I have a 20g tank that is completely overrun with aiptasia. I've tried all the control mechanisms:
Chemical attacks did... what they usually do. Nothing.
UV torch was... ineffective.
There's an aiptasia-eating filefish in the tank. He's fat and happy, but definitely not eating aiptasia.
There are three peppermint shrimp in the tank. They're loving life, and not touching aiptasia.
And I've tried berghia nudibranches on at least 3 separate occasions. There are no more berghia, but there are still lots of aiptasia.
The big problem with berghia, I think, is that there are simply too many predators, especially for their eggs. Bristle worms, fire worms, amphipods, various other critters. They can never reproduce in enough numbers to actually impact the aiptasia population. The bristle worms and the amphipods, I think, are the biggest problem. After lights-out, the entire floor of the tank is basically covered in worms.
The tank has other problems too, but the aiptasia is the big problem. If I could eliminate that, then I could take on the rest of the problems pretty easily (overgrown GSP, algae, etc). Pretty standard stuff, but it's hard to build up the motivation to, for example, clear a rock of GSP when you know it'll just get colonized by aiptasia. If I could get rid of the predators that take out the berghia, I think they would at least work well enough that I could remove the remaining aiptasia manually.
So, with that in mind... are there any critters I can add to the tank that would take out the berghia predators but not attack the berghia?
Current tank inhabitants:
2x Ocellaris clowns
1x captive-bred aiptasia-eating filefish
3x peppermint shrimp
Some snails
And a plague of worms.
Chemical attacks did... what they usually do. Nothing.
UV torch was... ineffective.
There's an aiptasia-eating filefish in the tank. He's fat and happy, but definitely not eating aiptasia.
There are three peppermint shrimp in the tank. They're loving life, and not touching aiptasia.
And I've tried berghia nudibranches on at least 3 separate occasions. There are no more berghia, but there are still lots of aiptasia.
The big problem with berghia, I think, is that there are simply too many predators, especially for their eggs. Bristle worms, fire worms, amphipods, various other critters. They can never reproduce in enough numbers to actually impact the aiptasia population. The bristle worms and the amphipods, I think, are the biggest problem. After lights-out, the entire floor of the tank is basically covered in worms.
The tank has other problems too, but the aiptasia is the big problem. If I could eliminate that, then I could take on the rest of the problems pretty easily (overgrown GSP, algae, etc). Pretty standard stuff, but it's hard to build up the motivation to, for example, clear a rock of GSP when you know it'll just get colonized by aiptasia. If I could get rid of the predators that take out the berghia, I think they would at least work well enough that I could remove the remaining aiptasia manually.
So, with that in mind... are there any critters I can add to the tank that would take out the berghia predators but not attack the berghia?
Current tank inhabitants:
2x Ocellaris clowns
1x captive-bred aiptasia-eating filefish
3x peppermint shrimp
Some snails
And a plague of worms.
