JHawlz9989
New member
Sorry if this is an ignorant question and has already been addressed. Are LPS the type of coral where each mouth must be fed independently? Because, well, Myka and Chris, that's a lot of food you guys have to burn through...
Sorry if this is an ignorant question and has already been addressed. Are LPS the type of coral where each mouth must be fed independently? Because, well, Myka and Chris, that's a lot of food you guys have to burn through...
Last January the coral suffered from what I believe was probably Black Band Disease that I think came in on an Australian Maze Brain, and I had to cut off about 1" all the way around the edge. Such a shame.
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I'm really glad you posted these. I have a very similar "closed brain" .... came in with the same eroding band.
Did your piece recover nicely?
I usually just call it "Band Disease". There are Black Band and White Band Diseases. I think it came into my tank on a Maze Brain that came from Australia where White Band threatens some coral populations. There really isn't a known cure. I tried battling it with dips and siphoning off diseased tissue and had no success. The first photo shows about 3-4 months after the onset of the disease, so it is definitely slow to spread. After the cutting my Favia has recovered nicely. The edges healed quickly and the coral looks great now. I would suggest you cut off the infected edges before you lose any more of the coral.
Looks like a Prism to me, which is actually a Favites. But who cares?! LOL
Beautiful coral Ritter!
identifying favids to a species is not a realistic expectation. I can reasonably get the Genus right, but corals are so fluid in growth & how they respond to enviroment, that a species ID isn't possible..
And of course, trade names are completely useless 99% of the time in correct ID of any coral.
Matthew
I'd go with Goniastrea palauensis.Any ideas on an ID for this one?
I'd go with Goniastrea palauensis.
Definitely one of the most awesome-looking Faviids, and yours is no exception.![]()