Need help. Nudibranch pest?

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I haven’t added any new rock or coral to my tank in months but today I noticed a bright yellow nudibranch about 2cm long moving across the back glass of my aquarium. The back of the tank is rarely cleaned so it wasn’t easy to photograph it through the algae buildup but here are the vest photos I got. Is this nudibranch a danger to my tank? I don’t know what kind it is or how it has been surviving in my tank for so long. I’m worried about my corals or if it’s toxic to the water when it dies.
Can anyone help?
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Strawberry

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I haven’t added any new rock or coral to my tank in months but today I noticed a bright yellow nudibranch about 2cm long moving across the back glass of my aquarium. The back of the tank is rarely cleaned so it wasn’t easy to photograph it through the algae buildup but here are the vest photos I got. Is this nudibranch a danger to my tank? I don’t know what kind it is or how it has been surviving in my tank for so long. I’m worried about my corals or if it’s toxic to the water when it dies.
Can anyone help?View attachment 1271368View attachment 1271369View attachment 1271370
I would try to get it out if I were you. They can multiply quickly and they eat zoanthids.
 
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Perpetual Novice

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I would try to get it out if I were you. They can multiply quickly and they eat zoanthids.

but that’s why I’m confused. I one have one small rock with zoas on it. But been in the tank for the better part of a year and seems totally unchanged. It’s a large tank with such a small food source if the nudi eats zoas. And I found the slug on the opposite side of the tank. I took it out but where there’s one there’s probably dozens more.
 
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Strawberry

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but that’s why I’m confused. I one have one small rock with zoas on it. But been in the tank for the better part of a year and seems totally unchanged. It’s a large tank with such a small food source if the nudi eats zoas. And I found the slug on the opposite side of the tank. I took it out but where there’s one there’s probably dozens more.
I agree that it looks like a nudibranch and most refers agree that they are a pest. What type of zoas do you have? A lot of times these things can conceal themselves among the polyps and even take on the same color as the zoas that can make them hard to spot.
 

MERKEY

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Had 3 we bought for aptasia and when the aptasia was gone we found 1 colored like the polyp it was on. We haven't seen any more since I took it out.

The weird thing is these were specifically bought as the ones that only eat aptasia and then this started happening. And it would not be the color of the coral unless it was eating it.

So at the end of the day nature will find a way to survive even if we think they will die ;)

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Perpetual Novice

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I agree that it looks like a nudibranch and most refers agree that they are a pest. What type of zoas do you have? A lot of times these things can conceal themselves among the polyps and even take on the same color as the zoas that can make them hard to spot.

About 40 or so heads of cheap eagle eyes. The nudi I found is about 3x the size of one polyp and the color really stands out. I really don’t see any more the more I check.
 

NanoDJS

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First off nudis come in many many many varieties , and they all have specifically one thing they eat. Alot look very similar to each other , just like the berhgia coerulescens the pic above , and berghia verrucicornis the one that eats aptaisia , now called Aeolidiella stephanieae , they are almost identical. One is larger , and does not get the colors , the blue yellow is natural on those slugs, not from eating zoas like the slugs that eat the zoas . Sea slugs get into alot of crazyness so unless you put it in your tank on purpose , I would say take it out. It looks like the ones that graze in macro , with the long neck and cute little head , but it could be anything .
 
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Orphek OR3 reef aquarium LED bar

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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