two rainbow BTA on the left and one black widow BTA that won't split on the right.Excuse me, what type are those BTA's?
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two rainbow BTA on the left and one black widow BTA that won't split on the right.Excuse me, what type are those BTA's?
Usually a toxin that one release wouldn't hurt that organism since it's the one that produced it. Leathers can release toxins. In the wild your right not much but it can be a few inches thats all the space the coral needs. As it grows a few inches gives it more space to grow. Who's to say bta don't do the same thing.I am very confident that is a smart toxin that hurt one BTA and not affect another BTA is essentially impossible. BTA is not that complex of an animal. The ocean is such a huge place that the practice of releasing toxin to the water to hurt your neighbor is not going to be much of an offense strategy, especially if the toxin release would also hurt the animal that releasing it. It is kind of like blow up a bomb at your house to hurt the people live next door. Nature is never that dumb.
Direct sting when it come in contact with the other animals is another matter, which is the strategy of all the reef animals when it wants to hurt the animal next to it in a tuff war. We do not see BTA sting each other, so we can conclude that they will live fine with each other. Other things can cause demise of an anemone, include infection that it is immune by some and not others. If there is death of one/several in a group of anemones that is not due to shading or to tank conditions (fault of the reefer), this is it.
We see this when populations mixed all the time. Introducing an animal that carries a disease that it is immune to but wipe out the native population (or vice versa).
Because not all bta are the same species.@sfin52
How can a toxin affect one BTA and not the other? Any toxin affect one animal will affect the same to another of the same species, because for all practical purpose they are the same. Even human with all out genetic knowledge cannot produce a toxin that affect one person not the other. This is only stuff of science fiction.
In order to be able to do this, the toxin need to be "smart" and differentiate anemone from the other.
We have cells in our body, not molecules, that recognize self vs non self. These immune cells would attack and neutralized cells in our body that it sees as "non-self". This is too much to pack into a molecule of toxin. Anemones have nematocysts that recognized non self and would fire them when it come in contact with other animals. Anemone does not sting itself because of this fail-safe mechanism. This in in direct contact, not release into the water.
There are plenty of people with multiple green, red and different cultivar that live together.Because not all bta are the same species.
Humans are all the same species we are different ethnicities.
I'm telling you I had a thriving green bta. Nothing changed in the tank accept I added a rose bta. The decline of the green was as soon as the red entered the tank. They never touched. The only thing that changed was the red. There's plenty of people who have had the same experience.
A much more logical reason can be that the Red BTA carries a pathogen that it is immune to, but the green one is not. The pathogen infected the green one and it got sick and either recover or died.Because not all bta are the same species.
Humans are all the same species we are different ethnicities.
I'm telling you I had a thriving green bta. Nothing changed in the tank accept I added a rose bta. The decline of the green was as soon as the red entered the tank. They never touched. The only thing that changed was the red. There's plenty of people who have had the same experience.
Hello! Can I ask how do you run your system? Do you have carbon, UV Sterilizer?Here is my 8" Acid Rain next to my 8" Black Widow.
Also in the same tank are a Colorado, Nexus Burst, Rainbow and Ultra Rainbow.
I kept the Acid Rain in a 10g tank with a mix of Rainbows and Ultra Rainbows for 3 years.
Hello! Can I ask how do you run your system? Do you have carbon, UV Sterilizer?
Well I’ve got a original sunburst and a rose bubble tip and they sit right next to eachother, the tentacles don’t touch and they’re doing fineHello, I was curious can you add a chicago or colorado sunburst anemone to a tank that has rose bubble tip and a green bubble tip?
I've heard that they will have chemical warfare and kill each other slowly. I'm curious on everyones take on this subject.
I want to add a chicago or colorado to my main tank but i have a rose and green. I do have a second tank though I can move these 2 "common" nems into if needed.