166
Reaction score
66
Location
Sydney
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Hi,
I moved a rock from a group of rocks today during my water change that I didn’t realise had a few BTAs on them. Long story short after the water change I found one of my anemones floating around almost torn in half. The anemone must have had his foot on the rock I moved and spread it to the next rock over. Moved him over to my frag tank (same system) and put him in a little breeder box with some rubble. My question is would the anemone release any toxins into the tank and is the Anemone likely to heal, or is it better the take it out straight away. Torn the whole way through (body, foot and mouth). Currently located in low light and low flow area. Pictures attached below.

F5D7CB04-0F0C-4814-B025-C6FF4C189ECC.jpeg 4E3BBC1C-244E-4255-9C9D-0E8D8A940605.jpeg 728F1FC6-82DC-4FBF-BEED-9D0DF47214DC.jpeg
 
OP
OP
F

Fin Jackson

Active Member
View Badges
Joined
Nov 7, 2020
Messages
166
Reaction score
66
Location
Sydney
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
Awesome, just herd of people having really bad experiences with these types of situations. Thanks for the reply!
BTA will be fine. More than likely you will have two of them in a week or so.
 

TOP 10 Trending Threads

HOW DO YOU ADJUST YOUR CUC AS ALGAE DISAPPEARS?

  • Capture and re-home CUC

    Votes: 10 8.3%
  • Increase white light/hours in tank to spur algae growth to feed CUC

    Votes: 8 6.6%
  • Feed nori to support CUC

    Votes: 39 32.2%
  • Feed herbivore pellets to support CUC

    Votes: 43 35.5%
  • Allow attrition to balance CUC and algae

    Votes: 52 43.0%
  • Provide macro algae to feed CUC

    Votes: 8 6.6%
  • Introduce CUC predators

    Votes: 1 0.8%
  • Other (please explain)

    Votes: 12 9.9%
Back
Top