it is about 1inch long and was streched out a bit further, its clearish, and you can see what i guess is poop moving through it and out the back, but its doing it fast, you can see it chunks moving along. it has itself wedged in a crack.
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Small cuke.it is about 1inch long and was streched out a bit further, its clearish, and you can see what i guess is poop moving through it and out the back, but its doing it fast, you can see it chunks moving along. it has itself wedged in a crack.
medusa wormstill photo![]()
Ah yeah. maybe Medusa worm.medusa worm
thanks, AI said aptasia, which i was fairly certain it was not. should i remove it? also wondering how it got in there. something that big i would have seen on the coral frags. maybe the oceans direct live sand? or a portain of Caulerpa? it would have blended with that. in my fresh tanks my water lettuce got INFESTED with glass worms, they were so hard to see.Small cuke.
Remove the AI, keep the sea cucumbershould i remove it?
Someday I will try to return the favorRemove the AI, keep the sea cucumber
Don't use AI for reefing. It fails to understand nuance and is more likely to make an issue worse than better.thanks, AI said aptasia
It's a sea cucumber; I can't technically say for sure from the pic what kind (there are a lot of translucent/transparent cukes, and I'm not familiar with all of them at present), but if it doesn't have any tube feet, it's a "medusa worm."@ISpeakForTheSeas
what is this?
(I recently learned about Molpadid cukes which also lack tube feet, but these have distinct tails [usually] and a respiratory tree - basically lines of gills inside the body - while Apodid cukes don't; this is useful in cases where the cuke is translucent/transparent to easily differentiate).Yeah Medusa Worm is a term generally used to refer to specific kinds of Apodid (taxonomic order Apodida) sea cucumbers (though the term is also applied to Loimia medusa, a type of Spaghetti Worm, and is sometimes generalized to mean any kind of Spaghetti Worm - spaghetti worms are from the taxonomic family Terebellidae).
looks a lot like this one.It's a sea cucumber; I can't technically say for sure from the pic what kind (there are a lot of translucent/transparent cukes, and I'm not familiar with all of them at present), but if it doesn't have any tube feet, it's a "medusa worm."
(I recently learned about Molpadid cukes which also lack tube feet, but these have distinct tails [usually] and a respiratory tree - basically lines of gills inside the body - while Apodid cukes don't; this is useful in cases where the cuke is translucent/transparent to easily differentiate).