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This is a polyclad flatworm and while not as harmful as red planaria, they in numbers can smother bases of coral and block the needed light for production of zooxanthellae which is their energy source.
Yeah I'll have to manually remove it. Dipping is not an option at the moment.OP, this is definitely a polyclad flatworm of some kind - Euphyllia Eating Flatworms are one kind of polyclad flatworm.
Regardless of what kind yours is, it likely either feeds on corals or mollusks (snails and bivalves, including clams), so it is likely to be harmful.
Wow that's huge. When you say drop a clam in. What type of clam. Like a raw dead clam? Or a live one LOL.Try a clam dropped in the tank at night. I put one in for my new CBB and left it. In the morning the entire clam was gone and this huge polyclad was cleaning the shell. It was pretty amazing actually, to me at least. It was cool to watch and I considered keeping it in a seperate small tank but decided I have too many running already.
Yeah I did notice mine a couple hours before lights on, not sure why it was on the front glass tho.I use clams from the seafood dept. Thaw tu and split open. I have magnetic algae clips and I just put the clam in one. The worms are a bit light sensitive so best at night and check your trap before daylight. Can scoop em out with a net. Thinking about it a bottle trap would probably work better but I wasn't trying to catch one, just feed fish when I caught mine.