Micro predator for a pico?

Kehy

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I've got a 2 gallon cube and while things are ok, the pod (of various species and sizes) population is nuts. It's at the point where the many large (3/8"+) pods are bothering the coral. I don't feel it's ethical to have fish in this tank in particular- actual water volume and swimming room are too limited.

Are there any non-fish predators I can add to maintain more reasonable pod levels?
 

Saltyreef

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A single flaming prawn goby would eat pods and be a stellar 2g tankmate as it dwells in the sand :)
If i had one fish to pick for a <5g nano that would be it.
 

BloopFish

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Porcelain crabs may? eat some copepods, but probably not enough to make a dent in your population. There aren't many inverts that are known to decimate pod populations in the aquarium reef trade, fish are more known to do the job.
 
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Kehy

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Hmm, well I do also have a 3 gallon that I'm fiddling around with I'd be more comfortable putting a fish in, so theoretically the 2 gallon could be a vacation all-you-can-eat buffet home?
 

malacoda

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Randall's (aka candy cane) pistol shrimp may help too. Also likely to form a symbiotic relationship with a flaming , hi-fin, yasha or other small prawn/shrimp goby.

That said, while the will prey on the pods, I'm not sure they'd do enough to cull back such a rampant amphipod population ... or, if the would, how long it would take.
 
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Kehy

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A thought: would a small anemone feed on the pods? I'm thinking tiny rock flower or mini carpet nem
 
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Kehy

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Update: no thank you.

gQ9zPkD.jpg


Hole is 3/4 -1" in diameter, but I'm not going in there to measure
 
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Kehy

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Update for the update: was blessed with the easiest hunt in my life. The worm was over 6" long in the tank. I have an 8" tank.

TlZN7bR.jpg

THeF8QZ.jpg
 

Ef4life

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Update: no thank you.

gQ9zPkD.jpg


Hole is 3/4 -1" in diameter, but I'm not going in there to measure
They are good guys, excellent clean up crew. They really don’t bother zoas either in my experience.

edit - I see you say 6” - yeah that’s a little bit for a 2 gallon
 
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Kehy

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They are good guys, excellent clean up crew. They really don’t bother zoas either in my experience.

edit - I see you say 6” - yeah that’s a little bit for a 2 gallon

Last time I had a big one (5") it went right after my zoas as soon as I put them in. I'm fine with the little ones, but 4" or larger I cull.

Bleeding heart me though caught it alive, and it's in a holding cell. Contemplating making a pico so it may live in peace, and I can atone for my worm crimes

jdWAGeZ.jpg
 

BloopFish

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If you are deathly afraid of bristleworms for whatever reason, you can get an arrow crab or a coral banded shrimp to eat them. Though the former would probably quickly outgrow your tank. None of these, like the pods or bristleworms, are an actual issue though.
 

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