feeding FUNGIA PLATE coral

AMW

New member
Do fungia plate corals need to be fed? (beyond MH/actinic lighting and phytoplankton).
 
I feed mine mysis and flying fish roe about twice a week. It is pretty neat to see it catch the food with its tentacles and then transfer them from the outermost tentacles to the tentacles closer to the mouth and then into the mouth.
 
I feed mine a little. Hardly ever spot feed it, but it sometimes catches the frozen I feed my fish. I did feed it a pellet today. I was surprised at how fast it moved it to it's mouth!
 
OK, I just tried feeding my fungia plate a large piece of krill...it completely sucked it up and shoved it into its mouth within less than a minute. Rather impressive for an LPS and definitely entertaining as well!
 
Interesting stuff. I had a fungia in my last tank that just faded away, but whether that was from lack of feeding or not, I'm not sure. What sort of flow/lighting do people have these in?
 
I feed mine the DIY food I have been making....problem is it grows to fast, and it seems to be producing new heads...

I have a 36g with 1 250w 15k MH and 2 96w PC actinics. Also 8 LED's at night. I would say the fungia is in high flow.
 
Interesting. So it wasn't my lighting or my flow I'm guessing (last tank was 2 x 250w MH and 2 x Tunze streams). Something else I did then. :(
 
Just a FYI...another key point in maintaining Fungia is to keep them up off the sand bed, sand is very irritating to them and can cause tissue necrosis. Keep them up on some rocks or pvc to keep them happy, also spot feeding is quite healthy for them
 
I didn't know that either. mine has been sitting in the sand since I first saw it. Someone told me that they will let go of the rock they are on at some point and move so I should move it to somewhere that I can find it when it does and mount it somewhere.
 
I was at a conference over the summer and Anthony Calfo expressed to never purchase a heliofungia as their survival rate is zero in captivity...I did have 2 die myself and will never get one again...anyone have the same experince?
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15698017#post15698017 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by laurarca
I was at a conference over the summer and Anthony Calfo expressed to never purchase a heliofungia as their survival rate is zero in captivity...I did have 2 die myself and will never get one again...anyone have the same experince?

Not sure how true that is. I've seen several "mother" fungia plates with babies all over them at LFS.
 
so what kind of fungia is this and should I move it from the sand?

vlcsnap-2009-09-13-19h21m51s134.png
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15698797#post15698797 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by goofyreefer
Not sure how true that is. I've seen several "mother" fungia plates with babies all over them at LFS.

Fungia sometimes produce babies like that when they're going through stress, IIRC, so it's not a good guide to whether they're doing well or not.
 
<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=15710345#post15710345 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by The Escaped Ape
Fungia sometimes produce babies like that when they're going through stress, IIRC, so it's not a good guide to whether they're doing well or not.

So they reproduce if their happy or stressed.... that could be said about many corals...no?

Not to mention that any coral in captivity would have a zero survival rate when it's all said and done.
 
I couldn't claim to be an expert on these, as you can see from my lack of success I mention above! Just reporting what I've read, which is that fungia often produce babies at times of stress. Though to be honest, thinking about it, I'm not sure if I'm remembering something about babies emerging from the skeleton of fungia that look like they've had it. Whichever way, you're right, there no doubt are a range of reasons babies are produced.
 
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