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Yay!Copepods/amphipods ! Great stuff to have in a tank.
Micro fauna is key to establishing a thriving reef ecosystem
Glad to see they are reproducing... This is my first time having them.Knew there was a better name for em. Just wanted to send him down the somewhat right rabbit hole LOLMunnid isopods instead of copepods or amphipods actually. Should be harmless though and big-ish fish will eat them.
So... to answer your questions....
1. Your parameters are a good indication of if you are ready, another way is to get a cheap 5-10 dollar frag of corals (zoas/palys) and see how they do in the system
2. Inhabitants will annihilate the population of pods and its good if they have time to form a big colony before adding predators. All my fish other than my chalk basslet will eat pods if presented the opportunity. My dragonface pipefish lives off em.. and thats a whole other story.
3. There CAN be too many pods but really its never an issue with people. I had an issue recently in my mangrove system where the pods were irritating my zoa colonies so, I added a predator, a dragonface pipefish to help with the control of them.
Do not think because you have pods you should get a pipefish, mandarin, etc. these fish require substantial amounts of pods and need the populations replenished often to keep the population thriving.
Hope this helps, if you would, come check out my youtube channel. May help out!
"melt away"?I've only had one zoa frag melt away out of the 7 I have and the others are thriving. That frag never looked good from the beginning so who knows.
They slowly stopped opening one by one and went from a grey to white color before disappearing completely. Once they die/melt (start turning white) things in the tank are likely to eat them from my understanding but wont touch healthy ones."melt away"?
They slowly stopped opening one by one and went from a grey to white color before disappearing completely. Once they die/melt (start turning white) things in the tank are likely to eat them from my understanding but wont touch healthy ones.
Anyways, back to your post. It all depends on tank size and the size of what died. Something small like 3 polyps of rasta zoas are not going to cause a dramatic effect in a 40 gallon like mine. Now maybe in a nano 10 gallon reef it may but it depends on your biological filtration. There are also palytoxins with some zoanthid and palythoa that you have to worry about but if you run activated carbon you shouldn't notice issues with it in the tank.I would think you'd want to remove it so the ammonia params. don't spike.

