Coral habitat for fish?

ichthyogeek

New member
In my research for finding habitats for fish, I'm quite stumped on finding a good coral species to provide cover. I know that chromis, smaller cardinalfish, and damselfish all like a branching coral cover to dart into when scared. What I'm looking for, is a good coral species that is like this in the wild. I'm thinking probably birdsnest coral is what I'm looking for, right?
 
It is easier to create hiding places for fish via aquascaping, IMO. Overhangs and caves made from placement of my liverock work well for my fish.
 
Green slimmer is a great branching acropora. I put a 4-5 inch colony in my tank and all my small fish gravitated to it. By small fish I mean cardinals, dottybacks, chromis, humbug damsels. My lyretail anthias seemed relatively indifferent.
 
I have a large colony of red cap which currently has a pair of lubbocks wrasses, a pair of borbonius and a yellow clown goby living in it.

I have a lokani colony which hosted a pair of baby bangai for a few week. When I say baby I mean freshly released from an adult in the tank.

To provide enough coverage for the fish to dart in and out of you need a fairly large colony. Building an area of aquascaping created from a bunch of thin branching live rock - and using it like firewood to build a standing pile will give you probably the most affordable and easiest to get coral hiding places for your fish.

Dave B
 
Hmm..all I have at the moment is pukani and tonga shelf rock....I may buy a coral colony for the fish though. My mind's pretty set on the bird's nest (seriatopora hystrix, not pocillopora damicornis) coral. Unless, there's an easier to keep branching coral?
 
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