<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15399138#post15399138 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by KarlBob
As I read Agu's posts, it sounds like the anemones do not require dedicated feeding. Agu suggests that their main food source is 'pods from the adjacent section, rather than any prepared food.
Agu also states that the mass of chaetomorpha at the top of the cryptic section blocks the majority of the light from penetrating below. If the space under a rock in the display tank can be considered a cryptic zone, I'd expect that a section of sump under a thick mat of chaeto could also be considered cryptic.
Finally, it's nit-picking, but I don't understand the use of the term "benthic" in this context at all.
Adult Echinophyllia: benthic. Adult Tridacna: benthic. Halimeda: benthic. All three are photosynthetic, and none are inhabitants of the cryptic zone. Why the word "benthic" should be used to distinguish critters in a dark area from critters in a lighted area is beyond me. It's not likely to set me off as badly as the gross abuse of the term "organic", but few things do.
DDT is an organic chemical. So is malathion. Nearly all the things that "organic" gardeners avoid are organic chemicals! Why on Earth would a philosophy of food production be named after the class of chemical compounds that contain carbon atoms, anyway?