ID Please...looks like feathers!

foxfacelo

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ID.jpg


This creature has the following characteristics:
1. dark blue green in color
2. it has a feathery texture
3. it does not retract when touched
4. it moves in the current
5. appears as layers of feathers
6. fast growing (about 2.5" in 3 weeks)
7. It is touching a turbanaria and neither seem adversely affected
8. growing out of a hole in what was pukani dry rock
9. is located about 10" from the water surface with medium to high flow

The 220 gal aquarium is 5 months old. Temp is 78 degrees, PH 8.15, and is SG 1.026.
Lighting by Ecotech radion LEDs. Thanks for your help.
 
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Lionfish Lair

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It's probably a feather caulerpa, such as Caulerpa mexicana or taxifolia. Is it green or red?

There's also a basket star that looks something like that, but that's not it.
 

Lionfish Lair

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The white tips look like growing algae. Did you perhaps do a Google image search for Feather caulerpa?
 
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foxfacelo

foxfacelo

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The white tips look like growing algae. Did you perhaps do a Google image search for Feather caulerpa?
No white tips must be light reflection in the photo. Doesn't really look like the caulpera I Googled today or caulerpa I have had in my other tanks. Also my blue hippo tang, yellow tang, foxface, lawnmower blenny, hermits and snails are not eating it.
 

TheEngineer

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I agree with @Lionfish Lair. Reason I asked (and it was a reallllll long shot) was that it looked like a feather starfish on my phone. That and the fact that this was posted in the Invert Forum.
 

Lionfish Lair

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A feather star! That's what I meant earlier when I said basket star by mistake. I too saw the similarities.
 
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foxfacelo

foxfacelo

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I agree with @Lionfish Lair. Reason I asked (and it was a reallllll long shot) was that it looked like a feather starfish on my phone. That and the fact that this was posted in the Invert Forum.
Well I'll be a son of a gun! Based on everyone's comments I decided to pry some "feathers" away from the rock and under room lighting they were green. They look like "mini" ultra delicate caulpera...not like any I have seen before. I still can't believe that my herbevoires didn't devore it! Too bad it didn't turn out to be a feather star...that would have been cool! Thanks to everyone for your help.

Is it going to be a plague in the tank?
 

Lionfish Lair

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There's a few different species of feather and that one does indeed look different from the other more common varieties. It's like they always look a little "beat up" than the others.

I didn't find this one invasive like the others.... It was like it was almost too niche or something. I actually don't know the extent these can become a problem, they just never went crazy in mine.
 

Salty1962

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Inverts and algae eating fish won't touch bryopsis. Still my vote with all of the information you've provided.
 

Maritimer

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I've got something similar booming in my tank - and I believe that it's a form of Bryopsis algae. Prettier than green hair algae, but pretty darned thick in spots . . .

~Bruce
 

Maritimer

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Best I've heard for removal is to slowly raise magnesium, using Kent's "Tech-M" product. (It's not the magnesium levels that do the job, supposedly, but something else in the bottle which Bryopsis can't take at that level.) Got a bottle yesterday, and will have a go . . .

~Bruce
 

Salty1962

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Yep...I just Googled bryopsis and some of the pictures look just like what I pulled out of the tank. Thanks very much!
Glad to help. Pull out as much as you can or it will take over your tank;)
 

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