Controlling Acropora-Eating Flatworms AEFW | Reef Receipts
Vložit
- čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
- Brandi Kamp came over to go over a scientific article on natural methods to control Acro-eating flatworms (AEFW).
Article:
Barton, Jonathan & Humphrey, Craig & Bourne, DG & Hutson, Kate. (2019). Biological controls to manage Acropora-eating flatworms in coral aquaculture. Aquaculture Environment Interactions. 12. 10.3354/aei00347.
Link to Article:
www.researchga...
Join this channel to get access to perks:
/ @tidalgardens
www.tidalgarden...
#tidalgardens #coral #reefaquarium
Check out our Amazon Affiliate Links to Items we use at Tidal Gardens
The salt we use:
Reef Crystals - amzn.to/3tYz9GA
Our Favorite Fish and Coral Foods:
Polyp Lab Reef Roids - amzn.to/424CTsa
Sustainable Aquatics Hatchery Diet 1.2 mm - amzn.to/35Xnz5B
Sustainable Aquatics Hatchery Diet 0.8 mm - amzn.to/2N10IPH
Nori Sheets - amzn.to/2LQVzsQ
Super Helpful Random Stuff:
Sicce Utility Pump - amzn.to/3qjgu6X
Wireless Remote Control - amzn.to/38FaMGy
ETEKCITY Infrared Thermometer - amzn.to/3nH7Pt9
OXO silicone dryer mat - amzn.to/2TFadnX
OXO Turkey Baster - amzn.to/3ofxyuV
Rubbermaid 1/2 Tray - amzn.to/3hrPscy
Photo/Video:
Canon C200 Cinema Camera
Canon C70 Cinema Camera
Canon 5Ds R - amzn.to/33qklaf
Canon 100mm Macro - amzn.to/33pbUvG
Canon 100mm IS Macro L - amzn.to/3guFh3h
Canon EF MP-E 65mm f/2.8 macro - amzn.to/3gz9HBO
Audio:
Shure SM7B - amzn.to/2DUQPP1
Sennheiser 416 - amzn.to/3ajHpIT
Sennheiser AVX Lavalier - amzn.to/33Ud4iU
SSL 2+ Audio Interface - amzn.to/3ZZVpjV
Cloudlifter CL-1 - amzn.to/2XY4En8
Aston Halo Portable Microphone Reflection Filter - amzn.to/36hoSfH
Copyright Information:
This video was shot and edited by Tidal Gardens. Tidal Gardens owns all intellectual property rights to this content.
Time to check the receipts on biological control of AEFW!
Super fun coming up to do this! Thanks for having me and letting me be all nerdy than!!
It was wonderful having you over for the extended weekend.
This is a phenomenal idea for a series, bringing the science back to the hobby.
I am so glad Brandi enjoys reading scientific journals
Glad you like it!! I’m excited to be able to talk about some nerdy things.
The value in that paper is yes - that species of peppermint shrimp and 6-line wrasses do consume AEFW, that does not imply that you can throw a single fish in a 180 gallon tank and it will eliminate thousands of AEFW. The conversation about peppermint shrimp species is an interesting one - I've been reefing for about 10 years and have solely been able to control Aiptasia with the peppermint shrimp we get here in Florida. I must admit I've had some that don't seem to do anything and others that make Aiptasia disappear. I now wonder if success is based on increasing the shrimps activity level by adding a couple at a time, making more active at night(fighting for territory or seeking a mate, etc), which in turn makes it more likely to find Aiptasia. A single individual definitely seems to camp in one spot.
OMG I love this series. Please keep them coming!
Thank you!!! I’ll try to convince than!
So a shop a work for in Michigan, we have acro-eating flatworms, though not too many. I do find them from time to time. My little tidbit I wanted to share, I found one eating a stomatella snail! I caught the stomatella, because I want more in my tanks and my boss doesn't like them. In the specimen container, what I thought was one organism split into two. It was an acro-eating flatworm eating a stomatella tail first! The snail had a huge chunk missing where the flatworm was attached. Hope this gets read by somebody, thanks!
Poor guy!!!
I had a copperband butterfly, just about 1.5 inches that was brand new to my tank. He was on a hunger strike when introduced, for 7 days and I tried every food made. One day, I saw him cruise over to one of my Maricultured Acropora, that happens to have a few Spionid boring worms, and eat about 4 of the 5 Spionid worms! I was in love! However, my yellow Scopas Tang would not stop bullying him and I had to remove.
Back to the topic, I have mainly Maricultured Acropora colonies in my tank and every single one of these came in infested with AEFW. I have never had any issues in the tank with AEFW. I dip in CoralRx for 5 min, then Revive for 5 or 10 min, then rinse and immediately dip for 15 minutes in Lugol's Iodine. That seems to do the trick as I have no AEFW. The only livestock I have that would eat them is a Yellow and purple wrasse.
BRANDI
More to come! We shot 4 of these on Brandi's last visit here.
Lol. That made me smile! Glad you liked it! Hope we can do a lot more of these! 💚☺️
Thank you both
Of course! 😋
Really like this series Brandi and Than! Thanks so much for the literature review.
Our pleasure!
I agree with so_so_reef,
Sounds like a good SPS QT system.
First a dip then a few days in peppermint shrimp tank then a few days in a wrasse tank for all new Acro additions.
🎉
Andrew Sandler is seeing some good results in his replication. I wonder if anyone breeds that type of shrimp in the us.
fantastic information thank you both for doing this 🙃can't wait for more videos 😊
More to come! We were able to shoot a total of 4 videos during Brandi's visit.
Thanks lady!!! You’re the best! 💚💚
Love the bow tie!
Thank you! I have a collection going
Oooo I would love to see more literature reviews!
More to come! We were able to shoot a total of 4 videos during Brandi's visit.
Sweet!!! Looking forward to doing more! ☺️💚
Awesome information. Thanks for sharing
Thanks Paul!!
awesome video I needed this a month ago 😭 but will apply this knowledge for the future
WOW. I love this video. One of the most helpful videos I've seen on youtube.
Glad it was helpful!
Great episode. Very interesting. Hope to see more like this. 👍🏻 🙌🏼👏🏻✌🏻
We will!
Something that you could do mimicking directly this study is to put peppermints/wrasse in your QT, or hospital tank, and not feed the shrimp/fish during treatment. Biological control might be more effective than human removal.
Agreed! I’m a lazy reefer. If an organism will do it for me, then I’m on board. 🤣
Great information!
Thanks for watching!
Such a great idea to bring together the scientific and hobbyist communities. Thank you Than! Now I need to go order some new acro frags from Tidal Gardens!
Please do!
6 line Wrasses are definitely my go to for every tank of mine. Peppermint shrimp tend to just disappear.
Unless you’re sixline sucks!
Good stuff
Appreciate it
Wonderful video, thank you for this guys!
Glad you enjoyed it Shoomie
Thank you shoomie!!! ☺️☺️
Thank you for bringing real data for the hobby. Also, kudos for the authors.
My 6 line jumped. I had a net cover too, it literally jumped out of a 3% of the tank that wasn't covered. found him dead on top of my cover crispy under the lights.
Bummer. Ours like to get into the overflow box and eventually down into the sump
Both of you are really really awesome by the way...
Hey Guys, really like the video, cool to share this sort of data!!!! Receipts!!!!!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Great video, thank you for this!!!
Me and my brother Inlaw have been trading corals for years….. torch’s, leathers, hammers you name it. Only thing is I have flatworms and have had them for years. Constantly doing Flat worm Exit, 2-3 times in a row days apart trying to kill the newly hatched eggs. Still can’t beat them, and for some reason my brother Inlaw has never seen one. Got me thinking what does he have in his tank that I don’t. 6 line wrasse. Iv never owned one and he has always had one in his tank. After watching this I’m convinced, I definitely need to try a 6 line.
Great video and great content, Brandi and Than!
Thanks so much Matt!
Very interesting 👏
My 6 line wrasse is always searching every little nook
Hummmmm I need to start watching all this videos asap
I disagree, six lines do jump Ive lost two until I put a screen on the tanks
I found these flat worm critters eating my brittle stars from the inside 😢
That's a polyclad flatworm on the thumbnail.
We need a true solution to this problem. Someone will have to develop an in tank treatment that actually works. Just adding some fish is not the answer. The industry needs to step up and put money forward to develop a drug that will wipe them out. These things are literally destroying the hobby.
There are thousands of reefers who don't keep Acropora. "literally destroying the hobby" Overdramatic much?
@jdamommio for those that keep sps they destroy the hobby. Years of reefing knowledge and skill to get to the pinnacle of reefing only to have it destroyed by these things.
@@TwoScottishReefers There is so much more to sps keeping than just Acropora
(Than even made a video about it). I know aefw are a real problem for stick-heads, but the part where you pretend Acropora enthusiasts make up the entire hobby is simply absurd.
@@TwoScottishReefers The pinnacle of reefing?! By what standard? If difficulty is the unit of measure, then surely non-photosynthetic corals are the pinnacle of reefing...
@jdamommio OK you just want to argue 🙄.
She is so pretty