Easy To Keep NPS Corals

Romulox234

New member
So far i have one dendro, an orange sun coral colony and a black sun coral colony there all doing great getting fed every day or every other day but i want to try my hand at some other types of nps corals.

Preferably the ones that don't require constant feeding such as gorgians because i have no way of making food in the water a constant.

Are there any nps corals that you know of that are more like sun corals and dendros that require spot feeding but not a constant supply of food?
 
Actually, many of the non-photosynthetic gorgonians that are available are not as difficult as you may think. The ones with the larger polyps do not need constant feeding and can do well with daily target feeding of things like frozen cyclop-eyes. This is really no more difficult that sticking to a daily feeding regimen that you would with a fish. However, the real challenge from my experience with gorgonians is keeping them algae free. Algae can be a real killer for gorgs, and it can be a real PIA constantly trying to remove it. On the other hand, if you're going for a an all non-photo tank, you can keep the tank dark most of the time and algae won't be an issue. There are a number of non-photo gorgonians that are relatively easy: Diodogorgia, Swiftia, and Menella among others.

As far as other nps corals to try, basically any "LPS" non-photo is a safe bet for being relatively easy. This would basically include any number of corals in the family dendrophyllidae, which has many corals that are uncommon to rare to just about never seen in the hobby.
 
Rhizotrochus typus (not technically legal to buy but they are often for sale) are probably the easiest besides dendros to keep. You spot feed them a 2 blocks of mysis a week and you will be good to go.

Mike
 
Why are Rhynzo's illegal? My lfs always has a bunch of them for sale

What about carnation corals, chile corals, sea fans corals of that type
 
180+55REEF, duncans don't need to be spot fed everyday.I feed mine once a week.you really don't to spot feed at all.it just makes them grow quicker.Ok back to nps,I have looked for rhizos and cannot find any.My lfs said they are illegal,He has nps that look like rhizos but don't get as big.
 
What about carnation corals, chile corals, sea fans corals of that type
Carnation Coral (Dendronepthya) and most "sea fans" would require the constant food source. Mike (uhuru) has had great success keeping Dendronepthya from his reports, but he's providing a constant food source. Chile corals are a bit easier generally as they have larger polyps and accept a variety of foods.
 
Why are Rhynzo's illegal? My lfs always has a bunch of them for sale

What about carnation corals, chile corals, sea fans corals of that type

I believe they are illegal to import because of a lack of CITES permits for it... Big no no if you are caught bringing them in. Good way to face major fines and the like.
 
Quoted from Jake Adams @ reefbuilders.com

"Have you ever wondered why you've (most likely) never seen a Rhizotrochus typus available for sale at your LFS? The obvious reason is that their suppliers probably don't have them because this coral species is simply not legal to collect, harvest or import into CITES participating countries, including the US. Go ahead, see if you can find any exportation quotas for ANY Rhizotrochus species, don't worry, we'll wait. "œBut Jake, I see them for sale all over the net" you'll say and the reason that is is because once the illicit coral has cleared customs and entered the country, there are no laws governing the ownership and resale of this species; all of the regulation takes place on the front end of importation and once they are in the animals are free and clear. We've tried to inform some other blogs of the black market nature of these corals but our comments just get deleted and there seems to be a general distaste for even bringing up the legality of Rhizotrochus in the US aquarium trade. Since there are no CITES permits for the importation of Rhizotrochus into the US, Rhizos are intentionally shipped with paperwork for either Euphyllia or Catalyphyllia, Torch and Elegance corals, since these species can look very similar when their tissues are withdrawn. You know what that's called? Smuggling. The only exception to the CITES permitting quota process is the country of Australia where exporters are alloted collection quotas based on tonnage. However, Rhizotrochus typus does not even occur in Australia so any vendor trying to pass off Aussie Rhizos is outright lying or misinformed."

Mike
 
Live Aquaria has a certified captive grown purple stereonephthya available right now. The one they have is photosynthetic but it would be a nice one to start with before trying non-photo softies. I was very tempted to get one but I don't want to worry about having to light the tank for a certain amount of time every day. In your mixed tank it would be fine. Act fast if you want it those get picked up pretty quick!

p-46701-passion.jpg
 
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