nm reef
Active Member
Once again I thought we'd focus a bit on a popular and widely available coral. Any and all comment(including pics) is welcome...I'm betting ya'all have some outstanding specimans.
Frogspawn(Euphyllia spp. ) are very closely related to both the torch coral as well as the hammer coral...the type I currently keep is euphyllia paradivisa . Information I've seen indicates that they prefer low to high lighting levels/moderate current...and they should be added only to systems that have stabalised and begun to mature. Calcium and alkalinity levels should be established and stable.Nitrates should be low and not fluctuating...mine has always responded poorly when PH levels are out of line(8.1-8.3).Feeding is primarily from the water column...but mine does respond to direct feedings of meaty type foods mixed with DT's. The speciman I currently keep was purchased about 15 months ago with 5 branches or heads ... it now has 9 and has grown to nearly double its origional size. One note on this coral is that it does not respond well to severe changes in temp...the first frogspawn I kept was lost due to a heater malfunction that spiked my water to 90 degrees...the frogspawn began to deteroriate rapidly and never recovered.
Below are a few recent pics of the one in my system....
Lets see if members can contribute as much on this second Coral of the Week as they did on the first...the Fox Coral was very well covered...
Frogspawn(Euphyllia spp. ) are very closely related to both the torch coral as well as the hammer coral...the type I currently keep is euphyllia paradivisa . Information I've seen indicates that they prefer low to high lighting levels/moderate current...and they should be added only to systems that have stabalised and begun to mature. Calcium and alkalinity levels should be established and stable.Nitrates should be low and not fluctuating...mine has always responded poorly when PH levels are out of line(8.1-8.3).Feeding is primarily from the water column...but mine does respond to direct feedings of meaty type foods mixed with DT's. The speciman I currently keep was purchased about 15 months ago with 5 branches or heads ... it now has 9 and has grown to nearly double its origional size. One note on this coral is that it does not respond well to severe changes in temp...the first frogspawn I kept was lost due to a heater malfunction that spiked my water to 90 degrees...the frogspawn began to deteroriate rapidly and never recovered.
Below are a few recent pics of the one in my system....
Lets see if members can contribute as much on this second Coral of the Week as they did on the first...the Fox Coral was very well covered...