I had a yellow coris wrasse (male) once that ate nudis.. or at least controlled them.
I've heard good things!
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I had a yellow coris wrasse (male) once that ate nudis.. or at least controlled them.
I just use a small brush to manually remove any eggs I can see, not heard of anything that will kill the eggs.I was considering using cleaning agents. I still might try it, no reason not to try. Eggs definitely seem to be the issue; how do you kill them without killing your rock/coral.
Thanks for posting your findings on which method works best.
Freshwater is most effective because it doesn't harm the zoas besides ******* them off for a few hours. The freshwater immediately bursts the membrane of the nudis because of osmotic pressure.
Keeping this in mind, the TLF coral dip that you did, while most effective in your observation, was preceded by a FW rinse. It wouldn't hurt to try the dip again without the freshwater rinse so that the results are purely the dip and not the freshwater rinse which is extremely effective in of itself.
Thank you.
#6: Two Little Fishies Coral Revive (best)Thanks for the input, what do you mean by TLF?
i see them on my larger palys and eggs on the palys as well. how about that ortho home defense that you used? have you tried it on the eggs? I saw it said "Kills eggs too" on the label. I too am currently battling them.
Bayer:
After 5 minutes the nudis were trying to move, but weren't doing so good. After ten minutes they were definitely dead, as was the star fish.
If I find more nudis I'd like to focus on Bayer and revive and see how weak I can make the solution and still have positive results. The three I found tonight were very hard to find.
Side note: there are a plethora of types of Bayer, I used complete bc thats what I saw being used online.