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I swear I have seen photos of people with RFAs and Riccordia right next to each other with no problems. Aren't they collected in the same areas as well? Here is a beautiful pico reef I follow that has a ton of both.
Well, I have some zoas that my maxi mini moved next to, and it didnt kill them they are open every day now. The zoas pushed around it and open every day even with the nem touching them.Adding up everyone's opinions, I think it being next to the riccordia shouldn't be a concern for me. I mean those riccordia have been there for near the same amount of time if not longer, and the RFA can always move.
Ahh the worries that come when a tank starts filling in. My maxi mini slightly moved over the night and is now covering half of my utter chaos colony!
Awesome! Hopefully that is the case here, and they are just closing as the main colony is not used to being covered/touched. Ive had zoas touching my RFAs and maxi mini for a while. They wont melt each other, but can definitely cause some polyp disturbance possibly just from smothering them from light.Well, I have some zoas that my maxi mini moved next to, and it didnt kill them they are open every day now. The zoas pushed around it and open every day even with the nem touching them.
This is the first tank Ive gotten to the point where everything is started to grow in. Pretty cool it can take time for them to get comfortable with each other! The complexities of coral/anemone biochemical communication is insane.Yeah they weren’t happy for a while, but they figured it out
You are correct - that probably was not the best assumption. But I do wonder if corals collected from other areas of the world than the anemones (or other corals) are more or less susceptible to stings.Them being collected in the same habitat doesn't mean they can safely touch. You can find foxes and pheasants in the same habitat, after all, but them touching isn't safe.
That said, yeah, the nems can move. They shouldn't be in serious danger from most stinging corals, as they can leave.
You make a point, but many corals/anemones dont have any skeletons and still love stinging haha. I am sure though that sofites and stony corals have had tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, or even millions of years of evolution to both sting, and be stung.As far as I'm aware, susceptibility to stings is mostly based in things like whether the coral has a skeleton to retreat into. Especially given that a lot of corals practice warfare by digesting the other coral; it's darned hard to be resistant to that.
I meant that the skeleton helps to protect them against stings, if they can pull their flesh into it and retreat from being stung. It's an arms race, which means all parties involved tend to suffer the entire time.You make a point, but many corals/anemones dont have any skeletons and still love stinging haha. I am sure though that sofites and stony corals have had tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands, or even millions of years of evolution to both sting, and be stung.