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- May 31, 2019
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should I really get rid of this? I love how they look but I’ve heard they attack corals actively. Came on a mushroom frag I bought today
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Where there’s one, there are 100. I pluck them out if they’re easy to get ahold of. I know they look cool at first but over time, they multiply like crazy. I can’t say I’ve seen any attack my corals however.should I really get rid of this? I love how they look but I’ve heard they attack corals actively. Came on a mushroom frag I bought today
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Lol. That’s hilarious.They've never given me any problem. Their numbers vary with available food. I've had very few in my tank and at other times a lot and couldn't see any difference in how my corals did. Coolest thing ever was when my linckia starfish started eating them.
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They came with my corals but have since never touched them since I put them into the tank. I see one on the glass right now and the other two that I know of are eating brown algae off my rocksIf they are on the glass all the time, they are the good algae eating kind. If you see them on around corals..." Danger Will Robinson"!!
That’s mostly what I’ve experienced as well. I’ve seen them crawl over bam bams and just chill on the polyps but I’ve never seen them mess with the larger polyps. I always take them out.I did some extensive posting about them a few months back. Most don’t eat coral, some do. It’s inconcl if it’s species or individual dependant but you can’t tell by looking at them. Small polyp zoanthids are most vulnerable. Larger palys are largely ignored.
If you have tiny frags they could be at risk, larger colonies are safer.
Side note, if you don’t have polyped (spelling??) things like zoa/paly, I wouldn’t think they would be an issue

