Keeping Rainbow Acans Colors

teddyb

New member
I recently received some very nice rainbow acans but in the weeks that I have had them in my tank they are losing the amazing color they originally have. I had them 20" under a 4x39w Geissemann T5 (midday, pure actinic, aquablue plus, actinic plus) and recently I have moved them so they are partially shaded.

It seems to help but they still are not as vibrant as when I first got them. However, they do look pretty good when just the pure actinic and actinic+ are on. Is putting them under 20k MH's the only way to keep the amazing rainbow color? What do you guys think? Any advice?
 
add another pure actinic, the actinic spectrum is what brings(to an extent) the rainbow colors, my rainow have lost some of their appeal over the last few months, they started out amazing an has faded to orange with only a hint of rainbow

here is how they started
rainbow2.jpg

and now,
P1010158-1.jpg
 
I guess actinic seems to be the key... that is the light spectrum they are accustomed to in the wild.

On another note; do acans need rock to encrust over or can they build their own skeleton and grow on the sand like a chalice?
 
IME they will turn int a "ball" on the sand bed and stop growing, if you give them a rock to grow onto they will spread much faster.
 
light is the key to keep the colour, i been try many light t5 blue works better.
the best way is open less time(4hr-6hr), but no matter what you do still change colour, the best i can do is keep 80% of originally.
 
my rainbow is becoming less "rainbow" too.

I have been putting it under the shaded area as you can see. I feed my corals with oyster feast sometimes and I feed my fishes regularly.

IMG_0105.jpg
 
add another pure actinic, the actinic spectrum is what brings(to an extent) the rainbow colors, my rainow have lost some of their appeal over the last few months, they started out amazing an has faded to orange with only a hint of rainbow

here is how they started
rainbow2.jpg

and now,
P1010158-1.jpg

The first photo looks like it is under 14k or 20k with actinic supplementation.

Your second one looks like you took the photo with a flash camera.

You can't compare those two photos. Sure, is the second one it isn't going to look like the first photo. A flash is around 6K. NOT the 14-20K + Actinic lighting spectrums.

I would bet if you took a photo under the right lighting conditions...that coral would look great!
 
Some change for the better and some for the worse. I agree some times there is nothing you can do. Water parameters, flow, and lighting can change the colors.
 
I would say some will morph


n659294705_1073067_2819.jpg


The green and red larger sized in this picture has morphed to this.

22558_321795994705_659294705_3262235_8239368_n.jpg


Have moved it to a higher light area and it is morphing again.

In my experiance some like higher light some lower light. You have to pay attention to them after you get them and adjust until they are happy.
 
they can also transfer zooxanthellae between different pieces of acans. my pink acans are next to my orange ones and the pink ones are turning a bit orange
 
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