Carefully inspecting corals should be part of the regular husbandry routine for a reef aquarium so that any signs of soft tissue damage or discoloration can be identified and investigated as soon as possible.
Early detection of the presence of hitchhikers is the most effective way of preventing an uncontrolled outbreak that can potentially harm the entire reef.
In the case of a mild infestation, the corals can suffer from chronic stress and will show signs of polyp retraction, pale patches on the soft tissue and increased mucus secretion. If not treated, it will become a severe infestation that can cause severe damage to corals, such as:
- Direct damage to the soft tissue as a result of predation and feeding or by the extraction of proteolytic enzymes and chemo-toxins, eventually exposing the coral skeleton.
- Reduced resistance against sedimentation, dehydration, UV-radiation, and bacterial infections as the hitchhikers feed on the corals mucus layer that protects it.
- Nutrition deficiencies as the erosion of the mucus layer reduces the corals ability to capture dissolved and suspended organic materials.
- Significant reduction in the amount of energy the coral receives from the photosynthetic zooxanthellae due to hundreds of creatures moving across the soft tissue and polyps, blocking the light.