|
#26
|
|||
|
|||
I've taken corals out of my tank with the Aiptasia on them, poured a little of Seachem's reef carbonate on them and in the holes, waited a minute, put them back in the tank never to see the buggers again!
It works the same as kalk paste. Just don't get it on your corals. I killed some Acan heads that way, but in a week they grew back.
__________________
Way too busy posting... |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
You also can take a solution of a lot of sea salt and a little ro water and hit them with the thick milky salt mixture. Be careful though, it will kill anything in the short vicinity though. I did it on a reef tank, and have never seen them return.
|
#28
|
|||
|
|||
what i did was I boiled water and kept on adding salt water until the salt would not desolve anymore. and then syringed the aiptasia. it was incredible, the heat from the water makes the cells expand while the salt crystallizes in mid flow and on the aiptasia making the cells contract at the same time, thus obliterating the cell walls, you do have to worry about your salt content though
__________________
"We will flog them and flog them until moral improves!" |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
A couple of years ago I followed SeanT's rook cooking recipe to the "T" Because of various reasons, my rock cooking was extended - 6 months total. I did change water, rinse and dunk, etc every week. ALL AIPTASIA was gone when I finally got the rock back into the tank.
__________________
Too young for Medicare Too old for women to care |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
I've tried just about every remedy I could find.......from Joe's juice to lemon juice to hot water to shrimp, you name it, I've probably tried it. Only two things have worked for me....Copperbands and Klein's butterflys. Klein's are hardier but riskier in a reef tank. First one I had ate all the Aiptasia and then ate the rest of my tank! My Copperband ( Abe ) died about a month ago after I'd had him for two years. Have a Klein's now who is a model citizen, so far. But the Aiptasia is still in the overflow and sump. So when the Klein's gone, Aiptasia will be back.
|
#31
|
|||
|
|||
thats good dkh0331 glad to hear you god rid of those little buggers
|
#32
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
I used a 55 gallon trash can, and threw in a MAG 24 for the pump. Ugh well dumb arse....... heat can't escape. Literally cooked the rock the water was at hot to the touch. I mean like scalding hot to the touch. Because however I new it would be a long time before I got back to it I just did a scrub and swish, changed the water. For about a month, then bought a couple of pieces of rock from a friend threw them in with the rock and seeded in the trash can. All came out great, rock clean as a whistle, and most of all no aiptasia.
__________________
Don't tell your problems to people: 80 percent don't care; and the other 20 percent are glad you have them...... Lou Holtz Click The Red House To see My Build Thread!!! |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
My main tank contains a copperband......tank was infested with about 200.....one month...no aiptasia....a few pop up here and there but they don't last too long....my copperband also eats brine shrimp so I don't have to worry about it starving to death.
|
#34
|
|||
|
|||
thanks for all the replies...added a copperband and aiptasias are basically gone...one small problem....the majority of the pest anemones are mejanos...too much of a problem to joes juice or squirt all of them with anything....kalk..boiling water, lemon juice , theres just too many....are mejanos as survivalistic as aiptasias if "cooked"?
any help will be appreciated...and thanks again |
#35
|
|||
|
|||
Quote:
__________________
Your tastebuds can't repel flavor of that magnitude! |
|
|