On the hunt! We want your hitchiker pictures!

A forum where you may post your pictures and descriptions about flora and fauna you find in your tank. Find answers to the eternal questions of "What the heck was THAT?" and "What just bit me?"

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On the hunt! We want your hitchiker pictures!

Postby wade » December 20th, 2004, 10:15 pm

We are always searching for images for our hitchiker FAQ and are looking for pictures of:

-things we don't have on the pages
-clearer/better pictures of those we have descriptions for
-more specific IDs or more information on each critter

>pest algaes
>pest anemones
>crabs
>fishes
>snails/whelks
>worms/polycheats
>anything else that happened to come in on your rock that you have a good picture of!

If you have any of these types of images, and you are willing to have us use them in our expanded HHFAQ, please post them here or email to: wade@reefs.org (we will credit the photographer of course).

Thanks!
Last edited by wade on February 15th, 2007, 10:04 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Snail love

Postby OceanInYourHome » April 28th, 2005, 12:44 am

I don't know the species of this one but it seems happy.
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Snail love.jpg
These snails seem to lay eggs all the time. I have not had baby snails in a while though... When I last moved, I removed by deep sand bed and kept just an inch or so. Was this the difference???
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Postby wade » April 28th, 2005, 8:40 am

Nice one. Thats a cerith snail...
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Just Strange!

Postby toothdr » July 10th, 2005, 10:36 pm

Received this fellow with a coral - about 3 inches long and 2 inches wide. Eats only algae (so far).
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Picture 030.jpg
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Postby Guy » July 10th, 2005, 10:45 pm

Sea Hare. Good find!
Andy_ wrote:Quit whimpering and rub some dirt on it.
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Postby superjohnny » February 18th, 2006, 10:23 pm

Found this guy attached to the bottom of one of my live rocks. Dunno what it is, but I'm guessing it's a cirolanid idopod. That would be a bad thing. He's in QT until I can get a positive ID.

Image
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Postby Guy » February 19th, 2006, 12:00 am

That's a Chiton.

They're a harmless algae grazer.
Andy_ wrote:Quit whimpering and rub some dirt on it.
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Postby mejiggery » February 21st, 2006, 9:56 am

ok how about some colonal tunicates
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24791whitetunicates.jpg
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Postby kennyfish » June 1st, 2006, 1:06 pm

hope some of these can help. Sorry I cant provide any ID's.
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found these when curing my live rock

Postby emilsanto » July 23rd, 2006, 7:57 pm

found these when curing my live rock. the are floating on top of the water. there about 3/8 to 14/long.[/img]
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worm.JPG
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Postby bjoiner » July 24th, 2006, 4:34 pm

Came with some mushroom corals. Suprised they missed this guy. (Also got a bumblebee snail.)
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Postby wade » February 15th, 2007, 9:57 am

We are still collecting images from anyone who has images that show good detail of any hitchhikers you happen to find in your tank.

Please visit the new website and the new hhfaq layout. Its still under construction, but its filling in nicely. If you have recommendations or would like to add more detail to the faq, please let me know!

Wade
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white threads id?

Postby wendyzim » March 18th, 2007, 11:27 pm

These white threads appear when my substrate gets stirred up. Are they coming out of the strange tubes coming off my live rock in the second pic? What are the threads? What are the crusty tubes?
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crustytubessmall.jpg
Crusty tubes jutting out of live rock
crustytubessmall.jpg (74.57 KiB) Viewed 13442 times
whitethreads.jpg
White threads up to 5" long
whitethreads.jpg (38.05 KiB) Viewed 13442 times
10 gal community
35 gal oscar
55 gal reef
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Postby wade » March 19th, 2007, 8:46 am

Very very hard to tell from your pictures, but based on the description, its likely the filaments from various worms that are being extended to capture the floating debris that stirring your sandbed produces.

People used to stir their sand alot, to feed corals and inverts, although that isn't too common anymore.
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I have tons of these!

Postby philosophicles » March 25th, 2007, 4:37 pm

I think it's a tube worm. I have many of these that send out a strong filament to catch floating debris.
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This is my most interesting hitchhiker so far!

Postby philosophicles » March 28th, 2007, 12:25 pm

I think it's a marine spider! Anybody seen these in your tanks?
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Forgot the link to the spider video!

Postby philosophicles » March 28th, 2007, 12:26 pm

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Postby wade » March 28th, 2007, 1:12 pm

There are spiders that can live around the water, but they are freshwater only (afaik) and they live outside in the air, they just capture air along their hairs to breath while underneath for short periods.

Based on the speed at which that spider is moving, its not in your tank surrounded by water. You positive its not outside someplace thinking it can make a meal of the 'pods you have inside?

True sea spiders do not have thick bodies, they are very very thin and stick-like and are very odd critters altogether different than what you are showing.
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Thanks for the reply!

Postby philosophicles » March 28th, 2007, 3:55 pm

If you watch the video carefully 3/4 through it moves a sand grain inside my tank when it moved. As for the speed it is moving at, I have smaller isopods that move just as fast. The video is taken through a microscope at about 600x mag. If it is a spider that hunts it would have to be faster then it's prey. Maybe you could argue that an isopod inside got spooked by the sight of it, and it moved the sand grain in retreat. But it doesn't appear that way to my eyes.
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Postby OddFish » April 3rd, 2007, 8:42 pm

I have the pictures, some questions:
- What is preferable size in pixels?
- I should post them in this thread, right?
- Will they become the property of the reefs.org, or I can continue to keep them at Photobucket and post on the forums?
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