Sponge root things

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I have these sponge string roots growing all over . They are white and look like a tree root. Getting tired of pulling them off live rock. Will a starfish eat this stuff? :ops:
 
I have the same thing in the left corner of my tank. It looks like kinda like those big webs you see in trees off the highway. I havent touched it but it seems to be spreading
 
Let me tell you it will spread.


I have the same thing in the left corner of my tank. It looks like kinda like those big webs you see in trees off the highway. I havent touched it but it seems to be spreading
 
Heres wat it looks like

IMG_0547.jpg2.jpg


 
I have that too. Its a major problem and have lost a few zoas to it (smothered). Tried many thing to get rid of it without much luck.
 
Hey I got a frag in that had aptasia on it so I made some Kalk Paste to take care of it. I also put the paste on a little of the sponge and it killed a little of it. I am going to try it some more. I will let you know.
 
I had a small piece last week but I was lucky it was on a small piece of rock. I was able to remove the rock and get after it with a tooth brush. I'm lucky thats all I had..

JR,
 
good luck

:smile:
Hey I got a frag in that had aptasia on it so I made some Kalk Paste to take care of it. I also put the paste on a little of the sponge and it killed a little of it. I am going to try it some more. I will let you know.
 
Why take them out?

Here is a good read on sponges,

http://www.advancedaquarist.com/issues/april2004/invert.htm

I had a very similiar or maybe the same type as you pictured there many years ago. I started thinking it was a problem and pulled it out where I could but it would grow out from the rock lieke crazy. I posted on line and found out the sponge was nothing to worry about, and as my tank matured and I started running it cleaner the sponge growth went away. I love sponges in my tank they are a good thing not a bad thing. My angel eats any in sight now though.

From the article

"The aquiferous system is just as amazing: an individual Leucandria 10 cm long and about the diameter of a pencil pumps 22.5 liters (about 5.5 gallons) of water through it's body every day. The impressive sieving capacity of even a relatively small sponge is what has led some to champion their use as natural filters for reef aquaria (Tyree 2003). There is no doubt that sponges can filter a surprising amount of water through their bodies on a daily basis. This pumping capacity is even more amazing when you realize that the cells responsible for moving this water (choanocytes) are about the size of our white blood cells. Aggregations of several hundred of these cells form chambers, and these choanocyte chambers may be as dense as 18,000 per cubic millimeter in complex sponges. Each cell has a tiny hair (flagellum) surrounded by a collar made of other even smaller hairs (microvilli). The flagellum waves back and forth from base to tip, pushing water ahead of them as they do. Each cell beats at it's own pace, and pulls water from very tiny openings (ostia) all over the surface of the sponge (the largest of which are about 1/10th of a millimeter) into the sponge, along the cell body, through the collar which captures food particles from 0.1-1.5 μm (that's less than 1/600th of a millimeter -- about the size of a bacterium), and pushes the water away from itself towards a common exhaust system (the oscula). As water moves along the cell body, oxygen diffuses into the cell, while carbon dioxide and other wastes diffuse out of the cell into the 'exhaled' water. Some free cells (ameobocytes) cruise around through these water channels and ingest small algal cells, protozoans, detritus and other organic particles in the range of 2-5 μm. Other freely moving cells (archeocytes) take these captured particles and complete the digestion of them before passing nutrients along to the rest of the body. Dissolved organic matter (DOM) is extremely important to the nutrition of many sponges; for example, studies on three species of Jamaican sponges showed that 80% of organic matter taken up by sponges was below the resolvability of microscopy, while the other 20% was comparised primarily of bacteria and dinoflagellates (H.M. Reiswig, unpublished data, from (Reiswig 1975)."

I think the sponge you posted does depend fully on this feeding and with less detritus, and food in the tank for them they will not be an issue.

JMO
 
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These may not even be a sponge They are like tree root spider webs.
If I wanted or needed a sponge I would buy a nice one.Nobody buys weeds for their lawn , they buy weed killer and they cut their grass to keep it nice looking.
 

IF YOU HAD TO TAKE A REEFING EXAM, WOULD YOU PASS?

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