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Eliminating hydra without killing the other inverts


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#1 Guest_Nightwing_*

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Posted 21 April 2008 - 06:41 PM

I found a bunch of hydra in my smaller grow out tank today(not surprising, as everything in it including the substrate, is straight from a local lake). Anyway...is there any way to eliminate hydra without killing off all of the other more desirable inverts? Or..am I just stuck with them?

#2 Guest_farmertodd_*

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Posted 21 April 2008 - 09:16 PM

Hey Paul,

If they were recently collected and with other inverts from the wild, I've found that their numbers tank very quickly. I think they only become problematic when they're the only consumer available (nice analogy for what's going on in the Great Lakes ;) )... Rotifers, for example, are probably better at handling population booms and busts in food resources in a biodiverse system than hydra. The hydra just have a bad name because they're really good at population explosions without interspecific competition. And they're big, and they'll sting your fry.

Todd

#3 Guest_mikez_*

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Posted 21 April 2008 - 10:10 PM

I recently went through the same thing. The ones I had were very small and a very pretty green color. After some googling I learned the green color was from symbiotic algae just as with coral and anemones. This explained why they clustered on the sunny side of the tank. I also learned the algae supplemented nutrition for the hydra and thus they were not such voracious preditors as some of the bigger, nastier hydras. Before I learned all that I had tried to eradicate them with a razor blade and siphon. Once I learned more about them, I decided to let them stay as they were cool. That's when I learned what Todd just told you - they peter out quickly with limited food supply. Now mine are gone.

#4 Guest_nativeplanter_*

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Posted 22 April 2008 - 01:15 PM

Todd,
Are they really that much of an issue with fry? What size fry are we talking?




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