Quote Originally Posted by clone View Post
Ok first off, examine all your frags/colonies with a magnifing glass. tweeze them off, look around up and down all around for eggs. If you find some which you will tweeze those off aswell. Then once you have done then dip them, shake them around, up and down, all around.
Then go out and buy yourself a sixline, radient, or a twinspot hoggfish.

I would look over your frags a month later after buying one of those wrasses just to make sure they are getting all of them.
I have a mystery so he *might* eat some. I don't like taking the chance with that and ending up with a fish I didn't want. Hopefully, the mystery will do some good. Also, I don't think he'd get along with another wrasse.


Quote Originally Posted by ZeroHour View Post
I had these in my nano. I tweezed them and then placed them into a urine sample cup (small colony). They seemed to then end up on the side of the cup. I did this with 6 small colonies and it worked for getting all of them every time.

It seems that with the lack of flow and the increased temp they were trying to get off the colony. This may or may not work for you but it was perfect for me.
I actually took one of the colonies and gave it a fresh water dip for a few minutes, then shook it around vigorously for a couple of minutes. I think that got most, if not all, of them off the colony. After doing this the zoa's started opening up again after being closed for a couple days. I think I may just do this for each coral I see them on, then put it in a different tank.

I should be grateful since the acro eaters seem way harder to deal with.