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#1
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Mystery Frag...Can You Help Identify?
Excuse my ignorance if this is in the wrong section, but I am mystified by a frag that someone gave me. I just wanted to get some identification so that I can properly care for it. It is about 1 1/2" in diameter with about 1/8" polyps that are a very light green. The frag is about 3" long, but only the end has live polyps on it, the rest is the remaining skeleton.
Here's a pic of it with the polyps extended... And here's one where only some are out and you can see some of the skeletal structure... Is it an LPS? That's what I am guessing, that is why I am posting here. I was told it may be a "flower pot" when I described it to a fellow reefer. Any information would be helpful. Thank you.
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-kAt. Photographer Florida Marine Aquarium Society |
#2
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flower pot coral?
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COMING SOON........INVASION OF THE MARINE PLANTED TANKS |
#3
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From what I can find on the web, the flower pot corals extend their polyps out further and they resemble more of a zoo type head. These polyps don't seem to have the tentacles around the perimeter as those do. These have only extended about 1/4" from the skeleton so far also.
Still wondering....
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-kAt. Photographer Florida Marine Aquarium Society |
#4
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Either goniopora or alveopora.
Can't remember which one has 12 and which has 24 nodules on the polyp... Peace, Chip |
#5
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A search of Alveopora says that they have 12 tentacles on each polyp. Photos I can find are much closer looking to this specimen than the gonipora. Now, of course, I am finding that people use the common name "Flower Pot" for both of these varieties...just to confuse me further.
I think once it is better acclimated to my tank and the polyps extend further, I may be able to better identify.
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-kAt. Photographer Florida Marine Aquarium Society |
#6
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That is a very bleached and dying Goni. Sorry to say but that coral isn't going to make it. Gonis are hard enough to keep without them being on their way out the door.
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Heloooooooooooooo Infidels. |
#7
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Yes, I think it will die soon too. I'd say it was an alveopora though (12 petal tips).
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#8
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Agreed. Bleached, likely dying, Alveopora. These guys are incredibly difficult to keep, very few people manage it.
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"The cure for anything is salt water: sweat, tears, or the sea." - Isak Dinesen |
#9
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I'd try feeding it DT's oyster eggs...... all your out is the cost of the food......
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nuttin like the taste of saltwater... |
#10
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they will eat cyclopeez as well...put a cut in half 2L pop bottle over it in order for the food to stay targeted...it doesn't was "direct light" but will need moderate current...good luck...keep us posted.
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55G tall mixed reef 30G sump,2x250W10K XM+ 2 VHO super actinic,CsS220, 130FOWLR 60Gsump. |
#11
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It's an avelopora that looks like it got bleached out a little.
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#12
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A dying avelopora has lost all of its Z
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It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to open ones mouth and to let it be known |
#13
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Well, I will trust the words of Julian Sprung then and try to supplement with iron and manganese which might possibly reverse the condition. I'm not holding alot of hope, but it's certainly worth a try...
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-kAt. Photographer Florida Marine Aquarium Society |
#14
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Feed it once or twice a day, with cyclopeeze, oyster eggs, and other meaty foods. You can do it!!! YES!!!
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#15
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You can save it... When I very first started I had a carpet anemone I bought that was white and green LOL IM an idiot when I bought it I didnt know WHITE is bad!... Regular feedings colored it up and it survived
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It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool, than to open ones mouth and to let it be known |
#16
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Well, the polyps are still trying to extend, so it may be doing okay. I am dosing and am going to try some direct feeding. Keep your fingers crossed for me. It looks like it may be an Alveopora Japonica, but I can't be sure unless I can see its real coloration and the tentacles extended.
Thanks for all of your input!
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-kAt. Photographer Florida Marine Aquarium Society |
#17
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Its a very bleached alveopora, which are not as difficult as the goni. Good luck getting it to come back. I got a Goni. that was bleached worse than that and the tenticles weren't even extending. Plenty of zoo/phytoplankton brought it back. My goni even captures small pieces of shrimp/fish mix that i feed to my sun corals. I'm not sure its eating it but it will capture and hold it forever. Just keep an eye on it and a lil TLC and you might get a nice piece from it.
terry
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90 corner overflow w/sump/refug, skimmer, 2 vho & 2 250w 10k XM MH., fishbowl Innov lunar light system, 1500gph CL. Teco ca200 chiller. started with a 55 in 4/20/04 upgraded to 90 5/1/07 |
#18
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I would agree alveopora. They need VERY small particles to properly feed, even moreso when weak. Cyclopeeze, oyster eggs, dt's (or even better phyto feast from reed mariculture) you can also take a frozen cube of mysis shrimp and use a knife to "shave" off 1/2 of the cube, then mix that mush with the phyto feast or dt's, throw in the cyclopeeze and direct feed. You need to turn off your pumps and squirt the solution right over the coral. I would think it can be saved just needs some daily TLC. Look for posts from john kelly, he has great sucess with these and goni's. HTH
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President CRC I love my family but I hate family reunions. Family reunions are that time when you come face to face with your family tree and realize some branches need to be cut off. |
#19
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its expelling zooxanthellae by the way(ie bleaching)
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