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Zoas: collection, transportation, and care.

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  • Zoas: collection, transportation, and care.

    I found this info on another forum and wanted to re-post it here for people that might be interested in keeping zoas.

    "I have been to the Solomons and collected zoos there along side native collectors.

    The area where they come from is in one relatively small location just a few feet from the beach in an area where raw sewage can enter the water. They are found everywhere in this location covering the rocks for miles in every direction and are only a few inches to no more than a few feet below the surface, as a matter of fact in this area there are very few found below about 5-10 feet. Large sections can be left out of the water at low tide and waves crash on the colonies constantly. The rocks in this area are covered in hair algae and other macro algae--those that get these colonies direct from the Solomons will often see the colonies are covered in silt and algae. Algae blennies are common in the area, other corals growing in this area are Acropora and Pocillopora, both not so colorful in this area.

    When the zoo colonies are cut from the rock often the new exposed rock on the base is black with anaerobic bacteria and all types of worms and other critters. These colonies are held for a relatively short period prior to shipment to the US. The colonies are held in shallow tubs under diffused natural sunlight with minimal water flow.

    Upon arrival in the US I always dip them in freshwater for about 10 minutes and then saltwater with Tropic Marin Pro Coral Cure. Usually on a weekly to monthly basis I will import 50-100 4-6 inch colonies. Unlike zoos colledted from other parts of the world, these colonies are sort of shaved off the rocks rather than whole chucks of rock with some zoos on it such as those shipped from Fiji or Bali. Most colonies have an assortment of pests and hitchhikers that fall off in the dips. I then keep them in a shallow vat with intense direct water flow and lots of large Turbo and other assorted snails for 1-2 weeks before doing anything further with them. This works very well in preventing fungal infections and other common problems with these zoos.

    Overall, I think the Solomon Island zoos are collected and handled well and the native folks work hard to get us some awesome corals and overall do a great job. They handle lots of different types of corals in volumes, so individual care for each individual colony is not practical, but overall they do a excellent job. Having attempted collecting them myself I can tell you it is difficult. The variety of colors is incredible and blues, reds, and pinks found regularly in this area with most colonies having a mix of colors, multi colored colonies with tightly packed polyps are typical for Solomon zoos.

    So, the area where Solomon zoos we get in this country are collected from is a specific shallow tidal pool with intense tropical sunlight, very intense regular wave water flow, high nutrient murky water, the colonies can often be covered in algae and there are relatively few fish in the area so some pests can be allowed to flourish in these colonies growing with tightly packed polyps. I was diving in many other areas in the Solomons and never found zoos in any other areas this leads one to believe that they do need these specific conditions to thrive in the wild.

    Growing in this environment explains how hardy these corals can be, but also may explain why some don't do well in certain captive conditions. In my facility I have one SPS system and one soft coral system, the water in the SPS system is more pristine and the zoos definitely do not do as well in that system. This is an observation based upon several years and many hundreds of colonies, not specific individual pieces, ie. these corals are quite adaptable and individual colonies can do exceptionally well under a wide variety of conditions. Someone here will likely say they have some thriving zoos in their SPS dominated tank, but this may not be the general rule for these corals. Colors will fade without intense lighting IME. IMO the most ideal captive environment for these corals is a less heavily skimmed tank that is fed well regularly with very intense lighting and water flow. Definitely most of these corals are sold under the idea that they do well under less lighting and water flow, some colonies can adapt, buy IME to thrive in terms of maximum genetic potential growth and color they will not do their best under low flow and light and too pristine water quality."
    By Dr.Mac.
    I ate my fish that died.

  • #2
    Yep zoas like poo! Whats funny is the other day in my tank i saw 2 zoas with fish pellets in there mouth.
    75gal reef aka the $$$$ pit.

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    • #3
      By the way, do you feed your zoas anything?
      I ate my fish that died.

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      • #4
        I dont target feed realy. I just add a cap full of zooplex to the tank a week. But the tank has an auto feeder on it, so i have seen sinking pellets end up in the mouth of zoas and frogspawn.
        75gal reef aka the $$$$ pit.

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        • #5
          You think they eating it?
          I ate my fish that died.

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          • #6
            yes i think there eating it. everything on the feeder side of the tank has grown quickly.
            75gal reef aka the $$$$ pit.

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            • #7
              Have you tried cyclo-peeze?
              I ate my fish that died.

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              • #8
                i have some phytoplex i use every once in a while.
                75gal reef aka the $$$$ pit.

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                • #9
                  coral frenzy.....my corals love that stuff
                  25g - Reef
                  3.5g - Surge Tank
                  10g - Ichthyophthirius multifilis breeding colony

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                  • #10
                    they eat...i saw them grab mysis...

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by cichlid1409 View Post
                      coral frenzy.....my corals love that stuff
                      Do you feed them directly or just let it float?
                      Resident fish bum
                      330G FOWLR
                      34G Reef
                      330G Discus biotopish (no longer running)
                      28G JBJ Reef (no longer running)
                      Treasurer, GHAC

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                      • #12
                        Common practice is to cut the flow and feed with a turkey blaster (or something smaller).
                        I ate my fish that died.

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