Help with ID

JHSteepat

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Recieved lr from tbs yesterday. I have an ID question. Is the red encrusting stuff a sponge???

IMG_9243.jpeg



I also got some form of sps (hard to see).

IMG_9245.jpeg
 
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JHSteepat

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Don't know what either are (second is too blurry), but the first is super cool!

The coral is small and towards the back with blue light and still a bit of silt on the wall, shootin with an iphone, so it was the best I could do. Will try for a better shot of the coral later.
 

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Yeah, the first one is a sponge - no positive ID on it yet (my current guess is an encrusting Clathria sp., but there are a few different sponges it could be too), but it's relatively common from TBS.
 
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JHSteepat

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Yeah, the first one is a sponge - no positive ID on it yet (my current guess is an encrusting Clathria sp., but there are a few different sponges it could be too), but it's relatively common from TBS.
I have this in a fallow tank for observation. While this and other organisms are beautiful, should I expect things like this to just die off? Should I even bother with feeding, such as broadcast feeding reef roids? I have pretty good light to at least maintain photosynthetic organisms.
 

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While this and other organisms are beautiful, should I expect things like this to just die off? Should I even bother with feeding, such as broadcast feeding reef roids? I have pretty good light to at least maintain photosynthetic organisms.
For most filter feeders you may get, you just feed some phyto and call it good (I'd recommend Isochrysis galbana (T-Iso) at the minimum and adding Chaetoceros sp. and Tetraselmis sp. if you can - adding more from there shouldn't hurt).

For the sponge specifically, they will probably die, yes, but you may well be able to maintain them too. That said, when it comes to sponges, there are things you can do/try to keep them alive. For the super brief explanation, you need the right foods in relatively large quantities, the right flow, and the right elements:

Food/feeding:
-Isochrysis galbana (T-Iso) or a blend of phyto containing it is a good idea.
-Bacteria, Cyanobacteria, Dissolved Organic Matter (DOM), Particulate Organic Matter (POM), possibly Diatoms, etc. are good food for sponges, so things like stirring the sandbed and basting waste off of the rocks in the tank with the sponge may be helpful (I know this may not be possible depending on the tank, but finding ways to get bacteria into the water for the sponge to filter is a good idea).

Your sponges probably won't feed on Reef Roids, as the food in Reef Roids is too big (I've seen it stated at 150-200 microns, most of the food consumed by sponges is DOM, which is smaller than 1 micron; even the larger foods like the T-Iso are only like 6 microns at the largest).
Most sponges that I’ve looked into primarily consume Dissolved Organic Matter (DOM - sometimes called Dissolved Organic Carbon, or DOC, which is actually a component of DOM) and specific kinds of bacteria (which kinds vary at least a little from one sponge to another). Most of them seem to have no preference for where their DOC comes from, but they have a preference for algal-derived Dissolved Organic Nitrogen (i.e. DON produced by algae). Giant Barrel Sponges and some Boring Sponges have had their diets analyzed, and they primarily consume DOM (~80% of their total diet, with the remaining ~20% coming from Particulate Organic Matter (POM - primarily phytoplankton and bacteria, though, as mentioned above, bacteria is taken in much higher quantities than phyto). This ratio of approximately 80/20 seems to be pretty typical(though it can vary from what I've seen by +/-15% or so one way or another) for most sponges from what I can find.
Flow (and Light):
I recommend reading both quotes below for flow.
If you do some reading on sponge keeping here on R2R, you'll probably find pretty quickly that most people recommend low lighting low flow for sponges (exceptions for photosynthetic sponges), but the truth is this also depends on the sponge species. The most common photosynthetic sponges in the hobby are the photosynthetic plating sponges (like you can find/buy on LiveAquaria's site), but there are quite a few other sponges that are photosynthetic too (such as Aplysina cauliformis, for example), and these would benefit from high lighting. Similarly, some species of sponge do best in very high flow areas, including high flow areas with laminar flow (a lot of people talk about random flow on the site, which would be called turbulent flow, as they're trying to get the water moving basically randomly throughout the tank - laminar flow is just a continuous flow that doesn't change, so the water keeps going the same direction nonstop and there's nothing random about it). If you're not sure if the sponge is photosynthetic or not, you can try starting it in one lighting (such as low lighting), see how it does and then compare it to a different lighting (moderate or high) and figure out its needs from that. Same with the flow. Light will probably be the most important part for photosynthetic species and the food/flow the most important for NPS species - some people have found stirring up their sand to be an effective food source for sponges, likely because it puts bacteria and DOM into the water column. It’s probably safest to start low light/flow and move up, rather than starting high and moving lower.
Should you decide to try and keep any of the sponges you're interested in, take note if you can of the sponge's surroundings and the flow it's in - if you can't do that, the link below may help you figure out sediment and flow preferences for any sponges you want to keep (the graphical abstract close to the top is a visual representation of the info presented).
Elements:
Basically, most sponges need silicates, and many need other elements that we don't often test for in tanks - I've heard of people having good anecdotal success with dosing ChaetoGro, so I'd probably recommend that at this point for meeting the other elemental needs of the sponges.
 
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JHSteepat

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For most filter feeders you may get, you just feed some phyto and call it good (I'd recommend Isochrysis galbana (T-Iso) at the minimum and adding Chaetoceros sp. and Tetraselmis sp. if you can - adding more from there shouldn't hurt).

For the sponge specifically, they will probably die, yes, but you may well be able to maintain them too. That said, when it comes to sponges, there are things you can do/try to keep them alive. For the super brief explanation, you need the right foods in relatively large quantities, the right flow, and the right elements:

Food/feeding:
-Isochrysis galbana (T-Iso) or a blend of phyto containing it is a good idea.
-Bacteria, Cyanobacteria, Dissolved Organic Matter (DOM), Particulate Organic Matter (POM), possibly Diatoms, etc. are good food for sponges, so things like stirring the sandbed and basting waste off of the rocks in the tank with the sponge may be helpful (I know this may not be possible depending on the tank, but finding ways to get bacteria into the water for the sponge to filter is a good idea).

Your sponges probably won't feed on Reef Roids, as the food in Reef Roids is too big (I've seen it stated at 150-200 microns, most of the food consumed by sponges is DOM, which is smaller than 1 micron; even the larger foods like the T-Iso are only like 6 microns at the largest).

Flow (and Light):
I recommend reading both quotes below for flow.


Elements:
Basically, most sponges need silicates, and many need other elements that we don't often test for in tanks - I've heard of people having good anecdotal success with dosing ChaetoGro, so I'd probably recommend that at this point for meeting the other elemental needs of the sponges.
I would love to feed phyto, but the cost seems too much among other ongoing costs, unless I start the hobby of multi-species phyto husbandry (I do have a microbiology background, but my wife will kill me as I now already have three tanks running instead of one).

That said, I do dose ChaetoGro for my refugium, and want to dose phyto, but need to figure out a cost-effective source of phyto.
 

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