What Coral is this??

fishnerd02

New Member
I've had this coral about 2 years, it was about the size of a fist, now it is the size of a very large dinner plate, in fact I broke off a piece and moved it to the other side of the tank. I might try to trade some at the LFS but I want to know what kind it is. Is this table coral?
 

babyb

Active Member
some kind of hard coral idk what kind, havent really masters the hard corals yet, but i was wondering what kind of lights you had it under
 

fishnerd02

New Member
I know its a hard coral, or perhaps semi hard coral. The green stuff is very soft, like carpet, but if I do a water change, it all retracts into the exoskeleton which is quite hard. I'm just not sure of the name.
For lighting I have the Orbit Current USA. 260 watts on a 50 gallon. Works great, has built in fan and 3 different outputs so you can time them differently. I had a crappy Chinese light system before that had the ballast die every 6 months (Never get Heleos). This is way better.
 

farslayer

Active Member
If that is a monti, I believe your lighting is no good for it. SPS, from my understanding, require metal halide lighting and a minimum of 20x water flow in the tank. Maybe an SPS person will chime in on this thread.
 

bonebrake

Active Member
It is an Echinophyllia sp., they are rather slow growers and some color variants are very rare and carry a big price tag. Green is the most common and they do not require a lot of light. I have one that has grown quite a bit in the year I have had it and it is almost completely in the shade under power compact fluorescent lamps.
 

farslayer

Active Member
Ah, thanks for the feedback, I was afraid he had a coral he couldn't care for and the thing looks awesome.
 

fishnerd02

New Member
It would have died 2 years ago if I had the wrong lighting. I've had it in the same conditions for the past 2 years. It has grown more than 6 times it original size! Thanks for the ID, it doesn't seem to need excessive light, For a couple months I was running only about half the lights due to previous ballast problem. It shrunk some, but came back big with the new lights.
Thanks...
 

krazekajin

Active Member
I vote for a monti. And for a coral to grow from a frag to larger than a dinner plate is considered success. Thus, who cares what kind of light he has, because the thing is huge.
 
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