What are those?

Mr.Kegel

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Hey! I'm new here, but have had a waterbox cube 10G since start of April.

My question:
I have some zoas(rastas) which have been closed up tight for a couple of weeks now.
Today I did a freshwater dip for 2,5 minutes and these little orange ish little things came off.
What are those?

I had the rastas on a plug for a month or so where they doubled in polyps, moved them to a stone where they where open for a couple days(5-7), then started to close up.

Best regards
Marc

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I'm not sure what they are, although I was wanting to say possibly flatworms, but most of the ones I see have more of an elongated shape and are bigger than those. I also just wanted to warn to be careful dipping corals in freshwater, I believe it's really stressful on the corals. Dipping corals is a good idea but most people use some kind of coral dip that kills pests, and not a freshwater dip.
 

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The ones in the last picture look like possible ostracods. (seed shrimp) If so, they could be hit or miss. As far as the first 2 pictures they almost look like baby limpets but I wouldn't rule out flatworms. There are some very round varieties like pumpkin flatworms for example.
 
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Mr.Kegel

Mr.Kegel

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I'm not sure what they are, although I was wanting to say possibly flatworms, but most of the ones I see have more of an elongated shape and are bigger than those. I also just wanted to warn to be careful dipping corals in freshwater, I believe it's really stressful on the corals. Dipping corals is a good idea but most people use some kind of coral dip that kills pests, and not a freshwater dip.
Thanks. I know it can be, and it was my last attempt to do something before I consider them dead. Everything gets a coral dip(can't remember the brand) for 5 min before added to tank.
 
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Mr.Kegel

Mr.Kegel

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The ones in the last picture look like possible ostracods. (seed shrimp) If so, they could be hit or miss. As far as the first 2 pictures they almost look like baby limpets but I wouldn't rule out flatworms. There are some very round varieties like pumpkin flatworms for example.
Thanks, I will look into those:)
 

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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