I need some advice.
About 2 months ago inside the Zoa/LPS dominant nano reef I keep in my office, there was an accident. After feeding my corals, I forgot to turn the tank back on and walked away. The reality is I used to always feed my corals and then go smoke a cigarette so they had a chance to swallow. I quit smoking.
I came back the next day to find my pygmy geometric hawkfish upside down dead, every single snail & stomatella in the tank at the water surface, corals closed, and what will become the theme of this thread, every spaghetti work in the tank had vacated their subterreanean homes in the sand and found their way to my rocks and corals.
I plugged the tank back in, removed the dead, and did a massive 90% water change, and then another 75% change maybe 2 days later. Three weeks after the tank had bounced back perfectly and you could barely tell anything had happened at all. Except for one rather annoying and particularly frustrating thing.
The spaghetti works all stayed on the rocks. Normally not a big deal. But in a zoa/paly tank they have been all over their polyps now for 2 months. They (the zoas) are constantly in a state of irritation due to the spaghetti worms and Im not sure how to proceed. Some of my bigger paly colonies that I've had for a while have stayed so irritated for so long they are beginning to shrink slowly and, I'm sure, are not far from a full on meltdown.
Has anyone ever dealt with something like this? I manually removed as many as I could but most have their bodies in the rocks and only their tentacles touching the corals. Is there a spaghetti worm predator? lol Any helps would be super appreciated. Pic for attention.

About 2 months ago inside the Zoa/LPS dominant nano reef I keep in my office, there was an accident. After feeding my corals, I forgot to turn the tank back on and walked away. The reality is I used to always feed my corals and then go smoke a cigarette so they had a chance to swallow. I quit smoking.
I came back the next day to find my pygmy geometric hawkfish upside down dead, every single snail & stomatella in the tank at the water surface, corals closed, and what will become the theme of this thread, every spaghetti work in the tank had vacated their subterreanean homes in the sand and found their way to my rocks and corals.
I plugged the tank back in, removed the dead, and did a massive 90% water change, and then another 75% change maybe 2 days later. Three weeks after the tank had bounced back perfectly and you could barely tell anything had happened at all. Except for one rather annoying and particularly frustrating thing.
The spaghetti works all stayed on the rocks. Normally not a big deal. But in a zoa/paly tank they have been all over their polyps now for 2 months. They (the zoas) are constantly in a state of irritation due to the spaghetti worms and Im not sure how to proceed. Some of my bigger paly colonies that I've had for a while have stayed so irritated for so long they are beginning to shrink slowly and, I'm sure, are not far from a full on meltdown.
Has anyone ever dealt with something like this? I manually removed as many as I could but most have their bodies in the rocks and only their tentacles touching the corals. Is there a spaghetti worm predator? lol Any helps would be super appreciated. Pic for attention.

