Got a white feather duster hitch hiker with some zoas. Been there maybe 3 months now and has doubled in size but still tiny. How likely is it to survive? If I want to keep it should I feed the tank something?
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I taught my children to smile for the camera while they were young and it was a hard task but eventually they realized that pictures of themselves look better if they made a nice face and smile for the camera. My fish and corals and clams must have gone to school with your featherduster as they are very difficult to photographAnd as for the bad picture every time I turned up whites it would hide and the angle through the glass for a direct picture it gets distorted. For location it’s in the sand next to the single zoa polyp.
As mentioned, if it has been growing for you, you're doing something right with it. Phytoplankton may benefit it, but it's also unnecessary if your worm is doing well - so, unless you're confident that you could start adding phytoplankton without messing anything else up in your tank (like your nutrients), I'd say there's no reason to change anything at this point.Well I first spotted it shortly after getting the little zoa colony. It disappeared after a week or two and when I moved the colony recently I found out it had moved into the sand. Again it was absolutely tiny, I mean it’s still tiny but it is about double the size now. As for crabs and fish it’s been in the open spot for maybe 2 weeks now. That’s actually a hermit just above it in the pic, they don’t seem to care. And the only fish in the tank are a pair of clowns.
If it does happen to be a cluster type that would be cool but I only ever see brown dusters so it would be really cool to have a white one.
And it is still living after 9pm PST