Anyone know what this is?
Posted: 21 Jan 2025, 03:20
Looking to figure out what this is and how to get rid of it. Found it in my pleco tank. Thanks so much.
The Aquarium Catfish website
https://planetcatfish.com/forum/
Do plecos seem to eat it at all? I know there are a good number of species (Parancistrus spp. for instance) that consume freshwater sponges; likely a completely different sort of sponge, but those white flat blob things are still sponges...OregonOutdoorsChris wrote: 21 Jan 2025, 14:38 I will second freshwater sponge. Probably from the genus Ephydatia.
I have some as well, and the only problem I have is it's in a planted tank and it kills plants it covers, it spreads by spores if you move anything from an infected tank to another, and I have yet to discover a way to kill it other than manual removal (but spores remain and it comes back).
Quite a few genera are reported to, I believe Megalancistrus as well, maybe Pseudacanthicus as while carnivores they do have some very robust teeth/jaws with more numerous teeth then normal for a carnivore. I'm not 100% they are digesting or actually eating the sponges opposed to extracting other organisms on and around the sponges. No doubt they probably wont feed on all sponges, there are images of those found in Loricariid habitats.Fallen_Leaves16 wrote: 21 Jan 2025, 14:51Do plecos seem to eat it at all? I know there are a good number of species (Parancistrus spp. for instance) that consume freshwater sponges; likely a completely different sort of sponge, but those white flat blob things are still sponges...OregonOutdoorsChris wrote: 21 Jan 2025, 14:38 I will second freshwater sponge. Probably from the genus Ephydatia.
I have some as well, and the only problem I have is it's in a planted tank and it kills plants it covers, it spreads by spores if you move anything from an infected tank to another, and I have yet to discover a way to kill it other than manual removal (but spores remain and it comes back).
Odd that it seems so invasive. The few people I know that had them found that they were slow growers and typically only grew on rock, wood, or glass; perhaps some species are far less particular and sensitive than others.