Can anyone identify this “thing”

Doles

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Does anyone know what are those pink “beads” on the algae?

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OP
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D

Doles

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The pink beads in the red circle
 

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Pickle_soup

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I have had something similar to that in my tank a long time ago. I was never able to figure it out. I thought it was eggs of some sort. Does it move?
 

DJF

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Is it maybe a sponge?
 

ISpeakForTheSeas

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Are you sure?- Tunicates usually have a different colonial morphology
Yeah, those are definitely colonial tunicates. For some examples of other colonial tunicates see the second quote below:
the little funnels around the outside are the oral siphons (the incurrent siphons - also known as buccal siphons) and the large mouth in the center would be the common cloacal siphon (the shared outcurrent siphon). So, the water would flow in through the oral siphons (then out through the individual zooid - each tunicate in the colony - atrial siphons which are hidden inside the common tunic - which is basically the skin shared by the whole colony) to the common cloaca and out through the common cloacal siphon.
Haha, yeah sorry - that's part of why I threw in the TLDR at the bottom there. Here are some photos of colonial tunicates with similar body structure (and some with - from what I can tell - similar coloration) to help decide if it is a colonial tunicate:
1671819041537.png

1671819101942.png

(The two above images are from here: https://www.mdpi.com/1424-2818/14/11/977 )

And the link below has a bunch more pics (some are different colonial tunicates like above, some are solitary tunicates):
 

Subsea

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Does anyone know what are those pink “beads” on the algae?

IMG_0272.jpeg
To the right of your circle of interest looks to be a red ball encrusting sponge that I get on Gulf of Mexico uncured live rock.

If you identify where the rock came from, it would assist in research.

image.jpg image.jpg
 
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ISpeakForTheSeas

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If you identify where the rock came from, it would assist in research.
Agreed with the above, but, OP, if you don't know where it came from, I'd guess Botrylloides violaceus - it generally comes in either orange, or some variation of this pink/white mix, sometimes with a little orange thrown in (see the links below):
 

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Subsea

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Read carefully as this looks to be highly invasive:


Botrylloides violaceus is native to the Northwest Pacific from northern Japan to southern Korea and northern China. It has been widely introduced to the Northeast Pacific, the Northwest Atlantic, and parts of the Northeast Atlantic. On the West Coast of North America, it was first discovered in Santa Barbara, California in 1966 and has since spread along the coast from Mexico to Alaska. On the East Coast, it was found in New England in the late 1970s and can now be found from the Chesapeake Bay to Newfoundland, Canada. It is a common fouling organism throughout much of its introduced range. It frequently displaces other fouling organisms, including native and introduced tunicates, bryozoans, barnacles, and mussels through competition for space and food.
Image Credit: Melissa Frey, Royal BC Museum, Canada
 

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