the pest is almost directly in the center of the frag disc among the zoas. What can I do to safely eliminate it before it becomes destructive to the colony? I was thinking of a peppermint shrimp, but theres no guarantees itll even eat them.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Unfortunately as you said there are no guarantees with a peppermint, however I feel it would be your safest option. The reason I say that is being its right in the center of a zoanthid colony, anything you do in means of manual removal whether its injecting it with hot water or lemon juice, or scraping it off and putting superglue over the spot it was in, has the potential to hurt and upset your zoanthid colony. At this time I think a peppermint shrimp may be the safest option.
Depended on your tank size you can get two. I have a skunk cleaner and a blood red fire in my 40 breeder and they get along just fineOk. I was wanting a shrimp, but was wanting a more colorful type. But peppermint it is
Depended on your tank size you can get two. I have a skunk cleaner and a blood red fire in my 40 breeder and they get along just fine
One thing to note about peps is that they will pick at some corals sometimes. I had to pull a pair from my tank once they took a liking to trachs. Joe's juice/aiptasia x will do the trick, but just be careful with application.
Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but as long as it doesn't get on the oral disk/tentacles of the zoas they should be minimally impacted by the juice.