You will have to do some serious research, there aren't many Caribbean SPS legally available. Heck there aren't many Carribean SPS left, let alone available to hobbiests! If you want to go totally Caribbean plan on Gorgs, zoos, and palys.
Find a good aqua cultured live rock source, there are several down here. Basically they dump Marco rock on a lease site for a few years then pick it back up and sell it. If you have never seen well kept live rock before you'll be in for a surprise. It's full of life, crabs shrimp, gobbles, algae and coraline even found some octopuss eggs once. It's not the typical dead coral skeletons with maybe some rotting zoanthids or sponges you typically see elsewhere in the country. I would say pocillopora about the size of a dime are present on one in 5-10 rocks, some kind of lps, like button polyps or meat corals on one in 50 rocks if your lucky. So it is possible to get going legally but to be honest, the colors are pretty drab and it's a lot of work searching, only ricordia, anemones and gorgonias can be bought as corals. I doubt you will ever see a staghorn or elkhorn recruit legaly atainable. I saw a thread a few weeks back of someone who did this with a 20 or 30g and it took him 7 years to get a decent looking tank, but he was also importing LR to NY and by decent I mean a bunch of green meat corals, not too diverse. By the time I put together a 150g sps system I would put some bright south pacific corals in there.
Yeah he as a sub board in the vendors area.I read in another thread that the guys at tampa bay saltwater entered into a project with one of the schools in Florida to mariculture Caribbean SPS. I don't know if the plan was to eventually sell the grown pieces or if it was purely academic, but it may be worth the time to reach out to them. I think the owner posts on here regularly.
I read in another thread that the guys at tampa bay saltwater entered into a project with one of the schools in Florida to mariculture Caribbean SPS. I don't know if the plan was to eventually sell the grown pieces or if it was purely academic, but it may be worth the time to reach out to them. I think the owner posts on here regularly.
heck I am also thinking that if we grow enough frags that in time we can plant some in the wild to help maintain / restore the wild reefs.
The folks that do grow out and transplant, such as the Coral Reef Restoration Foundation, not only need permits, but also follow some stringent rules to avoid any such contamination.Not allowed to plant frags or anything from a tank in wild. Introduce flatworms or red bug or some other pest to new area.
which totally is right.The folks that do grow out and transplant, such as the Coral Reef Restoration Foundation, not only need permits, but also follow some stringent rules to avoid any such contamination.