worm with tentacles? id help please

Jack_L

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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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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.


Small cuke.
 
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Jack_L

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still photo
1772220510796.jpeg
 
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Jack_L

Jack_L

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Small cuke.
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.
 

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As others have said could be Medusa worm as well but it looks like a cuke to
me. I’d keep either.
 
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AI also told me to add 1 gallon of chlorox to my tank when i was switching from fresh to salt. i didn't do that.
 

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It doesn't look anything like a medusa worm to me, or any kind of spaghetti worm really.

The mouthparts do look like filter-feeding sea cucumbers though, so I'm going with that. It's like a tiny sea apple! It even cleans the tentacles similarly.
 

ISpeakForTheSeas

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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."
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).
(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).
 

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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).
looks a lot like this one.

 

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