Caught a fire worm what do I do now

Fishy888

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Is there any way I can just kill everything in the rock but somehow preserve the algae and bacteria on it?
I wish it worked like that. I have some rock I got today that I’ve started curing. Hopefully the coralline on them will survive the curing process, or at least the spores. It’s not likely though.

Since the phosphates are sky high in the totes the rock is in I’m going to be soaking the rock in RO/DI freshwater. Once the die off has broken down and the resultant nitrates and phosphates go to zero I’ll use saltwater in order to seed it with life again.
 
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vetteguy53081

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EeyoreIsMySpiritAnimal

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What if I just dry out the rock?
No need. It's not a fireworm and you're taking the nuclear option to something that's not even a problem. You WILL have bristleworms in your tank...
 
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EeyoreIsMySpiritAnimal

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Leave it alone and enjoy the biodiversity
Agreed. Based on his other post, this is not a fireworm but a common bristleworm. No need to do anything.
 
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stoney7713

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Forbidden spaghetti
cat eating GIF


A trap would be best, where there's one....
 
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fishywishy

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I wish it worked like that. I have some rock I got today that I’ve started curing. Hopefully the coralline on them will survive the curing process, or at least the spores. It’s not likely though.

Since the phosphates are sky high in the totes the rock is in I’m going to be soaking the rock in RO/DI freshwater. Once the die off has broken down and the resultant nitrates and phosphates go to zero I’ll use saltwater in order to seed it with life again.
How are you curing the rock?
 
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