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jules11vb

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Ok, I have a few things in my tank and I don't know what they are. There is one thing that comes out more at night, I think it may be some kind of small anemone or something. Here's a photo of it...taken in the evening. Like I said, it comes out alot further at night.
n5oveq.jpg


Also, lately I've noticed small sprouts of straight course green algae (I think). I've looked online and can't find photos that look like it, so maybe someone has seen it before. My bulbs were getting old and it started to grow. I've replaced the bulbs now, but this stuff is on several pieces of my live rock. Here are some photos...
11uz4mx.jpg

qysom0.jpg
 

Saltysteele

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first looks to be an aptasia. bad anemone. spreads like wildfire and will sting other corals. use joe's juice, atasia control, or some other form of control to kill it. search the threads, plenty of information.

second appears to be hair algae.

photo's aren't real clear, but that would be my guess
 

paintballer768

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Nah the first is definitely a hidden cup coral, or something related to it. No harm, just kinda cool.

2nd is just hair algae. Your CUC will get to it eventually
 

RockCrawler

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jasonstan

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Aquarium hobbyists integrating Corynactis california into live coral settings provide hard stubstrates for colonial expansion, since this species kills coral and anemones when competing for resources.

found this on wiki, I'd juice it and not take the risk.
 

Psychographic

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It looks like a ball anemone, they don't seem to like light, which is why it comes out at night. From my experience, I found that the info about them being dangerous to not be true. I have a lot of them in my tank and none have bothered anything. I like them because they add some life in the caves and crevaces where nothing other than sponges and tube worms grow.
 

Jessy

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If your last picture of algae is single strand skinny green hairs then it is hair algae. If the strands have little hairs coming off the central shaft like a fern (still very thin and hairlike) and hard to pull off by hand then its byopsis.
 

Kate

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I have a couple of those anemones in my nano, and I put them in there from my large tank I sold, because they never hurt anything. I was told they were strawberry anemones, when I bought the rock they were on. I think they are very pretty, and they stay small!
 
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jules11vb

jules11vb

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yeah, it looks like a fern, so I guess it is bryopsis. Any suggestions on getting rid of it?

If your last picture of algae is single strand skinny green hairs then it is hair algae. If the strands have little hairs coming off the central shaft like a fern (still very thin and hairlike) and hard to pull off by hand then its byopsis.
 

Jessy

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yeah, it looks like a fern, so I guess it is bryopsis. Any suggestions on getting rid of it?
Ruby Lettuce Nudis and/or raising your magnesium are the only two things I've heard. The rubies are guaranteed to eat it, you just have to monitor your powerheads. Raising Mag is an observation by a few people that has proven to work in some cases. But what you have there isn't enough to sustain a nudi in your tank for even a week. If you can "borrow" one it would be best. In San Diego we had a few that got passed around from tank to tank.
 
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