Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I see it the same way with algea, aiptasia, cyano-bacteria, and bristle worms, they are all benificial ways that a tank could deal with excess nutrients in the water column (in different stages of organic decompisition), and they are all better than toxic water conditions. If you do not change the nutrient addition (feeding and organic dosing) and you remove any of these you should expect a bloom of one or all of the others, or rising nit and phos levels, ie; toxic water.
You might not like the way these things look but it is your tank trying to tell you somthing.
I would never remove bristleworms from a tank. They are beneficial scavengers. If they get really big and creep you out, then I could see removing them.