Anemone Acclimation and Trying to Prevent Moving

The_Paradox

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I hope this is not a superfluous post or what you thought it was going to be. Like a lot of people with bubble tip anemones (BTA) I have wanted them to stay in a specific region for various reasons from ascetics to not om noming my corals on walkabout. I started doing this method about 6 years ago and since then have not had one move with the exception on splits. In the past I have even been able to basically keep them in the sand. The method I have been using is to drill a hole in the rock I want them on, and gluing a "cross bar" this rock across the bottom. I have kept splits on premade rocks like this also until they had time to heal at which point I would give them away along with the rock. Since I have had questions about how long it takes BTAs to acclimate and how to prevent movement, I figured I would document it this time. I started with a cured (~30 days) piece of live rock and drilled a 2" hole through it. Of course I cured it wrong side up so despite my best planning, I am gonna be stuck with a white rock for a while. Because I like Hard Mode, I placed the rock directly in front of a powerhead at the bottom of the tank. I started with a BTA not from my tank so this was not acclimated to the tank conditions. So far after two weeks there has been no observable movement of its foot. Generally I like to wait three to four months before I consider a BTA happily settled so I will update this thread periodically. Obviously for this to work your tank needs to meet the basic requirements to keep a BTA. Hopefully this helps someone, if not... NO REFUNDS!

anemone.jpg
 

CasperOe

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I hope this is not a superfluous post or what you thought it was going to be. Like a lot of people with bubble tip anemones (BTA) I have wanted them to stay in a specific region for various reasons from ascetics to not om noming my corals on walkabout. I started doing this method about 6 years ago and since then have not had one move with the exception on splits. In the past I have even been able to basically keep them in the sand. The method I have been using is to drill a hole in the rock I want them on, and gluing a "cross bar" this rock across the bottom. I have kept splits on premade rocks like this also until they had time to heal at which point I would give them away along with the rock. Since I have had questions about how long it takes BTAs to acclimate and how to prevent movement, I figured I would document it this time. I started with a cured (~30 days) piece of live rock and drilled a 2" hole through it. Of course I cured it wrong side up so despite my best planning, I am gonna be stuck with a white rock for a while. Because I like Hard Mode, I placed the rock directly in front of a powerhead at the bottom of the tank. I started with a BTA not from my tank so this was not acclimated to the tank conditions. So far after two weeks there has been no observable movement of its foot. Generally I like to wait three to four months before I consider a BTA happily settled so I will update this thread periodically. Obviously for this to work your tank needs to meet the basic requirements to keep a BTA. Hopefully this helps someone, if not... NO REFUNDS!

anemone.jpg
Thanks for that mate! :) Might adopt some of those learning points when I add some more BTAs to my nano next month!
 
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The_Paradox

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Thanks for that mate! :) Might adopt some of those learning points when I add some more BTAs to my nano next month!
Let me know how it turns out. Basically you want to give them a rock with a deep enough hole that they can adjust how much flow and light they get by just extending not just by noping out and leaving.
 

CasperOe

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Let me know how it turns out. Basically you want to give them a rock with a deep enough hole that they can adjust how much flow and light they get by just extending not just by noping out and leaving.
I'll keep you posted mate! :) Cheers
 
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The_Paradox

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Rock s now fuzzy as expected, clowns are still nesting powerhead… as expected, but RTBA has not moved.

IMG_2840.jpeg
 
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The_Paradox

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Depends on the rock. Spades work fine in softer rock. If it’s a harder rock, like that one, you can use the same hole saws you use for bulkheads.
 
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The_Paradox

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IMG_3346.jpeg


It’s all annoyed looking because it just split and I had to fish the clone out, but after 6 months directly infront of the power head it has not moved. For what it’s worth Clowns are still nesting on the power head. :face-with-rolling-eyes:
 
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IMG_3536.jpeg


I had completely given up on this pair but after 14 months they finally moved out of the powerhead and into this anemone. I guess it took them just over 6 months to decide they liked it. So much so they have been biting it and the coral next to it all morning.
 

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