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Dinophilid worm, probably a Dinophilus or Dimorphilus species - either way, they're harmless/beneficial:How worried should I be about all of these worms in my sand bed??
This density of these critters is scary!!
Interstitial annelid about 1mm in length and among the tiniest animals. Good hitchhiker. Feeds on detritus, bacteria, protozoa, unicellular algae and diatoms.
Are you sure that these are not planaria that I need to somehow eradicate? They appear to be the reason my sand is also clumping…
100% yes. These are definitely Dinophilid worms.Here is a clearer video of just one of them…note the two eyes and arrow shaped head.
Okay - so nothing to worry about. Thanks @ISpeakForTheSeas !100% yes. These are definitely Dinophilid worms.
it all makes sense now. These critters exploded in number in the tank due to the increasing diatoms population in the tank…which was triggered when I began dosing my tank with silicates to compete against dinos…They look similar, but the difference is that dinophilid has a 6-7 segmented body whereas planaria’s silhouette is smooth. Yours is definitely segmented. I had this worry too some months ago.
it all makes sense now. These critters exploded in number in the tank due to the increasing diatoms population in the tank…which was triggered when I began dosing my tank with silicates to compete against dinos…
Thanks. Seen these around occasionally but had no good name and no good leads to start a search.100% yes. These are definitely Dinophilid worms.
Haha, yeah, I find a lot of worms basically by chance - finding a kind that I'm totally unfamiliar with is often a lost cause otherwise.Thanks. Seen these around occasionally but had no good name and no good leads to start a search.
"Worm" encompasses like the vast majority of animal classification types on this planet.
So "some kind of worm" narrows down absolutely nothing, lol.