ishmael
Premium Member
I was browsing Veron's "Corals of the World" and noticed a few pictures of the Great Barrier Reef at low tide. I understand that probably only a very small percentage of corals throughout the world end up this exposed, however,
It got me to thinking,
A. Why am I so concerned when fragging/placement/removal from the tank in general of my acros, when in nature some of these corals spend hours exposed to the air/baking sun?
B. Does this exposure in nature actually contribute to the health of the coral?
C. Has anyone ever been innovative/courageous enough to incorporate this aspect of natural environment to the aquarium? Imagine viewing someone's tank at simulated low tide, 1/4 empty? '
'
I have included rather crude pix of the pix. Unfortunately, my reprints don't do justice to the fact that these corals are absolutely gorgeous, sitting right out there in the air.

It got me to thinking,
A. Why am I so concerned when fragging/placement/removal from the tank in general of my acros, when in nature some of these corals spend hours exposed to the air/baking sun?
B. Does this exposure in nature actually contribute to the health of the coral?
C. Has anyone ever been innovative/courageous enough to incorporate this aspect of natural environment to the aquarium? Imagine viewing someone's tank at simulated low tide, 1/4 empty? '
I have included rather crude pix of the pix. Unfortunately, my reprints don't do justice to the fact that these corals are absolutely gorgeous, sitting right out there in the air.