ID Please - Nudibranch? Cucumber? Sea monster?

Lylelovett

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Hi all,

So I found this thing slowly crawling along the waterline tonight...

It's about an inch long, but stretches out a little longer and shrinks back a little smaller. It looks like it has some little feelers/antennae on the front.

I for sure did not bring it into the tank at that size, or of any sizes really. Must have been tiny/egg/larva/etc or I would have seen it. I don't add that much stuff, and not recently, so it must have been in there a while.

I'm just coming up on a year into the hobby, so I'm new to mystery creatures. But I was thinking a nudibranch or sea cucumber? Hopefully not something more sinister?

Any ideas?

Thanks for your help!
J

ID1.jpg ID2.jpg
 
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redfishbluefish

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Oh Boy....that looks like a nudi to me....but I'm not good with these things. I'd pull it out now and hold it in a container for now. Let's get some more eyes on this that know a whole bunch more than me..... @KJ , [HASH=1]#reefsquad[/HASH]
 
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Homelander

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Yup, nudibranch. Not sure what kind though. Better to remove just to safe.
 

vetteguy53081

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+1 on nudibranch and here is my rule......

IF IN DOUBT, CHUCK IT OUT !!

Even if it were a berghia, I would rather take the loss on a worker than a colony being wiped out
 
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redfishbluefish

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Doing a quick search, these two popped up as possibilities.....bottom line, I'd pull it out (don't like nudi's)

Coryphella lineata

OR

Cuthona nana
 
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redfishbluefish

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Why don't you like nudibranch?

With few exceptions (Berghia Nudibranch, as an example) they eat the good things in our tanks. Most are not reef safe.
 
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saltyhog

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Yeah this is super cool looking!

Looking at the Cuthona nana, it looks nearly identical to some of those pics

Will make me sad to flush it. :(

Hey if you were absolutely positive it was that one you could keep it......they eat hydroids!
 

vetteguy53081

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Hey if you were absolutely positive it was that one you could keep it......they eat hydroids!
Without positive i. d. , not worth the risk of eggs (if not present already) and a tank wipeout
I’d rather have beautiful live coral than a Cute nudibranch
 
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ScottR

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Why don't you like nudibranch?
Each type of nudi has its own strict diet. One may eat aiptasia, one zoas, one montis, one sponges. If you can’t 100% positively ID it, you may notice that it munched on something you didn’t want it to.
 

saltyhog

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Without positive i. d. , not worth the risk of eggs (if not present already) and a tank wipeout
I’d rather have beautiful live coral than a Cute nudibranch

Sorry, didn't put the emojis in....I was being sarcastic.
 
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KJ

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Hi all,

So I found this thing slowly crawling along the waterline tonight...

It's about an inch long, but stretches out a little longer and shrinks back a little smaller. It looks like it has some little feelers/antennae on the front.

I for sure did not bring it into the tank at that size, or of any sizes really. Must have been tiny/egg/larva/etc or I would have seen it. I don't add that much stuff, and not recently, so it must have been in there a while.

I'm just coming up on a year into the hobby, so I'm new to mystery creatures. But I was thinking a nudibranch or sea cucumber? Hopefully not something more sinister?

Any ideas?

Thanks for your help!
J

View attachment 1166039 View attachment 1166040
Google Janolus sp.
 

Polyp polynomial: How many heads do you start with when buying zoas?

  • One head is enough to get started.

    Votes: 27 10.6%
  • 2 to 4 heads.

    Votes: 145 57.1%
  • 5 heads or more.

    Votes: 65 25.6%
  • Full colony.

    Votes: 10 3.9%
  • Other.

    Votes: 7 2.8%
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