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It’s really cool looking. I’ll give it that. I never thought I’d get one. lol. So many years of seeing people post “is this a fire worm” and it’s just your average bristleworm. I did a double take and grabbed my camera instead of my tongs, lol. I could have grabbed it last night it was crawling in the sand.Yeah, get rid of it asap. You could rither remove them with tongs, trap them in a fireworm or leach trap or a wrasse/ arrowcrab are also known to eat them. Wear gloves though as they have a nasty sting. You can drop it in a bucket of tap or fresh water to kill it.

That is all of him, they have been known to regenerate if cut or torn into half.RIP little worm. You were truly![]()
It posted twiceRIP little worm. You were truly![]()

I agree, I think the worm is just a mature bristleworm.Many wrong answers in here. That is/was a bristle. Have not seen an actual fureworm in a long time. They are more rare in the reef tanks than you know.
I have a massive collection of bristles in my tank. Some are up to 7” long. Love them haha. My tanks squeaky clean.
Here are two colors variations. They have color variations based on how compressed or extended they are at time I feel. Could be wrong. Yea lots of them! Haha! That’s only a fraction of them that I own. By the way I sell them if your interested in a new one if you killed that one!
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Hermodice carunculata, the bearded fireworm isnt really found in areas where liverock and other things are collected for the hobby, they mostly exist in the lower carribean and in the Mediterranean. While most of the livestock and liverock for this hobby come from the indo-pacific and the upper carribean.I dunno about that @winxp_man … the worm I pulled out matches the description of a bearded fireworm. I really don’t see the difference.
The rock came from the keys. So really not far off from the Caribbean and they could be moving northward as the waters are warming.I agree, I think the worm is just a mature bristleworm.Many wrong answers in here. That is/was a bristle. Have not seen an actual fureworm in a long time. They are more rare in the reef tanks than you know.
I have a massive collection of bristles in my tank. Some are up to 7” long. Love them haha. My tanks squeaky clean.
Here are two colors variations. They have color variations based on how compressed or extended they are at time I feel. Could be wrong. Yea lots of them! Haha! That’s only a fraction of them that I own. By the way I sell them if your interested in a new one if you killed that one!
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Hermodice carunculata, the bearded fireworm isnt really found in areas where liverock and other things are collected for the hobby, they mostly exist in the lower carribean and in the Mediterranean. While most of the livestock and liverock for this hobby come from the indo-pacific and the upper carribean.I dunno about that @winxp_man … the worm I pulled out matches the description of a bearded fireworm. I really don’t see the difference.
Theres also a lot of misinformation about "fireworms" they arent predators, they are mostly detrivores and oppritunistic feeders.
Your worm is also visually different than a bearded fireworm, make sure you use authoritative sources when comparing pictures. Theres a lot of mislabeled pictures, most are from hobbyists thinking they have a fireworm.
The link you provided shows this photo:@daikaijureefer what you are showing looks like all older bristle worms I have in my tank.
Here is a photo of a fireworm https://www.reef2reef.com/threads/anyone-have-fire-worms.324447/