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FAQs on the Hydrozoans 2
Related Articles:
Hydrozoans 1,
Cnidarians, Fire Corals,
Stylasterines, Hydrozoan Jellies,
Related FAQs: Hydrozoans 1,
Hydrozoan Identification, Hydrozoan
Behavior, Hydrozoan Compatibility,
Hydrozoan Selection, Hydrozoan
Systems, Hydrozoan Feeding,
Hydrozoan Disease, Hydrozoan
Reproduction, Medusoids/Jellies (Ctenophores, some Hydrozoans,
Scyphozoans): Jelly
Identification, Jelly Behavior,
Jelly Compatibility, Jelly Selection,
Jelly Systems, Jelly Feeding,
Jelly Disease, Jelly Reproduction,
Fire Corals,
Lace Corals,
Stinging-celled Animals Some
fishes are relatively immune to most Hydrozoan stings. | 
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Variation in hydroids? 4/15/06 Good day WWM
crew! You folks the bomb! <Boom, boom da boom...> Sew, I
noticed on reefcentral, on their current (4-14-06) homepage, for their
slideshow presentation, they have some images of hydroids mixed in
there. <Are common in shallow reef environments...> I've had
what I thought to be a rather small colony though spreading all over
rockwork, of polyps. They look like a mini version of snake polyps or a
variation of a small yellow polyp. I can provide images if needed.
<Please do> My question, mainly.....these guys in my tank, that look
almost identical to the slideshow on reefcentral, retract when touched
or if anything moves or swims by them.....so, are there any species of
hydroids that retract? <Likely so> If so, I would have never
known such....and am craving a definitive answer. Thanks very much for
your time, look forward to hearing from you. Hydroidy polyp.
<Please read here:
http://wetwebmedia.com/hydrozoans.htm and the linked FAQs file
above. Bob Fenner> Hydroid identification... no graphic -
2/15/2006 Hey pros got a quick question for you. I was
browsing through your array of posts and articles when I stumbled upon
the "Hydrozoan" section. I looked through the photos and found one that
is similar to something I have in my tank. The picture I'm referring to
is under a post entitled "Bad boyz hydroids- 12-30-03. The picture
shows small tube-like structures protruding from the live rock with tiny
little white heads. <Covers many species...> I have something
similar in my aquarium. There are several small (1/16 to 1/8 on an
inch) solid tubes, purple in color (covered in coralline algae) that
appear to be growing out form the coralline algae (or maybe the
coralline is just growing onto it). On the end is a tiny filamentous
structure (looks like a clear bubble but it's very small so hard to
tell) but in either case it looks as if it could pull inside the tude.
<? Not retractable> These little tubes have been there for at least
a few months if not year, I never paid attention to them, and I have
never noticed them bother anything. There are no corals growing
near them, but I assuming if I see them in that spot then they are
probably growing other places too. All corals (Shrooms, xenias,
colt, zoos, and gorgonians) seem to be doing fine. Can I do a test by
placing a small xenia, perhaps, near this "hydroid" to see what
happens? Are these little tubes always "bad" or can they be
beneficial/neutral creatures as well? <As long as "stay small", to
themselves> I have seen other similar creatures that live in tubes
(some straight some coiled) that have feather duster like heads. I'm
certain these aren't harmful, but how do you visually separate these
from hydroids? <If trouble, best to remove, denude from
the rock> One post stated that they can look like corals, algae, or
jellyfish. That describes many small creatures I see in my aquarium,
how do I separate the good from the bad? Thank you Jon <...
a photo or drawing please. Bob Fenner> Little white
pests...but not Aiptasia...and other problems Hi, hope you can
help! <Will do my best> Background: We have a 125 gal
saltwater tank with 2 filters, protein skimmer, but no reef lighting
(yet). <... but some lighting?> Inhabitants are a yellow tang,
Firefish, coral beauty, 2 cleaner shrimp, a pink knobby Cuke, a dozen or
so hermit crabs, and damsels. (Neon damsel, blue damsel, humbug
damsel, 3 green Chromis.) We have several large live rocks, and a few
pieces of fake decorator coral junk while we wait to get the right
lighting to add the real stuff. Substrate is a mix of live sand and
crushed coral. Chemistry and temp perfect. Tank is about 6 mo.s
established. All is well in there. We have a 20 gal hospital tank for
inductees and sick guys, currently only inhabited by 2 cleaner
shrimp and a few hermits, about 4 months old. A few pieces of decorator
plastic caves, and a few pieces of live rock. Same substrate. Same
chemistry and temp as 125 gal tank, but our new fish don’t survive it…
not sure if something is wrong in there or if we are getting bad stock
or what’s going on. <Good list of speculations... you
are using your big tank's water there? I would> We don’t want to
introduce new fish into the big tank, because we’ve already experienced
“chasing down the sick guy” in the big tank, and it’s not good for
any of the other inhabitants. <Well-stated> We had two lunare
wrasses in the main tank for about a month that were trying to eat
everyone else, so we moved them to the hospital tank for a few weeks
before returning them to the pet store, and they were fine in there.
<Interesting... gives weight to the "initial bunk livestock" theory>
We feed with frozen multi-pack foods in the eve, and leave dried seaweed
pieces pinned up during the day, both of which are eaten voraciously,
but nobody looks to be starving, or even close, and the shrimp are
molting and hermits moving to new homes, but no visible food decaying or
spike in nitrates, so think we are good with feeding. Problem
#1: Every time we get new fish, they die in the hospital tank, usually
within 3-5 days of arrival. We do 10% water changes (in both tanks)
every week. We have tried a 100% water change in the hospital (several
times). We have tried restoring it with water from both the main tank
and clean water source to help match. <Ah, I see> (Water
source is completely purified, we bought a water purification system
solely for the tank water, and add Oceanic Salt.) <I would read over
re synthetic salt mix brands... on WWM, the Net... and switch to
something else (myself)> Occasionally we see signs of ich on the
new guys…when we do, we remove the carbon in the filter and treat with
Kick Ich…. <This product is worse than worthless. Please read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/homeopathfaqs.htm At best it's a
misleading placebo, worse, it may be poisoning your system to a degree>
but sometimes no signs of ich, they just keel over. We used to induct
our fish over a several hour period to the hospital tank, lights off,
adding ¼ cup to their bags at a time until introducing, but have gone
even farther now to a “drip method” where we place the fish and water in
a (covered, dark) container, and slowly drip the hospital tank water
into the container until it overflows into a bucket (4-6 hours or so),
before introducing the fish into the tank. Still they die. Any advice
or thoughts??? <Lots... for here, try a Polyfilter in your water
flow path... see if you "get any color"... You likely have a poison
source here... perhaps a bit of metal from... a clamp? Ornament? Check
with other hobbyists in your LFS/source store... do they have similar
lack of "luck?"> Problem #2: Several months ago we were thrilled to
see a bunch of “little white things” birthed in our 125 tank and
floating around. (Hey, stuff is living!!) =) They were free-swimming,
with a tiny ring of tentacle looking things around the top, sort of
hydra-looking, and may have been Aiptasia, <Nah... not this life's
M.O.> but if so did not last long. (Probably got eaten.) About a
month ago, there was a birthing of same in the hospital tank. We had
added some live rock, and also infused some water from main tank, so
don’t know source. At the time there were (doomed) fish in there, so
only one of the birthed critters survived. He lodged himself on a shell
and grew to be about an inch or two long! He was white, with a large
rotund belly, and a small hole at one end. <Sounds like
my ex-brother in-law> No visible tentacles, really, but a small
circle of very short hair like things around its hole. Interior appears
almost hollow. No narrow base, far removed from Aiptasia descriptions,
obviously alive due to growth, but not movement, (stationary in all
regards), and very ugly. Sort of like an onion? After another batch
(3) of new fish died, we removed him as well, as we did not know what he
was and he was therefore suspect. (About 3 weeks ago.) <Likely not
related to your fish mortalities, and don't know what this is exactly...
see below> Last week, there was another birthing of these things in
the hospital tank! They appear first as free-floating creatures with
little umbrella heads (very tiny), almost like hydras, but then affix
themselves everywhere—the glass, heater, shells in the substrate, and
commence to filling out with the wide belly onion look. They are
growing, and are now already probably 1/8-1/4 inch long. I have
searched and searched and can’t determine what these things
are. They fit the description of Aiptasia in how they arrive and
behave, but not at all in appearance after that. <Actually, not an
Actinarian (anemone) but likely a hydroid of some sort... a guess based
on your description of appearance and life history. Not desirable, but
no reason to panic either... they are originating from a bit of live
rock (strobilizing is the fancy word). They will "run out of eggs"
someday soon.> Any help? <Oh yeah, getting to something in the
way of a real solution... Here's the big wind-up and the pitch.... a
refugium! I'd attach another (live) sump container to your existing
system, put it on at least a reverse timed lighting schedule (do get
some light for your main tank if you don't have this as well), and grow
some live macro-algae, have a DSB there... Voila! Whatever the problems
are/were, solved. Please read here:
http://www.wetwebmedia.com/refugium.htm and the linked files
above till you understand rubber band. Bob Fenner> Thanks, Tracy
Stranded Hydroid! Yikes! 4/7/05 Hello WWM Crew, <howdy>
I have a quick question for you regarding a finger leather and a
strange set of tentacles coming from it. <yikes! they are not
from the leather, but instead are from a stinging hydroid. They can
be quite aggressive to other reef creatures and even burn your skin
painfully> I have attached a picture of identical tentacles as
what are coming from my leather but am unsure of how to deal with
this issue. <manual removal> I have only had the leather for
3 weeks now and it has never extended a single polyp. <Perhaps
it's irritated from the hydroid. More importantly... I fear you have
added this coral to your tank without a proper quarantine period.
Yikes, if so... it's a surefire way to introduce pests and predators
to your tank like this hydroid> Every evening these threads come
out and they are very intricate which is what led me to believe they
were not just mucous. I cannot see anything on the leather
itself by following the threads but there are 6 or 7 coming out.
Any help you can give me would be greatly appreciated. Regards,
Scott B. <There are many types of hydroids in the world. Some
look like corals... some look like algae... others more like
jellyfish. Caution with all :) Anthony> | 
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Strange Little Creature Hi All I have recently setup a marine
aquarium and spent a lot of time researching the do's and don'ts! I have
a 250L aquarium with Eheim Wet/Dry Filter, Red Sea Turbo Skimmer, and
Internal Jewel Mechanical/Chemical Filter (which I want to replace for
an external). The tank currently holds 30Kgs of uncured live rock which
over the last 4 weeks has gone from looking quite sad to very happy
indeed! and a further 20kgs of crushed CaribSea sand and shells. I still
have a few weeks to go though before any livestock can go in but my
ammonia is 0 and my nitrate is now 0.3mg/l. There are lots of
critters which I have been able to identify but one in particular has
got me, please could you see if you know what he is? He is living on the
glass amongst the diatoms which have started to appear everywhere,
should these diatoms be left alone until I put a cleanup crew in? <I
would clean the diatoms off the glass. That creature could possibly be a
hydroid, something you really don't want in the tank. To be safe, I'd
squish him. James (Salty Dog)> | 
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