Sps ID help

Krazyandy

New member
Need some help IDing this coral guys. Let me know what you think it is. It's a sps coral that has very meaty look to it and is incredibly bright green.
 
Believe its actually a lps if i remember right . Stings crap out of corals becareful wuth placement great grower i cant remember name of it for the life of me right nowsorry
 
Repetitive at this point, but these things are MEAN! I've actually banned them from all of our systems; a while back, I had a purple acro with red polyps swing around on the frag rack and touch a hydno. 15 minutes later, the whole acro was covered in a slime cocoon, and 15 minutes after that, it was skeleton.

Be careful! :D
 
Repetitive at this point, but these things are MEAN! I've actually banned them from all of our systems; a while back, I had a purple acro with red polyps swing around on the frag rack and touch a hydno. 15 minutes later, the whole acro was covered in a slime cocoon, and 15 minutes after that, it was skeleton.

Be careful! :D

Good to know what I finally have now, I'll make sure to keep it away from everything else.
 
I had a hydnophora frag from a ways back that has been happily expanding in my tank for the past year plus and I've had it positioned it in a spot where it isn't next to other corals. Here are some observations from having this coral around...

- It can inflate its tissue away from the hard skeleton and 'puff-up' a bit, which is a neat look
- Mine is an encrusting hydnophora, so if you're playing in this ballpark make sure that this territorial coral has its own domain
- Hydnophora seems to be tolerant to a range of flow and lighting levels; it seems to be hardy and flexible. I have noticed longer polyp extension and tissue expansion in higher flow conditions
- It has a neon bright green color that is just amazing
- If you'd like to see what happens when hydnophora nuzzles up to another coral, check out #coraltimelapse on YouTube for two videos
- My clam (tridacna) is a bit of a mover and he and the hydnophora were spending some quality time together as a results of my clam's movements - note that the hydnophora did not cause any damage to the clam's mantle

If I were running a zoo, I wouldn't put the lions in the same cages as the gazelles. This coral is a lion (of sorts) - cool, powerful, and demanding knowledgeable respect.

Disclaimer: The above statements have been made as a result of my observations. Results may vary.

As I recently fragged mine, after it heals a bit, you can be sure I'll be posting a proper disclaimer when I put them up.

- Jim
 
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