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I'm losing confident in Aiptasia X and wonder why this thing is still on the market... surely not everyone has bad taste about it?
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File fish did all work for me but they also eat zoa too.
boiling water -I used a turkey juice syringe with the tip cut off. Works for the kalk paste too.
i use vinegar.We had a pretty sizable outbreak when we introduced some live rock last September. We used lemon juice in a 1mL syringe / needle. Inject right in the center and give each one a few drops of lemon juice. They immediately recoil and never recover... very satisfying. We're 6 months since then and haven't had any more issues.
The thing is you have to get it all. 1 cell left untouched will grow a new one.Why am I hearing bad things about Red Sea Aiptasia X causing them to spread instead eliminating them?
Basically this is what happened to me because of using Aptasia-X on the ones in the holes and crevices. I couldn't get the whole Aptasia because of their location and they bounced back in numbers. I added 10 Berghia Nudibranchs to the tank last night... crossing my fingers.The problem with injection is not the mixture but the technique. You have to have a very steady hand and get a good clean squirt into the mouth before the aiptasia retracts into the rock. I was pretty successful with killing the larger ones but not the small ones as they would retract too fast. When I did miss I would see more pop up pretty soon after. I got really tired of the cat and mouse so I picked up half a dozen peps (90 gal w/~6 aiptasia) and a week later I was aiptasia free (or so I thought). Aiptasia are smart pests bc 2 of them went kamikaze and actually flushed themselves down my overflow to live in the sump. I sucked 1 out last week and now found another one that is getting a little too cozy on my return pump.
So this works? I me a couple outcrops in my tank and I took the rock out and cut the infected areas out. I don't want to throw away the rock so it's in ro/vinegar solution.i use vinegar.
A good way to rid your aquarium of aiptasia is Berghia sea slugs. They eat only aiptasia, and are completely reef-safe. Their small size allows them to fit into tiny crevices to get stray aiptasias. They will lay eggs in your aquarium and continue to reproduce.Question: What is the best method in killing these Aiptasia (some is quite big; total of 3 approximately at the moment)?
- Peppermint shrimp doesn't seem to work (I put in 3 small one yesterday and I don't see them anymore LOL .... let alone them fixing my Aiptasia).
- I had a bigger Peppermint shrimp earlier this year and it seems to work on those Aiptasia but shame, I think it gets eaten by the BTA; perhaps what I need is a bigger Peppermint Shrimp?
- Prefer to fix underwater (don't need to take rock out if I can).
- (Information if it matters) Inhabitants inside: BTAs, Zoanthids, Euphyllias, Scolly, Rics, Morphs, Acans & 2 Clownfish.
Picture below is just reference and doesn't depict the real Aiptasia in the tank.