Jump to content

acro


Recommended Posts

  • SRC Member

Don't worry too much by the slime - that's how they trap food sometimes. It has also been reported by some scientific report that the coral does transport food to other coral via this slime mode.

When under stress, sps usu slime more then that but normally if it is just a bit - there is noting to worry about.

I posted in another thread that I saw my acro crab eating the slime - so it seems to be true that the slime trap food otherwise the crab wouldn't be eating it.

My 2 cents

Link to comment
Share on other sites

oh yes, therelives a crab in there too. been trying to get it out but it keeps playing 'police catch thief'. is it ok to leave the crab there?

thanks for the advices.

it depends whether it is a acro crab. if it is brown hairy aka evil-looking, crush it!!! :evil:

Austin the Westie: "I may be your best friend, but you are my everything".

Lightning Strike's Back!!!

Reefkeeping Is Not My Hobby, It's My Obsession.

Austin's Birthday

.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • SRC Member
slight slime is due to acro crab 'rubbing' the tissues of the acro to entice it to secrete slime so that it can eat the slime as food IMHO.

weisoon, that's the first I've heard of such an occurance. Personally, I've never seen it happen to any of my acros with acro crabs in them. The acro crabs perform a useful function by consuming/removing detritus and food particles trapped in between the branches.

Detritus and food particles that remain trapped in between branches or crevices of sps may cause some tissue recession over time. Hence, good circulation and turbulent flow is important as well.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

weisoon, that's the first I've heard of such an occurance. Personally, I've never seen it happen to any of my acros with acro crabs in them. The acro crabs perform a useful function by consuming/removing detritus and food particles trapped in between the branches.

Detritus and food particles that remain trapped in between branches or crevices of sps may cause some tissue recession over time. Hence, good circulation and turbulent flow is important as well.

I second that. Large colonies with acro crabs have been proven to do better compared to similar sized colonies without symbiotic acro crabs or fish. Don't think the crab will need to stimulate the sps to secrete mucus as sps do it naturally to remove settled debri and other possible pathogens. But then again the mucus might be an essential part in the acro crab diet. I've not had any luck keeping an acro crab alive when taken away from its host. Either due to the importance of acro mucus to its diet or it gets stressed so severely without a host that it dies.

Always something more important than fish.

http://reefbuilders.com/2012/03/08/sps-pico-reef/

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • SRC Member

weisoon, that's the first I've heard of such an occurance. Personally, I've never seen it happen to any of my acros with acro crabs in them. The acro crabs perform a useful function by consuming/removing detritus and food particles trapped in between the branches.

Detritus and food particles that remain trapped in between branches or crevices of sps may cause some tissue recession over time. Hence, good circulation and turbulent flow is important as well.

danano

I may be wrong or the papers that I read may be wrong. Maybe as a form of discussion, you can enlighten how the fiji super clean water where acros exists, the crabs can actually survive. wouldn't there be virtually non-existence of detritus/food particles in these waters?

In nature as well as in our sps tank, we provide good current flows and chances that pieces of detritus being caught in the acros will be quite slim.

Maybe as in the picture posted, there may be more slime than usual probably caused by stress. But I guess if the theory I mentioned is true, then the crab will only stimulate the acros just enough to produce slime for it consumption and not too much to the extend that stressed the acro and then causing it to die. As in the 'just enough', slime will be quite difficut to be spotted through the human eye. In this case, is a loose-loose situation as then the crab will place itself in a dangerous situation as well if the host dies.

However, I amy be wrong.....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • SRC Member

interestingly enough, my acros that have the slimely look thread does not seems to have acro crab livng in it while those with acro crab does not have the slimely hairs.....both colony are about the same share and size (both colony now brown...:P)

so could it mean that the slime are produce by something else and the acro crab just clears it of the acro????

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • SRC Member
interestingly enough, my acros that have the slimely look thread does not seems to have acro crab livng in it while those with acro crab does not have the slimely hairs.....both colony are about the same share and size (both colony now brown...:P)

so could it mean that the slime are produce by something else and the acro crab just clears it of the acro????

Its sliming could be a sign of poor health and the fact that the slime remains on the acro could mean that its a waterflow problem.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share



×
×
  • Create New...