glparr
Waterbox Keeper
We all work daily to make sure our azoox corals, specifically chilis, dendronephthya, scleronephthya, chiro, etc., have a steady or nearly steady supply of food, because we know they'll die if they don't eat all of the time. It occurred to me today that these corals must have some level of nutritional storage capacity in their guts and tissues. They certainly can't be living so close to the edge that a day without food puts them on the decline. They all have survived the two or three days, or more, that it takes to get them from the ocean to our tanks.
Has there been any research that tells us how much nutritional material they can store, i.e., how long a well-fed azoox coral can go without any food before it starts down the slippery slope to death? Or do they literally live in an environment where there is never a food shortage?
Gary
Has there been any research that tells us how much nutritional material they can store, i.e., how long a well-fed azoox coral can go without any food before it starts down the slippery slope to death? Or do they literally live in an environment where there is never a food shortage?
Gary