i need i.d. on these please.

Chad Vossen

New member
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thanks. :D

oh yea, my boss is calling them mushrooms. isnt that funny
 
They are pretty common and I will usually give them away if I can. They spread like weeds.
 
ok ty. my boss keeps calling them green mushrooms. is there a scientific name for these? what family are they in?

he bought 2 rocks of these. i was disapointed since they are kinda ugly and he was actualy proud of them.. oh well.
 
your boss doesnt know coral. thats not even close to a mushroom. im glad youre helping him out with IDs! :) seriously, there need to be more LFS employees that give a pooh.
 
thank you, i was thinking Palythoa when i first saw them but i didnt know enough to challenge him on it. but i knew they were not mushrooms...

im looking for better proof that i can take to him and just smack talk him lol. he doesnt think i know much of anything about saltwater tanks. just recently he asked my advise on diatoms and my advise helped alot. lol his 40 years experience vs. my 5 months experience with saltwater. i think reefcentral is great :D
 
No problem. They are aka button polyps in many LFS in the northeast, not sure if they use a different name down there. Plus, mushrooms are in the actinodiscus family of corallimorphans anyway. Tell your boss to brush up on his latin genera of marine inverts!
 
Those are Palythoa species (and judging by the morphology what used to be classified as Protopalythoa)- take a very close look at the polyp stalk (maybe using zoom) - they should have sand or other bits of detritus incorporated into the structure.

Genus = Palythoa
Species name = no clear idea, although I have seen a lot like these in nature... classification to the species level needs work.

cheers,

James
 
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