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My jellyfish things are very tiny and look like those badminton ballsAlso, here's a direct link to them on imgur that you can use if they're not showing up in that post.
Here's a better pictureThey could be the hydroid medusae but it's difficult to tell from your picture. About how large are they? Here is a picture of a hydroid medusa I took with a microscope after a bloom in my tank.
It does look like those, are they harmful?They could be the hydroid medusae but it's difficult to tell from your picture. About how large are they? Here is a picture of a hydroid medusa I took with a microscope after a bloom in my tank.
Mine has longer tentaclesThey could be the hydroid medusae but it's difficult to tell from your picture. About how large are they? Here is a picture of a hydroid medusa I took with a microscope after a bloom in my tank.
Thanks, are they harmful?Still hard to see, but I'd say medusa stage hydroid is more likely. There are a number of creatures with at least one life cycle stage that looks like a jelly that can be in our tanks, but hydroids are the most common and that clear bell with little dots around the rim seems to be a more common one of them too.
Not generally. There are kinds of colonial hydroids which, if in a tank well fed with particulate foods, can grow rapidly and cover surfaces where other organisms would be, but most don't, and I don't know if catching and removing the medusae would be at all effective in reducing or controlling the population even if they were a harmful type.Thanks, are they harmful?
Here's a somewhat better pictureYour pics are sadly not good enough to identity anything.
Some pics made by me.
These jellyfish are hitchhikers that come either with freshly hatched artemia or get released from sessile jellyfish that are somewhere growing on live rock. In both cases they will die pretty fast inside a regular reef tank.
To figure out if they are harmful or not, you would have to find the sessile jellyfish colony in your tank, if there are any.
Like this thing?
This is my colony. They have a green fluorescent color and I can frag them like a regular coral. They don't multiply fast and stay in the same spot. A week ago a coral had fallen on that colony damaging it. They are quite sensitive.
I heard from other species that can turn into a pest because they spread fast and are hard to remove and are much more sturdy.
That looks more like a feather duster worm than a hydroid polyp in this case.Like this thing?
This pic is good enough to confirm that it's either a hydroid or jellyfish medusa, probably a hydroid.Here's a somewhat better picture
Thats a feather duster worm. Their tubes are made out of calcium. Jellyfish tubes are out of chitin or something similar.Like this thing?
I mean, yes, these look like jellyfish. Have you fed with self hatched artemia? Or do you have live rock in the tank. The sessile form could be a pest, or harmless like mine.Here's a somewhat better picture
I've never fed artemia before and I only use dead rockThats a feather duster worm. Their tubes are made out of calcium. Jellyfish tubes are out of chitin or something similar.
I mean, yes, these look like jellyfish. Have you fed with self hatched artemia? Or do you have live rock in the tank. The sessile form could be a pest, or harmless like mine.