Undertai,
Some of the corals that you are asking me to help you out with are quite small. I have a difficult time when trying to ID frags as they have not fully developed their overall structure. I have seen some strange things happen to frags as they grow and therefore I am reluctant to make a concrete decision. But I will do my best....
#1 Looks to me like a Crayola Tabletop which most seems to be a A. latistella, but realistically it can be a couple of different species. I am not sure if anyone has noticed this but there are several species in Veron where the photos listed on each of the species are almost exactly the same. This species is one of those. A. desalawii, plana and latistella all are quite similar. But from what I have seen as a mature colony, with fully developed branches and undisturbed corallites I believe these to be A. latistella.
#2 I respect your guess but I disagree. One thing that I try to do when ID'ing is to look at the distrubution map. I don't always follow this as some corals look too similar but according to the map they don't exist in that part of the ocean (A. maryae for example). When looking at this frag several times I have come to the conclusion that it is just too small to ID. Too much room for failure when it is this size. Take another photo after it has grown a few inches, or if possible get me a photo of the mother colony.
#3 This photo is pretty blurry so I am having a little bit of a hard time with it. But I have narrowed it down to 2 possible species A. cerealis or A. azurea. A. cerealis would make more sense as it has a larger distrubution but with the way the corallites seem to curl back into the branch I am inclined to say A. azurea. Maybe if you could get a better photo I might be able to say one way or another.
#4 Same as #2 as it is just too small and the polyps are out too far to give you good guess.
For the next post....
#1 I am pretty sure that this is A. ceralis. The tubular corallites, deep purple and the yellow tips.
#2 I am inclined to say A. anthrocercis. This is another one that is pretty close to A. plana, latistella and desalawii. But the raidal corallites can be more rounded and they also have flowering polyps. I would be interested to see what this looks like in 6 months.
#3 A. insignis with the long tapering branches and the very uniform corallites. Somtimes the corallites with contrast in color from the branch.
#4 Not sure, any chance for a full colony shot?
#5 Looks to me like a A. tenuis but again it is a little small, give it some more time and retake it. I can then give you a better guess.
Thanks for the challenges! I need more, we can't just let this thread die!
I am ready when you are....
Chris @ RM