Donmarco February 28, 2009 Share February 28, 2009 I'm in the process of slowly transferring the coral in my 50G to a 120G reef tank. There are three species that have permanently attached themselves to the live rock and I'm not certain how to dislodge them without doing them harm. The three species are a very healthy and large colony of zooanthia, a large mushroom leather, and two colonies of button polyps (encrusting anemones). I want to transfer the coral but leave as much rock in the 50G as possible as I want to set it up as a FOWLR tank with a few species of fish that are incompatible with a reef. Can anyone advise me how to accomplish this? Also, would anyone be interested in a few small zoo frags? The colony I have is over two years old and is rather large, much larger than I want in my 120G. Thanks! Mark Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
epleeds February 28, 2009 Share February 28, 2009 where are you located...interested.... eric Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
reefmontalvo February 28, 2009 Share February 28, 2009 Well I would just move only the rocks that have the coral growth. You can try to remove them but in the end youd probably do more harm than good. I would just plan that rock for the reef tank and just put a substitute rock in the 50g. In any event the new rock in the 50g tank will eventually become a live rock. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Smoothtriqueter March 1, 2009 Share March 1, 2009 Well I would just move only the rocks that have the coral growth. You can try to remove them but in the end youd probably do more harm than good. I would just plan that rock for the reef tank and just put a substitute rock in the 50g. In any event the new rock in the 50g tank will eventually become a live rock. +1 on this. Just use the rock in the 120 and get a new one or move something from the 120 to the 50. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
zygote2k March 1, 2009 Share March 1, 2009 razor blade works great. all 3 of those corals will regrow what you cut away. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
lanman March 1, 2009 Share March 1, 2009 Most live rock is very porous, and easy to fracture. You should be able to pull the rock out, put it on a towel, and drive a screwdriver into several locations around the parts you want to remove. Then pry out that section of rock. bob Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Donmarco March 5, 2009 Author Share March 5, 2009 Thanks everyone for the advice. I'll let you know how it goes. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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