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BEWARE: Acropora Burrowing Red Worms << Pix Included >>


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Received a call from a friend, who described what looked like red burrowing worms INSIDE a Blue Tort. I had to see that, so I ran over took some pix. It looks like the worms borrow in and tunnels through coral.

 

Mild case of basal STN prompted further investigation, which led to the discovering. The coral was in his system for a least 12 months.

 

 

Red Worm infection.

worms4_zpsfce1b73e.jpg

 

worms6_zpse2ef944b.jpg

 

Red Worm on paper towel.

worms5_zps95ede335.jpg

 

worms3_zps55f1dcde.jpg

 

worms2_zpsc03277c7.jpg

 

worm1_zpsabee432d.jpg

 

Infected Tort

worms8_zps449f9395.jpg

Wow, I have never heard of them. Were they only near the base? Could they be harmless and the STN was caused by something else or do you feely these were the cause?

Wow, I have never heard of them. Were they only near the base? Could they be harmless and the STN was caused by something else or do you feely these were the cause?

 

He believes the worms were causing the STN, because the system was fairly stable. Personally, I do not have any evidence to support it.

Hmm, why would they be eating the skeleton and not the flesh. I'm wondering if they just found a place to hang out.

I was wondering where the worms were getting its nutrients, but I could not see evidence of trauma to the external flesh. Granted I only had a 5x magnifying glass available. Worms stealing nutrients from the polyps?

When the worms are exposed they do not seem to "run". Relaxed like they are protected inside the coral skeleton. I dipped a frag in CoralRX to see if it would react, nothing.

That was the only coral infected? Has your friend added anything (corals, fish, snails etc) to their tank recently?

That was the only coral infected? Has your friend added anything (corals, fish, snails etc) to their tank recently?

 

He probably has approximately 30 SPS corals. We fragged what we could. I focused on the Oregon Tort, Milles and Staghorns; corals that could possibly support the worms. No signs of infection in the other corals. The most recent addition to his tank was a Linka starfish. Based on the pervasiveness of the infection, the worms have been there for a long time. Last night was the first time the infected coral was fragged.

Did you find the worms every time you snapped a piece apart?

 

Absolutely. The worms began about two inches from the top all the way to the base. In fact, they were in the encrusted base as well.

Wow..... Pretty amazing. Makes me wonder what else is coming into our tanks that we don't know about yet!

Did they move around at all?

 

Maybe he should try flatworm exit, wait a few days, then cut a frag and see if they are still alive.

 

Also, the interceptor spectrum that people are buying from australia and canada has prazi in it, which kills worms. Could try that as well.

Did they move around at all?

 

Maybe he should try flatworm exit, wait a few days, then cut a frag and see if they are still alive.

 

Also, the interceptor spectrum that people are buying from australia and canada has prazi in it, which kills worms. Could try that as well.

 

The worms did not move around at all. I snapped a frag to expose the worms, dipped in CoralRx for 45 minutes, no reaction from the worms. Maybe the light causes the worms to go to sleep; active only during the night.

 

About three months ago, the hobbyists treated his tank with Prazi for a week because he thought one of his fish had Flukes. I was going to dip it in Bayer, but I did not feel like driving home to pick up my solution. It is too late to determine a means to eradicate the worms, he used the most effective method, the trash toss.

(edited)

I'm not so sure they are worms...

they could be gonads or part of the coral animal that is getting fortified in preperation for spawning.

The fact that you saw no reaction from them when dipped in a solution that is highly irritating to polychaetes and other forms of non-coral life supports this as well. Also, if indeed it is a burrowing organism, there should be evidence on the outer fleshy layer (at least in certain "freshly burrowed" areas).

 

-Robert

Edited by chucelli
(edited)

I agree with this. They don't look like worms to me.

 

I'm not so sure they are worms...

they could be gonads or part of the coral animal that is getting fortified in preperation for spawning.

The fact that you saw no reaction from them when dipped in a solution that is highly irritating to polychaetes and other forms of non-coral life supports this as well. Also, if indeed it is a burrowing organism, there should be evidence on the outer fleshy layer (at least in certain "freshly burrowed" areas).

 

-Robert

Edited by Jans Natural Reef Foods

Very very interesting thread. It would seem a little odd that a coral under distress from STN would have the energy to be ready to spawn. I'm eager to hear the input from some of the practicing marine biologist that we have in our community.

Some corals spawn under severe disstress/stress. Agreed that it would be great to hear from a Marine Biologist on the subject.

Very very interesting thread. It would seem a little odd that a coral under distress from STN would have the energy to be ready to spawn. I'm eager to hear the input from some of the practicing marine biologist that we have in our community.

The coral polyps were semi-retracted for a couple weeks and the base began to recede. He lost a couple corals due to STN a few weeks ago, so he thought the Tort was headed down the same path.

 

I am not a marine biologist, so anything sounds plausible to me, especially when it comes to spawning.

 

I agree with DaveS above, I find it hard to believe the coral would have the energy to prepare for spawning when tissue necrosis is ongoing.

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