Worm ID. Friend or Foe

WaterWerks

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Some type of worm. Looks to have borrowed into the live rock. Haven’t seen the mouth/face yet. Seems to be just cleaning the rock scape.
Video prob won’t post. It’s about mid way up in the photo. Drags its mouth against the rocks. image.jpg
 

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NonstopSoda

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Looks like vermentid worm, a foe. Grows like crazy and can grow on corals with skeletons
 
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WaterWerks

WaterWerks

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Really extending out in this picture with light almost fully off
 

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ISpeakForTheSeas

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Yeah that's either a peanut worm (sipunculan) or a ribbon worm (nemertean) - if it's a ribbon worm, it'll have a pretty crazy looking proboscis it sticks out to hunt with (the proboscis and worm would be toxic); if it's a peanut worm it'll basically look like it has a little mop or just a small ring of tentacles around the mouth to feed with.

Ribbon worms can be harmful to a tank (and you shouldn't touch them with bare skin); peanut worms are harmless/beneficial.

In this case, I'm inclined to think peanut worm, but I can't say for sure.
 
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WaterWerks

WaterWerks

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Great photo. No idea about worms.

@ISpeakForTheSeas

Yeah that's either a peanut worm (sipunculan) or a ribbon worm (nemertean) - if it's a ribbon worm, it'll have a pretty crazy looking proboscis it sticks out to hunt with (the proboscis and worm would be toxic); if it's a peanut worm it'll basically look like it has a little mop or just a small ring of tentacles around the mouth to feed with.

Ribbon worms can be harmful to a tank (and you shouldn't touch them with bare skin); peanut worms are harmless/beneficial.

In this case, I'm inclined to think peanut worm, but I can't say for sure.
Watching it scrape the rocks. I didn’t see any tentacles reaching out. More like opening its mouth and then scraping it closed on the red rocks.
 

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