I got them from Golden basket so its a wild species.. the closest they had was a Rainbow 'something' but that one had pink and orange skirts where this is all green, with a slight orange on one skirt tip
This is un color boosted.. but pretty accurate
So I was wondering if this zoa had a name already.. Can't find it anywhere except ones that have orange and pink skirts.. These are mainly green on green but have a similar skirt and polyp type of a Mohawk/ cherry charm/juggernaut type. Or they could be closer to a candy apple with the white slit mouth
If no one knows then give me a name suggestion. Hulks? Cactus?
thanks Jack.. Id love to make it up there and see the tank.. maybe we can also get a zoa trade going.. just lemme know if its pretty quiet.. the one I got makes a slight humming noise.. but not like the stock one my roommate has on his nuvo
I was wanting to see if anyone had a quiet old pump they wanted to part with.. I get that buzz from the current pump and since this is a night stand Nano I'm wanting something a little more silent.. If anyone has a MJ 900 or something not to strong I would love to trade or buy it. I gotta hear it under water to confirm its quiet running though Also if anyone has an extra Spin Stream nossle I would love to buy/trade for that also
bubble algae crabs are your best bet besides a new rock potentially.. pitch or cut out the zoas.. I have frags of those if you want more.. or different types
I'm thinking of setting up a nano for my high end zoas to display..
Wanting to find anyone willing to sell an AIO, either a Nuvo or anything else.. Trying to be under 12g but maybe more than 4g
Message me if you've got something that fits and we can strike a deal
It's what birthed us. Of course it's got to do some good.. And your immune to most of those bacteria and viruses already
If I ever got a cut, a saltwater dip daily would heal it faster than without, and no scar
So they determined the melting starfish syndrome is actually a virus in the they have identified.
What do you think?
http://www.iflscience.com/plants-and-animals/virus-suspected-gruesome-sea-star-die-offs