A single dot, a squiggle of white, a floating orange ball – marine eggs come in all shapes, sizes, and colors! Of course, the easiest way to tell what it could grow up to be is to find mom nearby, but that’s not always possible. These are just a few of the most common eggs found in an aquarium to help you with the identification of marine eggs.
Berghia Nudibranch Eggs (Berghia verrucicornis) – Reef Safe:
Anyone plagued by Aiptasia sp. anemones needs to know about Berghia nudibranchs. These nudibranchs only eat Aiptasia anemones, and they produce an egg sac like the one pictured every few days. Below, a microscope image shows the developing nudibranchs, along with grown adults.
Nerite Snail Eggs (Nerita sp.) – Reef Safe:
Nerite snails are a great snail, but I only know of one person who had nerite eggs hatch and grow successfully to adults (in other words, most eggs do not become adults…or even make it to juveniles.) The eggs look like white sesame seeds and are sometimes found singularly or in small groups (like the four in the photo below). Read more about snails here!
Collumbellid Snails…AKA Hawaiian Strombus Snails…AKA Strombus maculatus – Reef Safe:
Ok, so maybe the taxonomy isn’t entirely straightened out on this snail yet, but regardless of name, they’re great snails. As you can see by the multiple egg sacs, they reproduce faster than rabbits. If you’re sick of buying snails, then these are your best choice in my opinion. They graze over rocks and on glass, stay small, and their population waxes and wanes with food supply. Read more about snails here!
Nassarius Snail Eggs (Nassarius sp.) – Reef Safe:
Nassarius snails produce various egg patterns, depending on species. Some of them produce some of the most beautiful “fan” patterns of marine eggs, but others leave these small individual sacs. Read more about snails here!
Cerith Snail Eggs (Cerithium sp.) – Reef Safe:
Cerith snails are a beneficial part of a reef tank clean-up crew. They reproduce in captivity to some extent (some aquarists have more success than others, and the juveniles make it to adulthood in small numbers). The egg pattern is very distinctive, as shown with the
mother (and possibly father). The egg pattern will vary by species, but most have something similar to this white swerving pattern or the fuzzy white string below. Read more about snails here!
Stomatella Snails (Stomatella sp.) – Reef Safe:
Stomatella snails are hands-down my favorite snail. They come in nearly all colors (like the black one and speckled one below, but also in red, silver, green, etc.) They frequently enter an aquarium as a hitchhiker, scour the tank for algae, and then reproduce prolifically. They’re broadcast spawners, so they reproduce by climbing high in the aquarium and releasing small puffs of sperm and eggs which look like smoke.
Although the stomatella snail can’t be seen in the photo with the Scolymia coral, there is one hiding under the coral releasing either sperm or eggs (white smoke-looking mass to the left of the
Scolymia). This event lasted about 3 minutes. Unfortunately, I’ve had a hard time determining their life cycle times since they constantly have new batches of babies. Read more about snails here!
Conch (Strombus sp.) – Reef Safe:
I had (what I assume to be) a mated pair of fighting conchs that regularly laid eggs. Unfortunately, I never had success raising these in captivity. Read more about conchs here!
Acropora-eating Flatworms (Amakusaplana acroporae) – Not Reef Safe:
As the common name implies, these flatworms only eat Acropora corals. Although they usually lay their eggs directly on the Acropora corals, the eggs can sometimes be found near Acropora corals, like on a frag plug in the photo.
Polyclad Flatworm – Not Reef Safe:
These massive flatworms are not reef safe due to their predatory behavior. I found one of these flatworms inside a hole in the live rock attached to a coral along with the marine eggs shown. Although I am not 100% certain the eggs are from the flatworm, there were no other large invertebrates within the live rock. Additionally, the eggs resembled very large Acropora-eating Flatworm (AEFW) eggs, another polyclad flatworm species.
Gall Crab Eggs – Reef Safe with Caution:
There is quite a bit of debate over whether gall crabs are reef safe, but I, personally, have not experienced any issues. The female builds a small hole in live rock, and corals grow around the crab. Since sick corals often contain gall crab inhabitants, the crabs are often blamed for the coral’s ill health. I should note that extremely large, healthy corals in the wild house gall crabs with no noticeable problems. The female shown is carrying eggs (in yellow).
Coral Eggs – Reef Safe:
Coral eggs, like the Tubastrea coral eggs shown, are typically orange balls. The coral below actually started spawning while in a coral dip!
Unknown Marine Eggs
Marine egg diversity is vast, as shown by another pattern here. What eggs have you found in your tank?
Pingback:Identification of Marine Snails - Coral Ever After
Pingback:Berghia Nudibranchs: Natural Aiptasia Predators - Coral Ever After
Would you be willing to help me with two identifications if I were to send pictures and/or videos? I don’t use Facebook or Twitter or other social media, but I can send files as email attachments or upload them to dropbox or google drive.
1) Appears to be an egg mass in spiral concentric rings. The one I photographed measures 1.4 mm in outer diameter, but I think a few others may be larger. There are probably >100 presumptive eggs in each. I observed two hydroids small enough to have emerged from these ‘eggs’, but I’m not aware that any cnidarians reproduce in this fashion. The hydroids were quite mobile and quickly moved on so they were probably just passing thru. There are several of these presumptive egg masses that appeared on the aquarium glass of a quarantine tank a week or more after the addition of a variety of macroalgae that were collected off the coasts of southern Florida.
2) Appeared in quarantine tank as above. Possibly a shell-less mollusc, but I wouldn’t rule out almost anything. measuring 4 mm. Has a mouth (combined anus?) but no obvious radula, and digestive tract. Observed consuming algae. Adhesive ventral surface, pigmented dorsum. One or two pairs of “eye spots”. Two pairs of eye stalk-like structures that may also include an additional pair of lenticular eye spots. Moves in slug-like or inchworm like fashion. I suspect this could possibly be a pulmonate because it has a constanting “beating” organ.
Thanks for your consideration!
Cheers, Peter Houde
Hi Peter, and thanks for reading! Sorry for the delay. It may be too late to help, but I just sent you an email anyway.
I’m sorry, but I don’t seem to have ever received the email you sent. Can you please resend an email so I can correspond directly? Thank, Peter
Hi Peter! Thanks for following up. Please check your inbox (and maybe spam), as I just emailed you. Previous email was sent 5 Oct 2023. Hope you find it.