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Really?? I've never had issues. In order for a toxin like that to affect you, you need to expose some sort of cut skin or mucosa membrane like the mouth or in the eyes. Also, if you want frag them, you can use techniques that avoid butchering the coral. Sometimes, education is the answer to cure your fears. And, those are palys.I'm personally on a mission to stay paly and zoa free. Those are zoanthids and they're GORGEOUS not to mention fast growing as easy to keep. They are just dangerous if you don't follow proper precautions like wearing gloves and eye protection. Look up Palythoa Toxica before buying corals like these. I have too many fur babies and little people running around here to add additional risk to our environment.
Get out of the zoa page then hahahah. All corals are dangerous to your health.They all release a mucous substance to protect themselves that can cause infection. Just teach the little guys to be careful and to respect all living things.I'm personally on a mission to stay paly and zoa free. Those are zoanthids and they're GORGEOUS not to mention fast growing as easy to keep. They are just dangerous if you don't follow proper precautions like wearing gloves and eye protection. Look up Palythoa Toxica before buying corals like these. I have too many fur babies and little people running around here to add additional risk to our environment.
O wow! Very young! I think they all produce lethal toxins there's jist not enough studies out there to prove itNot all corals produce the same kind of toxins and I'm also here to learn... there is also only so much work to be done on children between the ages of 1-4.
Yeah unless your kids take them out and play with them or eat them there's nothing to worry about. Most of these cases are from people boiling their rocks on the oven to try to kill pests. It's the steam that kills the household. Never boil anything. When people talk about cooking their rock, it's meant to let it sit in bleach or just letting it sit in a holding tank to let all the decaying stuff decay before adding it to a tank.Not all corals produce the same kind of toxins and I'm also here to learn... there is also only so much work to be done on children between the ages of 1-4.
It bothers me a little that i can name almost every one there. Only one that got me stumped is the big yellow polyps with long skirts next to the utter chaos.Here enjoy lots of poison lol
Jps yellow sunsets made up name on the fly lol. (It a keeper)It bothers me a little that i can name almost every one there. Only one that got me stumped is the big yellow polyps with long skirts next to the utter chaos.
wish i had all this poison in my tank!!!Here enjoy lots of poison lol
My bad I totally didn't read the article you screen shoted. People love them, they are also starting to wake up to them being more dangerous than initially perceived.
Dumb people are everywhere lol. As the hobby grows we'll see more. If everyone would read before doing something like boiling a rock full of proto palys or wear gloves and eye protection the world would be a safer placeI'd argue the danger is overblown. If it was more dangerous then we'd see more stories of issues. The palytoxin stories are few and far between compared to the number of us keeping a lot of zoas and palys.