New ciliata

  • Thread starter Thread starter Hadla
  • Start date Start date
  • Tagged users Tagged users None

Hadla

Well-Known Member
View Badges
Joined
Jul 19, 2014
Messages
797
Reaction score
619
Location
Sacramento, CA
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
You learn something new every day! Finally got my favorite species of mantis shrimp again a month ago! He's a Pseudosquilla ciliata. I just noticed the small orange spots on him which turns out to be shell rot and is caused by very bright lights. I have never seen it in my 12 years of mantis keeping!

Luckily he will recover in a few molts, it's not at the point that there are holes in his shell. I'm going to lower the light over his tank... some led light settings are just way too bright


Excuse the dirty glass lol
 

Attachments

  • IMG_6343.mov
    71.1 MB
I found the mantis shrimp subreddit and saw some pictures with the same spots on them and one of the comments said it’s from too bright of a light and I already knew it happened a lot in peacocks if they had bright light so it made sense
 
Photo-reactive shells? Sounds crazy, but who knows I guess. ;)

I wonder if it's natural or some kind of photo-sesnsitizataion due to chemical or metal exposure? Inverts can be really sensitive.
 
Any notable difference in your setup this time vs others in the past? Style of plumbing or tank? Filtration differences?
 
Looks more like an injury than shellrot but I'd need a clearer look. Could even be healing from a previous infection.

Lights have correlation with shell disease but never causation. Turning whites down helps the same way it does with algae.

Mantis shrimp that are stressed/injured will develop the disease more frequently in dim tanks than ones that are happy in pristine water in SPS metal halide reefs.

This one is a spearer which won’t pinch inverts so they are safe with him :)

This is not actually true, spearers can punch and I've been hit by an L. maculata myself. Spearers don't use their clubs as tools typically but they will use them for hard bodied prey and warning shots all the same, they just have their preferences in the same way fish tend to 'work out' with our smashers.

Smashers, similarly, can spear as well and those are what cause deep infections/stitches/etc as they're serrated and get stuck in your skin (soft bodied), its the worst possible outcome to get speared by any of them. Hermit crabs and snails aren't perfectly safe and can be broken into, they just typically won't bother over softer shrimp/fish/frozen if offered.
 
Last edited:
Thanks for the info! The mantis didn’t have the spots on his back when I got him in the mail from kpaquatics so I think it’s the start of shell rot but who knows? I guess I’ve just been lucky with spearers not bothering inverts lol

I’m not afraid of putting my hands in with the small mantises but I’d never try with the large spearers!
 

TOP 10 Trending Threads

ARE YOU READY TO CONFESS TO CRAZIEST, DUMBEST, FUNNIEST THING YOU’VE EVER DONE IN REEFING?

  • Yeah, I'll confess! (Share your story in the comments!)

    Votes: 18 58.1%
  • Nah, I'll keep mine a secret...(Don't be like that, share with the class!)

    Votes: 13 41.9%
Back
Top
Home
Post thread…
Market
What's new