Thank you, Danny!
It's 6g Nano-cube, the coral is very close to the glass, the sunlight is from the back-side, going right through the transparent polyps. Old point-and-shoot 3 megapixels camera, Pentax Optio 30, somehow it's able to make such shots.
More:
Baby scleronephthya and dried Cyclop-eeze - too big:
Same - chili coral:
And this: the runner came on the rock with Dendronephthya hemprichii, who know what is it:
Was far from glass, another tank, sorry.
Danny, I highly value your knowledge of non-photosynthetic corals keeping, glad to meet you here.
Can you give any advice on simplified keeping of the non-photosynthetic corals (smaller tanks, less expensive hardware, then the best tanks have, substitutes for a special food, not available locally). Especially filtration, turned off during feeding - if this is necessary or desirable, schedule may be. Mounting these sensitive corals too - mine keep freeing themselves and going wherever they want.
Any help will be highly appreciated.
It's 6g Nano-cube, the coral is very close to the glass, the sunlight is from the back-side, going right through the transparent polyps. Old point-and-shoot 3 megapixels camera, Pentax Optio 30, somehow it's able to make such shots.
More:
Baby scleronephthya and dried Cyclop-eeze - too big:
Same - chili coral:
And this: the runner came on the rock with Dendronephthya hemprichii, who know what is it:
Was far from glass, another tank, sorry.
Danny, I highly value your knowledge of non-photosynthetic corals keeping, glad to meet you here.
Can you give any advice on simplified keeping of the non-photosynthetic corals (smaller tanks, less expensive hardware, then the best tanks have, substitutes for a special food, not available locally). Especially filtration, turned off during feeding - if this is necessary or desirable, schedule may be. Mounting these sensitive corals too - mine keep freeing themselves and going wherever they want.
Any help will be highly appreciated.