Bi-Colored Carnation Coral

Holygrail45

New member
Hello,

I am relatively new to this great hobby (3 months in) and have really taken to maintaining my tank the best I can. I did, however, break one of my own cardinal rules and purchased a soft coral on the word/advice of my local fish store without first researching to my own satisfaction.

Anyways, I purchased a bi-color (red and orange) carnation coral which he informed me was medium in care level. I have since come to find every article and/or piece of information I can find on the species to be that it is hard to very hard.

I suppose what im asking is if anyone has any tips on this specie? I have tried my best to place it in a place that has moderate water flow but very low light (very tough in my tank, its a pretty bright light tank), and I've adjusted some live rock to provide whatever shade I can. I've compromised the water quality by feeding it phyto-feed daily, along with baby brine as I have come to understand as one of thier core foods. Is this post too long? Sorry, anyhelp would be greatly appreciated.

Thanks
 
Sounds to me like you are doing everything you should be. Good work :cool:

PS- Your post wasn't very long. Have you seen some of these honkers around here?? :eek2:
 
Currently carnation corals are extremely difficult to impossible to maintain in an aquarium. Very near to 100% perish within one year. BBS are too large and mobile, and most research has shown phytoplankton to be a very small part of its diet and alone is not enough to sustain one. The zooplankton which come from the addition phytoplankton may also be a part of their diet. Now there seems to be alot of speculation that bacterial films, and coral mucas may be a large part of their diet. Here is a long thread dedicated to figuring what it may take to keep one healthy. Good luck and happy reading. :)

Dendronephthya study group
 
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